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Gardens of Sri Lanka

2000 years of landscape architecture tradition


  • Silvana
  • by Klaus Holzhausen, Senake Bandaranayake
Sri Lanka takes its place in Asian garden history not only by virtue of its chronicle accounts, inscriptional records and literary descriptions of gardens and natural environments, but even more so on account of the unique survival of the ar­chaeological remains of many planned garden forms. The Sri Lankan relict gardens are an archaeological phenomenon little seen elsewhere in Asia from a period prior to the 13th century.

ISBN 9788836659555 | EN | HB
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Publisher Silvana
ISBN 9788836659555
Author(s) by Klaus Holzhausen, Senake Bandaranayake
Publication date December 2024
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 270 x 252 mm
Illustrations 340 col.ill.
Pages 288
Language(s) English ed.
Description

Sri Lanka takes its place in Asian garden history not only by virtue of its chronicle accounts, inscriptional records and literary descriptions of gardens and natural environments, but even more so on account of the unique survival of the ar­chaeological remains of many planned garden forms, especially from time horizons earlier than those of surviving historic gardens in other South Asian societies and cultures. The Sri Lankan relict gardens are an archaeological phenomenon little seen elsewhere in Asia from a period prior to the 13th century.

Following the journey proposed by Klaus Holzhausen and the authors of this volume, one goes from surprise to surprise. First of all, there's the unsuspected world of the great royal estates: spatial generosity here reflects a local aristocratic civilization which found in the garden the highest point of its art. Another essential tradition presented in this volume is that of Sri Lanka's monastic gardens. The sheer number of Buddhist monasteries scattered all over the island since almost 2000 years is incredible. Most of these sites contain rather gardens than buildings. Then there's the more com­plex case of colonial gardens, those magical but often forced amalgams between a self-celebrating culture from outside and the local to- pography and vegetation. Last but not least - and the volume that Klaus Holzhausen, as a true prophet of the places he has traversed for nearly three decades, makes clear - is the existence of contemporary gardens that have, physically and imme- diately for those lucky enough to walk through them, an extraordinary force and something to teach the world.

The extremely meticulous way in which Gardens of Sri Lanka has been elaborated and the quality of the iconic and writ­ten documentation permit readers to already be there and to discover page after page the existence of another world.