The word "landscape" is one of the most striking examples of art shaping language. It entered English around 1598, borrowed from Dutch "landschap" (a region, a painting of scenery), composed of "land" (land) and "-schap" (a condition or state, equivalent to English "-ship" as in "friendship" or "kinship"). The word came to English not through everyday contact but through the specific influence of Dutch landscape painting.
Before the late 16th century, English had no single word for a view of natural scenery considered as a whole. One could describe individual features — hills, rivers, forests — but the concept of the landscape as a unified visual composition did not have a name. Dutch painters of the Renaissance, and especially of the 17th-century Golden Age, developed landscape painting into a major art form. When English speakers encountered these paintings, they borrowed the Dutch term along with the artistic concept.
The earliest English uses of "landscape" referred specifically to paintings, not to actual scenery. A landscape was a picture. The semantic expansion from the painting to the thing depicted — from a landscape painting to the landscape itself — occurred during the 17th century. By the 18th century, "landscape" could mean the actual view of natural scenery, and people began to speak of landscapes as beautiful, dramatic, or bleak.
The suffix "-scape" was extracted from "landscape" and became productive in English, generating a series of parallel terms: "seascape" (a painting or view of the sea, coined 1799), "cityscape" (an urban view), "moonscape" (the surface of the moon), "skyscape," "snowscape," "dreamscape," and "soundscape." None of these formations exist in Dutch — English created them by analogy.
The verb "to landscape" — meaning to improve the appearance of a piece of land through planting, grading, and design — appeared in the 19th century. "Landscaping" became a profession and an industry, and "landscape architecture" was established as a discipline by Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York's Central Park (1858). The term "landscape architect" was Olmsted's own coinage.
German "Landschaft" is the direct cognate, and like the Dutch original, it means both a region and a painting of scenery. In German geography, a "Landschaft" is a defined natural region with characteristic features. The Scandinavian cognates (Swedish "landskap," Danish "landskab") similarly denote both scenery and administrative regions — Swedish "landskap" is the term for the historical provinces of Sweden.
The "landscape" orientation of a page or screen (wider than it is tall) takes its name from landscape painting, which is typically wider than tall to capture horizontal scenery. The opposite, "portrait" orientation (taller than wide), is named for portrait painting. These terms were adopted by the printing and computing industries, making art-historical vocabulary part of everyday digital literacy.
In modern usage, "landscape" has been metaphorically extended far beyond physical scenery. People speak of the "political landscape," the "media landscape," the "competitive landscape," and the "digital landscape." These uses treat complex, multi-faceted domains as if they were visible terrain to be surveyed and understood.
The environmental movement of the late 20th century gave "landscape" new scientific precision. Landscape ecology, founded as a discipline in the 1980s, studies the patterns and interactions within landscapes at various scales. "Landscape-level conservation" considers entire ecosystems rather than individual species or habitats.
From Dutch Golden Age studios to modern digital screens, "landscape" demonstrates how a word borrowed for art can become indispensable to everyday language, science, technology, and metaphor.