Notes
1 See Singh, Ram Bachan (1974) Cities and parks in ancient India, Geographical Review of India, 36(1), pp. 62–75; here p. 63.
2 See Villiers-Stuart, C. M. (1913) Gardens of the Great Mughals (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1983 reprint).
3 See Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania. Reuther, O. (1925) Indische Paläste und Wohnungen (Berlin: Leonhard Preiss), here pp. 71–78.
4 See Gothein, M. L. (1926) Indische Gärten; Frey, D. (Ed.) Die Baukunst (München: Drei Masken Verlag).
5 See the overview in Wescoat, Jr, J. L. (1999) Mughal gardens: the re-emergence of comparative possibilities and the wavering of practical concern, in: M. Conan (Ed.) Perspectives on Garden Histories, Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium on the History of Landscape Architecture, volume 21, pp. 107–135, Washington, DC.
6 See Wescoat J. L. Jr, (1990) Gardens of invention and exile: the precarious context of Mughal garden design during the reign of Humayun (1530–1556), Journal of Garden History, 10, pp. 106–116; Wescoat Jr, J. L. (1991) Gardens of conquest and transformation: lessons from earliest Mughal gardens in India, Landscape Journal, 11(2), pp. 105–114; Wescoat, J. L. (1992) Gardens versus citadels: the territorial context of early Mughal gardens, in: J. D. Hunt (Ed.) Garden History, pp. 331–358 (Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium on the History of Landscape Architecture [XII, XVI] Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Trustees for Harvard University in Washington D.C.) as well as Wescoat, J. L. & Wolschke-Bulmahn, J. (1994) The Mughal gardens of Lahore, Die Gartenkunst, 6(1), pp. 19–33.
7 See Wescoat J. L. Jr, and Wolschke-Bulmahn, J. (1996) Mughal Gardens, Sources, Places, Representations, and Prospects (Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium on the History of Landscape Architecture [XII, XVI] Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Trustees for Harvard University in Washington D.C.).
8 See Herbert, E. W. (2007) The gardens of Barrackpore, Studies in the History of Gardens & Designed Landscapes, 27(1), pp. 31–61.
9 See Sinha, A. & Sinha, R. P. (1997) Landscape in Gautama Buddha's Times, paper, Cincinnati, OH, Department of Landscape Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
10 Hierophany is the manifestation of the sacred or the holy in the world.
11 See Lloyd, S. (1984) An Indian Attachment (New York: William Morrow & Co.), reprint Lloyd, S. (2007) An Indian Attachment (Enfield: Eland Publishing).
12 See Mowl, T. (2006) Historic Gardens of Worcestershire (Stroud: Tempus Publishing).
13 See Buruma, I. et al. (2000) India a Mosaic, R. B. Silvers & Barbara Epstein (Eds) with an introduction by A. Roy (New York: New York Review Books).
14 See Meister, M. (Ed.) (1983–2001) Encyclopedia of Indian Temple Architecture, 12 volumes (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press).
1 Griffiths, J. (1994) The last frontier, Planning Week, 2(11), pp. 14–15.
2 Fairbrother, N. (1970) New Lives–New Landscapes (London: The Architectural Press, ISBN 851 483 3).
3 Shoad, M. (2002) Edgelands, in: J. Jenkins (Ed.) Remaking the Landscape: The Changing Face of Britain (New York: Profile Books, ISBN 1 86197 375 6), being an updated and expanded version of her essay, ‘Edgelands of Promise’, published in Landscapes, 1(2), October 2000.
4 Centre for Urban and Regional Ecology (CURE) (2002) Sustainable Development in the Countryside around Towns: Volumes 1 and 2 (Cheltenham: Countryside Agency).
5 Barker, K. (2006) Barker Review of Land Use Planning—Final Report—Recommendations (London: TSO).