Gardens, Landscape, and Vision in the Palaces of Islamic Spain

Gardens, Landscape, and Vision in the Palaces of Islamic Spain

  • D. Fairchild Ruggles
Publisher:Penn State University PressISBN 13: 9780271022475ISBN 10: 0271022477

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Gardens, Landscape, and Vision in the Palaces of Islamic Spain is written by D. Fairchild Ruggles and published by Penn State University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0271022477 (ISBN 10) and 9780271022475 (ISBN 13).

Islamic gardens, with their waterways and beds of plants and trees, are generally regarded as an earthly reflection of paradise. D. Fairchild Ruggles offers a new interpretation, contending that the palace garden was primarily an environmental, economic, and political construct. She discusses three aspects of medieval Islamic Spain: the landscape and agricultural transformation documented in Arabic scientific literature, the formation of the garden and its symbolism from the eighth through the fifteenth centuries, and the role of the gaze and the frame in the spatial structures through which sovereignty was constituted. Although the repertory of architectural and garden forms was largely unchanged from the tenth through the fifteenth centuries, Ruggles explains that their meaning changed dramatically. The royal palace gardens of Cordoba expressed a political ideology that placed the king above and at the center of the garden and, metaphorically, of his kingdom. This conception of the world began to falter in later centuries, but patrons clung to the forms and motifs of the golden age. Instead of creating new forms, artists at the Alhambra in Granada reworked and refined familiar vocabulary and materials. The vistas fixed by windows and pavilions referred not to the actual relationship of the king to his domain but rather to the memory of a once-expanding territory.