Hedge maze

{{Short description|Outdoor garden maze or labyrinth}}

File:Traquair House Maze.jpg]]

A hedge maze is an outdoor garden maze or labyrinth in which the "walls" or dividers between passages are made of vertical hedges.

History

File:Labyrinth Versailles colour.JPG was a hedge maze in the Gardens of Versailles, a royal château in France. Pictured is Labyrinte de Versailles by Charles Perrault with engravings by Leclerc and coloured by Jacques Bailly, circa the late 17th century]]

Hedge mazes evolved from the knot gardens of Renaissance Europe, and were first constructed during the mid-16th century.

{{cite book

| last1 = Fisher

| first1 = Adrian

| title = Mazes & Follies

| publisher = Jarrold Publishing

| year = 2004 }} These early mazes were very low, initially planted with evergreen herbs, but, over time, dwarf box became a more popular option due to its robustness. Italian architects had been sketching conceptual garden labyrinths as early as 1460, and hundreds of mazes were constructed in Europe between the 16th and 18th centuries.{{cite book

| last1 = Wright

| first1 = Craig M.

| title = The maze and the warrior: symbols in architecture, theology and music

| publisher = The President and Fellows of Harvard College

| year = 2001 }}

Initially, the hedge maze was not intended to confuse, but to provide a unicursal walking path. Puzzle-like hedge mazes featuring dead ends and tall hedges arrived in England during the reign of King William III of England. They were now part of the bosquet or wilderness part of the garden, and extended area of highly artificial formal woodland, with groups of trees enclosed by hedges. It was possible to get lost in the much-admired labyrinth of Versailles, built for Louis XIV of France in 1677 and destroyed in 1778. This maze was adorned with thirty-nine hydraulic sculpture groups depicting Aesop's fables. The oldest surviving puzzle hedge maze, at Hampton Court Palace in Surrey, England, was built for King William in the late 17th century. Its distinctive trapezoidal shape is due to pre-existing paths running alongside the maze.

In modern times, hedge mazes have increased in complexity. A hedge maze at Longleat House in Wiltshire, England, designed in 1978, features a three-dimensional maze that uses bridges and a grid-less layout to confuse visitors.

Notable public hedge mazes

File:Hampton court maze.svg|The layout of Hampton Court Maze, a typical hedge maze, UK

File:Hampton Court Avri 2009 42.jpg|Inside Hampton Court hedge maze, UK

File:Chatsworth (48521657511).jpg|Chatworth Maze, UK

File:Blenheim Palace Maze (6093408666).jpg|Blenheim Palace, UK

File:Nemzszinh-spiralcivertan.jpg|Hungarian National Theater

File:Hedge maze in Parque São Roque da Lameira 6.jpg|Parque São Roque da Lameira, Portugal

File:VanDusen Botanical Garden maze.jpg|VanDusen Botanical Garden, Canada

File:Longleat maze.jpg|Longleat Maze is three-dimensional, UK

File:Hedge Maze, St Louis Botanical Gardens (St Louis, Missouri - June 2003).jpg|St Louis Botanical Gardens, USA

File:Jeju Kimnyoung Maze Park (15029448766).jpg|A maze in Jeju City, Korea

File:彰化-探索迷宮歐式庭園餐廳 (31258296494).jpg|A waist-high maze in a European-style "manor" in Taiwan

File:Hedge maze - Nokkakivi.jpg|A maza at the Nokkakivi Amusement Park in Laukaa, Finland

See also

{{Portal|Gardening}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |title=The Spirituality Of Mazes And Labyrinths |last=MacQueen |first=Gailand |year=2005 |publisher=Wood Lake Publishing Inc. |isbn=1896836690 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-kXbPNbhKYAC |access-date=October 8, 2012}}