s in the
City of London Cemetery A shrubbery was a feature of 19th-century gardens in the
English manner, or the gardenesque style of the early part of the century. A shrubbery was a collection of hardy shrubs, quite distinct from a flower garden, which was also a cutting garden to supply flowers in the house. The shrubbery was arranged as a walk, ideally a winding one, that made a circuit that brought the walker back to the terrace of the house. Its paths were gravel, so that they dried quickly after a rain. A walk in the shrubbery offered a chance for a private conversation, and a winding walk among shrubs surrounding even quite a small lawn was a feature of the garden behind a well-furnished
Regency suburban
villa. "Mr Rushworth," said Lady Bertram, "if I were you, I would have a very pretty shrubbery. One likes to get out into a shrubbery in fine weather." —
Jane Austen,
Mansfield Park (1814). , England In the later part of the 19th century hardy Asian shrubs from the hills around the
Himalayas and Western China became the most exciting new additions to the European garden, and large Asian
rhododendrons now often dominate shrubberies and woodland gardens planted in the period that have not been carefully maintained, especially the invasive
rhododendron ponticum. This had a wide range across Asia, extending to southern Spain, and it was introduced to England in the 1760s. But many sections of gardens, mostly from about 1890 to 1950, were planted as "rhododendron gardens" or "azealea gardens" from the start. A variant on this, from the 1890s onwards, was a European interpretation of the
Japanese garden, whose aesthetic was introduced to the English-speaking world by
Josiah Conder's
Landscape Gardening in Japan (
Kelly & Walsh, 1893). Conder was a British architect who had worked for the Japanese government and other clients in Japan from 1877 until his death. The book was published when the general trend of
Japonisme, or Japanese influence in the arts of the West, was already well-established, and sparked the first Japanese gardens in the West. Initially these were mostly sections of large private gardens, but as the style grew in popularity, many Japanese gardens were, and continue to be, added to public parks and gardens. These are to a large extent planted with shrubs, as well as small trees. Technically the
rose garden is a specialized type of shrub garden, but it is normally treated as a type of
flower garden, if only because its origins in Europe go back to at least the
Middle Ages in Europe, when roses were effectively the largest and most popular flowers, already existing in numerous garden
cultivars. Roses were never out of fashion, but received a great boost in the 19th century, as many hybrids from Asian species were developed, above all from
rosa chinensis (the "China rose"), which is still the dominant parent in most modern
garden roses. Large rose gardens became highly popular as features of public parks at the end of the century, and remained popular additions in the 20th. Many rose breeders also show off their plants in gardens at their nurseries. ==20th century==