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The Medici gardens of Boboli and Luxembourg: Thoughts on their relationship and development

Posted on:1993-08-28Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Coombes, Pamela MFull Text:PDF
GTID:2472390014996098Subject:Art history
Abstract/Summary:
Marie de' Medici began the 'jardin du Luxembourg' during her Regency for Louis XIII. As Henry IV's queen, she had clung tenaciously to her Italian family heritage and as her upbringing had close associations with the spectacular 'giardino di Boboli', she was thus inspired to utilize it as the prototype for her Parisian garden. The validation of Marie de' Medici's success lies in the investigation of both gardens to determine the recurring features and to ascertain their precise chronology. Evidence suggests that some replicated features were well known to Marie, the 'Grotta Grande', the original layout and the amphitheatre's general form; while other features, the 'Isolotto' and the amphitheatre's stone seating, were not. These were realized either concurrently or even later than similar features at Luxembourg: a factor overlooked by historians who habitually cite the formative role of Boboli at Luxembourg.
Keywords/Search Tags:Luxembourg, Features
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