Sichuanese garden | |||||||||||
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Chinese | 四川园林 | ||||||||||
Hanyu Pinyin | Sìchuān yuánlín | ||||||||||
Si4cuan1 yuan2nin2 | |||||||||||
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Ba-Shu garden | |||||||||||
Chinese | 巴蜀园林 | ||||||||||
Hanyu Pinyin | Bāshǔ yuánlín | ||||||||||
Ba1su2 yuan2nin2 | |||||||||||
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The Sichuanese gardenorBa–Shu garden is one of the major regional styles of Chinese garden developed in the Sichuan and Chongqing regions.[1][2] Most of the Sichuanese gardens are located on Chengdu Plain and were built by the government as public gardens to memorize significant local celebrities, which distinguishes them from those private gardens in East China (e.g. Suzhou) and those imperial gardens in Beijing.
East Lake in Xinfan, Chengdu is one of the only two existing Chinese gardens which were built during the Tang dynasty (618–907).
Sichuan topics
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General |
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Geography |
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Culture |
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People |
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East Asian traditional gardens and landscape design
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Styles |
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Jiangnan style |
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Royal style |
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North China style |
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Lingnan style |
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Sichuanese style |
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