The most common crop in the US is not wheat or corn, but lawn grass. From the gardens of Versailles to suburban America, why are well-manicured lawns central to our cultural identity?
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A lawn can feel like a little oasis, our very own patch of nature. But throughout history, lawns have been powerful symbols of orderliness — and wealth.
When France's King Louis XIV — also known as the Sun King — moved to Versailles in 1661, he commissioned a famous French landscape architect, Andre Le Notre, to design the gardens at Versailles palace.
Le Notre understood that the gardens, which included meticulous lawns, were political: They were a way for the king to communicate that all was in order and under control.
The planner notably created a "tapis vert," literally a "green carpet" that linked the palace and the gardens.
The lawn was not for walking on, or picnicking on, or for grazing animals — as grassy meadows had been in medieval times. Now it was purely ornamental, a status symbol, a symbol of power and conquest.
"If you look closely at the grass" in a classic meadow, said Ian Thompson, a retired landscape architect who taught at Newcastle University in the UK, "there's all kinds of other plants in there … you would find things like daisies and violets and clover and strawberries in there, for example."
Europe's stunning parks and gardens
Europe is a great place for anyone who loves landscape gardening. Here a selection of some of our favorite gardens.
Image: Bernard Jaubert/imageBROKER/picture alliance
Prince Puckler Park, Bad Muskau
Prince Hermann Ludwig Heinrich von Puckler-Muskau was an eccentric and a gifted garden visionary. The prince created an English landscape garden around the New Palace in Bad Muskau at the beginning of the 19th century. This green oasis, spanning some 830 hectares, has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2004.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J. Kalaene
The Garden Realm of Dessau-Worlitz
Duke Leopold III of Anhalt-Dessau created a park in the style of an English Garden on the banks of the Elbe River in the 18th century. What was revolutionary for his time is that he opened it to the public. He integrated natural and artificial waterways, vantage points, islands, vistas, sculptures and architecture. The result was a collective work of art that still fascinates people to this day.
Image: Stephan Schulz/dpa/picture alliance
The palaces and parks of Potsdam
Peter Joseph Lenne was one of the most productive landscape gardeners of his time, serving the Prussian Court Gardens for 50 years in the 19th century. The park at Potsdam's Sanssouci Palace, which he extended and redesigned, is today a World Heritage Site.
Image: Bernd Settnik/dpa/picture alliance
Herrenhausen Gardens in Hanover
Herrenhausen's Great Garden is the only original baroque garden in Germany today. It only survived because the Kings of Hanover never really took an interest in it. They ruled England from 1714 until 1823 and decided to cut expenditure back home in Germany. So while new landscape gardens were created elsewhere, Herrenhausen remained untouched.
Image: Julian Stratenschulte/dpa/picture alliance
The Gardens at Versailles
Versailles is one of the biggest palace compounds in Europe. Its baroque gardens inspired many European monarchs. King Louis XIV's gardener, Andre Le Notre, ranks among the most important landscape gardeners of all time. Versailles was his life's work.
Image: Johann Kräftner/ brandstaetter images/picture alliance
Chateau de Villandry and its gorgeous garden
You will find one of France's most visited gardens in the Loire Valley, forming part of the Chateau de Villandry grounds. Created in 1906, this green oasis is characterized by distinct floral patterns and geometric shapes.
Image: Bernard Jaubert/imageBROKER/picture alliance
Villa d'Este near Rome
The gardens at Villa d'Este date back to the 16th century. They boasts numerous water fountains in true renaissance fashion. The gardens at Villa d'Este have been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2001.
Image: K. Thomas/blickwinkel/picture alliance
Moorish gardens at Granada's Alhambra fortress
The verdant Moorish gardens at Granada's Alhambra fortress stand out against the bone dry surroundings of southern Spain. They are surrounded by shady garden rooms, and elaborate water fountains. Moorish gardens originated in the 13th century and inspired the entire Mediterranean region.
Sissinghurst Castle features one of England's most famous gardens. It was created from 1930 onwards by author Vita Sackville-West and her husband. The garden itself combines elegant sensuality and strict shapes.
Image: Michael Warren/Photoshot/picture-alliance
Britain's garden obsession
Every summer hundreds of people in London and elsewhere in Britain open their private gardens to the public. Many serve serve tea and cake, and many also charge a small entrance fee. Proceeds are usually donated to a good cause.
Image: NGS/dpa/picture alliance
Monet's Giverny garden
Artists tend to have a green thumb. Each year, over 500,000 people travel to Normandy, France, to visit Impressionist painter Claude Monet's garden. He loved this green oasis and kept buying new plants until Giverny garden turned into a vertiable jungle. The water lilies became his most famous motif.
Image: Mustafa Yalcon/AA/picture alliance
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Pure reason of cut grass
But the lawns of Versailles are a pure grass that has conquered these flowers and weeds. These pristine stretches of grass show a command of nature, of a wilderness that can be hostile and dangerous.
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In 17th-century Europe, ideas about humans' relationship with nature were changing. French philosopher Rene Descartes argued that nature, as represented by the body, is chaotic and is separate from the mind, from the higher reason of man.
The lawn was therefore a symbol of the rational mind colonizing the irrational body. The idea has endured for centuries.
Louis' lawn was adapted in part across the English Channel. The 18th-century English aristocracy liked to incorporate meadows and thickets of trees into their more "natural" gardens — even if still highly stylized and mowed.
This curated country landscape was in turn appropriated by the French Queen Marie Antoinette, who wanted to create a mini English garden at her palace.
Rise and decline of the suburban lawn
So, too, in America, the English garden — as opposed to the king — ruled.
President George Washington ordered the creation of a bowling green and deer park at his vast residence and slave plantation at Mount Vernon. He is said to have imported English grass seed for the job.
Lawns: Is yours giving sun king or pink flamingo?
Thomas Jefferson, the third US president and author of the Declaration of Independence, also cultivated a grass area called "the lawn" at his home.
A couple of decades later, home turf was all the rage, with the first horse-drawn lawnmower patented in 1830.
Initially restricted to the backyard, these stretches of well-maintained lawn were soon proudly displayed in front of US homes.
Like the earlier gardens of the French royals and English gentry, by the 20th century the American front yard became a kind of exhibition space, a symbol of one's mastery of nature.
But it had to remain uncluttered and pristine.
"It's basically a piece of grass with nothing on it," said Jenny Price, a writer and environmental historian, of the American lawn. "This is a very class-oriented thing, generally [people] do not approve of putting anything in your front yard. No chairs, no lawn ornaments, no anything."
Natural forests instead of English lawns
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She added that the controlled lawn demands a lot of irrigation and pesticides. But in an age of climate change and water scarcity, lawns are again giving way to trees and diverse species.
"We are going back toward the flowery meadow," said Ian Thompson. "And actually the suburban garden is one of the places which, you know, can be a sanctuary for wildlife. I think this is all to be encouraged, really."