Peter Davidson
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This chapter considers an early modern cultural exchange which seems largely to have been forgotten: the large number of Scots who took one or more degrees at the universities of the United Provinces of the Netherlands. This chapter explores the essentially Dutch nature of the fictional (but historically accurate) garden of Monkbarns in Scott’s novel The Antiquary, the influences of Dutch gardens and garden poems in Scotland, and a little-known Scottish garden poem in the Dutch style: Mackenzie’s Celia’s Country House and Closet. By contrast, it also examines the French-style gardens at Edzell laid out by Sir David Lindsay at the turn of the seventeenth century.

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Relics, dreams, voyages

World baroque

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