The Hanging Gardens of Babylon

The Mysterious Wonder of the Ancient World

Jul 10, 2006 Robin Fowler

Did the fabled Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, really exist?

The Hanging Gardens of Babylon evoke a romantic picture of lush greenery and colorful flowers cascading from the sky. The grandeur of their sight must have been awe-inspiring, which is why Herodotus would have considered them one of his 7 Wonders of the Ancient World. However, not only are the Hanging Gardens of Babylon not standing today, but their entire existence is also up for debate. Because of the lack of documentation of them in the chronicles of Babylonian history, many doubt they were ever there. They were merely a figment of ancient imaginations, a story to be told in the annals of ancient myth and history.

In ancient writings the Hanging Gardens of Babylon were first described by Berossus, a Chaldaean (a dynasty in Babylonian history) priest who lived in the late 4th century B.C. In his book Babyloniaca, written around 280 B.C., he describes the gardens and attributes them to the great Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II. Many other Greek historians went on to provide detailed descriptions of the gardens, citing either Beossus' work, or from accounts of other ancients.

According to these ancient sources, Nebuchadnezzar had the Hanging Gardens built around 600 B.C. for his wife Amytis. Amytis was originally from Media (modern Iran), and had married Nebachadnezzar in an arrangement to further political ambitions (not uncommon for the time). Amyitis was homesick for her verdant and mountainous home, and quite depressed living in the flat and arid Babylon. So, an elaborate garden was constructed to replicate her lush homeland and cheer her up.

The Hanging Gardens did not actually hang at all. They were actually made up of a simulated mountain with rooftop gardens. They would have likely been multi-level terraces supported by baked brick columns. These columns would have been filled with dirt to allow large plantings and trees to root and grow. The effect of the plants hanging down over the years likely gave the effect of a lush mountain landscape, seemingly hanging in mid-air. It would have been spectacular to behold.

Recent archaeological excavations of the palace in Iraq have uncovered evidence of a building with vaults and a well (for irrigation?) nearby. However, the location of the palace complex contradicts where Greek historians placed the Hanging Gardens, which was on the banks of the Euphrates River. The palace excavations are simply too far away. There is promising news, though. There have been recent excavations on the banks of the Euphrates River of some substantial 25 meter-thick walls. Could these have been part of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon?

Though some believe that the Hanging Gardens never existed, it is not outside of the realm of possibility that they were real. The technology of the time would have certainly made it possible. That does not explain the lack of contemporary documentation, however. But why would later historians spend so much time describing this masterpiece of ancient history if it did not exist in at least some physical form?

Sources consulted:

Past Worlds: Atlas of Archaeology. 1988, Times Books Ltd. HarperCollinsPublishers.

Clayton, P. and Price, M. The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. 1988, New York: Barnes & Noble Books.

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