MediaWiki API result
This is the HTML representation of the JSON format. HTML is good for debugging, but is unsuitable for application use.
Specify the format parameter to change the output format. To see the non-HTML representation of the JSON format, set format=json.
See the complete documentation, or the API help for more information.
{
"batchcomplete": "",
"query": {
"normalized": [
{
"from": "Main_Page",
"to": "Main Page"
}
],
"pages": {
"1762": {
"pageid": 1762,
"ns": 0,
"title": "Main Page",
"cirrusdoc": [
{
"index": "wikidatabase_content_1626708088",
"type": "page",
"id": "1",
"version": [],
"source": {
"version": 41372,
"wiki": "wikidatabase",
"namespace": 0,
"namespace_text": "",
"title": "Home",
"timestamp": "2021-08-12T15:29:51Z",
"create_timestamp": "2012-03-21T19:52:35Z",
"category": [],
"external_link": [
"https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300101744/keywords-american-landscape-design",
"https://www.nga.gov/research/casva/research-projects.html"
],
"outgoing_link": [
"Category:Keywords",
"Category:Places",
"Category:People",
"The_Evidence_of_American_Garden_History",
"Writing_the_Landscape",
"Modes_of_Representations_in_American_Landscape_and_Garden_Design",
"File:0464.jpg",
"File:1213.jpg",
"File:0072.jpg",
"File:0033.jpg"
],
"template": [
"Template:Break",
"Template:Showcase main",
"Essays"
],
"text": "The History of Early American Landscape Design digital resource is an inquiry into the language of early American landscape aesthetics and garden design in the colonial and national periods. Thousands of texts are combined with a corpus of more than 1700 images in order to trace the development of landscape and garden terminology from British colonial America to the mid-19th century. By placing terms in relation to representations in the visual record, the project clarifies their use and meanings, providing for well-informed histories of designed landscapes in early America. The project is organized by 100 keywords, supported by 100 featured places and historical figures. Without claiming to be comprehensive, this project models an approach to the study of landscapes and gardens that helps scholars consider past cultural conditions, uncover former appearances, and better understand the experiences and meanings of designed environments as they were built, and also as they were imagined. Anonymous, Floor Plan and Fa\u00e7ade of Garden Pavilion, Economy, Pa., c. 1830 William Russell Birch, Plan of Springland, c. 1800 Charles Willson Peale, William Bartram, 1808 These essays first appeared in the original publication Keywords in American Landscape Design (Yale University Press, 2010) from which this site originated. The investigation into the history of early American landscape design has continued with the advantage of the digital platform and the addition of approximately one hundred individual pages dedicated to People and to Places to the original one hundred Keywords pages. These introductory essays remain a fundamental contribution to the project with insight and guidance on navigating its content. The Evidence of American Garden History Therese O'Malley Charles Willson Peale, View of the garden at Belfield, 1816. Writing the Landscape Elizabeth Kryder-Reid Cornelia Jefferson Randolph, attr., A Garden Seat by Mr. Jones, From Chamber's Kew, c. 1820. Mode of Representations in American Landscape Design Anne L. Helmreich and Therese O'Malley Robert Mills, Picturesque View of the Building, and Grounds in front, 1841. Read more about the Center's research projects. Banner Images: Nicolino Calyo, Harlem, the Country House of Dr. Edmondson, 1834 C. A. Hedin, \u201cFront Elevation on Live Oak Street,\u201d 1853 Thomas Jefferson, Plan of an orchard at Monticello, c. 1778 Robert Mills, Plan of the Mall, Washington, DC, 1841",
"source_text": "{{break}}\n===''Welcome''===\nThe ''History of Early American Landscape Design'' digital resource is an inquiry into the language of early American landscape aesthetics and garden design in the colonial and national periods. Thousands of texts are combined with a corpus of more than 1700 images in order to trace the development of landscape and garden terminology from British colonial America to the mid-19th century. By placing terms in relation to representations in the visual record, the project clarifies their use and meanings, providing for well-informed histories of designed landscapes in early America.\n\nThe project is organized by 100 keywords, supported by 100 featured places and historical figures. Without claiming to be comprehensive, this project models an approach to the study of landscapes and gardens that helps scholars consider past cultural conditions, uncover former appearances, and better understand the experiences and meanings of designed environments as they were built, and also as they were imagined. \n\n{{break}}\n{{Showcase main}}\n{{break}}\n\n===''Introductory Essays''===\n{{:Essays}}\n{{break}}\nRead more about the Center's [https://www.nga.gov/research/casva/research-projects.html research projects].\n\n<div style=\"font-size:14px; font-family: Georgia-serif; color:#777777; line-height:2em;\">Banner Images:</div>\n\n<div style=\"font-size:14px; font-family: Georgia-serif; line-height:2em;\">[[:File:0464.jpg|Nicolino Calyo, ''Harlem, the Country House of Dr. Edmondson'', 1834]]<br>\n\n<div style=\"font-size:14px; font-family: Georgia-serif;\">[[:File:1213.jpg|C. A. Hedin, \u201cFront Elevation on Live Oak Street,\u201d 1853]]<br></div>\n\n<div style=\"font-size:14px; font-family: Georgia-serif;\">[[:File:0072.jpg|Thomas Jefferson, Plan of an orchard at Monticello, c. 1778]]<br></div>\n\n<div style=\"font-size:14px; font-family: Georgia-serif;\">[[:File:0033.jpg|Robert Mills, ''Plan of the Mall'', Washington, DC, 1841]]</div>",
"text_bytes": 1946,
"content_model": "wikitext",
"language": "en",
"heading": [
"Welcome",
"Introductory Essays"
],
"opening_text": null,
"auxiliary_text": [],
"display_title": null,
"redirect": [
{
"namespace": 0,
"title": "Main Page"
}
],
"incoming_links": 4
}
}
]
}
}
}
}