With the role of the landscape architect increasing as it is in importance, this first comprehensive survey
of the art and practice of landscape architecture fills a great need.
Norman T. Newton has included over 400 illustrations in his book, which conveys a basic understanding of the aims
and scope of landscape architecture and offers visual analyses of major historic works, each in the context of
its own time.
The first third of the study is concerned with landscape architecture in the Western world, mainly Europe, from
ancient times to the mid-nineteenth century. But the major part of the work is devoted to the development of landscape
architecture in the century that has passed since it acquired the status of a profession and an independent discipline.
Concentrating primarily on the United States, Mr. Newton reviews his subject from its beginnings in colonial days
to the work of Olmsted, Vaux, Cleveland, Weidenmann, Eliot, Platt, and the founders of the American Society of
Landscape Architects. He discusses the Columbian Exposition of 1893, the "City Beautiful" movement and
the growth of city planning, the Country Place Era, town planning in England and America, American national and
state parks, parkways, urban open spaces, and recent variations in professional practice.
Mr. Newton concludes his book with a timely discussion of the vital role that landscape architecture plays in the
conservation of natural resources and in protection of the environment.
Table of Contents
I. Ancient Times
II. The Middle Ages
III. The World of Islam: Cordoba, Seville
IV. The World of Islam: Granada, Iran, Mogul India
V. The Renaissance in Tuscany
VI. Rome and the Cinquecento
VII. Roman Villas of Villeggiatura
VIII. Villa Lante and the Villino Farnese
IX. Later Italian Villas, 1610-1785
X. The Piazza in Italy
XI. Beginnings in France
XII. André le Nôtre: Vaux-le-Vicomte and Versailles
XIII. England under the Tudors
XIV. Seventeenth-Century England
XV. The English "Landscape Gardening School"
XVI.