Eduard Petzold
Carl Eduard Adolph Petzold (14 January 1815 – August 1891) was a German landscape gardener.
Life
[edit]Petzold was born in Königswalde (Lubniewice), Brandenburg. As a child, he followed his parents in 1826 to Muskau, visiting the town's school and in 1828 the grammar school at Halle in Prussian Saxony.
![Castle Park in Lysá nad Labem, Czech Republic](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Lys%C3%A1_nad_Labem%2C_z%C3%A1mek.jpg/250px-Lys%C3%A1_nad_Labem%2C_z%C3%A1mek.jpg)
In 1831, he started working at the Park von Muskau of the Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau, who turned out to be of great influence on his later work. 1835-38 he created his first Park at Matzdorf (Silesia). In 1844-52 he received the position of court gardener in Weimar, in 1852-1872 he returned as Parkinspector to Muskau, and was, in 1852-72, Director of Parks of the Netherlands.
He created 174 parks and gardens in Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Bulgaria, and Turkey.[1]
He published frequently on his art, as well as biographical studies of other landscape gardeners, especially his study Fürst Hermann von Pückler-Muskau in seiner Bedeutung für die bildende Gartenkunst, of 1874.
See also
[edit]Notes and citations
[edit]- ^ For full information see: Michael Rohde, Von Muskau bis Konstantinopel, 1998.
Bibliography
[edit]- Michael Rohde: Von Muskau bis Konstantinopel. Eduard Petzold ein europäischer Gartenkünstler [in German], Dresden: Verlag der Kunst, 1998, ISBN 90-5705-119-2.