Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Historical landmark · Al-Mahawil District

Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Historical landmark · Al-Mahawil District

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GCVC+J54, Mahawil, Babylon Governorate, Iraq

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Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null
Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon by null

Highlights

The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, a legendary ancient wonder, imagined as lush, tiered terraces blooming in the heart of a desert city.  

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GCVC+J54, Mahawil, Babylon Governorate, Iraq Get directions

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GCVC+J54, Mahawil, Babylon Governorate, Iraq Get directions

Features

wheelchair accessible parking lot
wheelchair accessible entrance

Last updated

Jul 31, 2025

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This Natural Wonder Is the Most-searched in the World

"Ranked as the third most popular overall, despite not existing today or possibly never having existed." - Stacey Leasca Stacey Leasca Stacey Leasca is an award-winning journalist and co-founder of Be a Travel Writer, an online course for the next generation of travel journalists. Her photos, videos, and words have appeare

https://www.travelandleisure.com/most-googled-wonder-of-the-world-mount-everest-8642425
View Postcard for Remains of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Ian Warner

Google
Babylon is one of those special place that evokes so many vivid images of past grandeur and opulence in days long past. You really have to use your imagination to see the hanging gardens now but if they say this is where they were, I'll believe it.

Jungle “Jungle Boy” jones

Google
What a great garden. Fair prices too, picked up a pack of dandelion seeds for $7.95 after taxes. The jungle garden really brought out the jungle in the Jungle Boy.

Melissa Torres

Google
Gardens of Babylon was an amazing experience! Great plant and pot options and the staff was welcoming. Neil was very helpful!

Battu Vijay

Google
Consaft is good and package is so good They are providing many more package for trips

Tazoar Ahmad

Google
The **Hanging Gardens of Babylon** are ancient gardens considered one of the **Seven Wonders of the World**. These remarkable gardens were thought to have been located near the royal palace in **Babylon**, an ancient city in **Mesopotamia** (now in southern Iraq). However, the exact site of the Hanging Gardens has not been conclusively established, and many theories persist regarding their structure and location¹². Here are some key points about the Hanging Gardens: - **Description**: The gardens were described as an **ascending series of tiered gardens** containing a wide variety of trees, shrubs, and vines, resembling a large green mountain constructed of mud bricks. - **Origin**: According to legend, they were built by **Neo-Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar II** for his Median wife, **Queen Amytis**, who missed the green hills and valleys of her homeland. Some sources attribute their construction to the legendary queen **Semiramis**¹. - **Location Uncertainty**: The Hanging Gardens are the only one of the Seven Wonders for which the location has not been definitively established. No extant Babylonian texts mention the gardens, and no definitive archaeological evidence has been found in Babylon. Three theories exist: 1. **Mythical Ideal**: Some believe they were purely mythical, described in ancient Greek and Roman writings as a romantic ideal of an eastern garden. 2. **Destruction**: Another theory suggests they existed in Babylon but were destroyed sometime around the first century AD. 3. **Alternative Location**: The legend might refer to a well-documented garden that the **Assyrian King Sennacherib** built in his capital city of **Nineveh** on the River Tigris, near modern-day **Mosul**²³. Despite the lack of definitive evidence, the Hanging Gardens continue to captivate our imaginations as a testament to ancient engineering and beauty. 🌿🏛️

Addilyhnn Hooks

Google
this is so amazing where doing a class project on this stuff and its so cool!!

rachel robertson

Google
loved the greenery, absolutely wonderful place if you love plants!

Ravindranath M

Google
If they existed, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon would be the second oldest of the ancient wonders. Built during 425 - 240 BC, the gardens are long gone. Some scholars argue that the reason there's no record of them is precisely because they were gardens -- plants and flowers are living things that eventually die. Even if the structure on which the gardens were affixed remains, However the current state of the Legendary monument is in unrecognizable ruins. We'll start with the most popular theories about the gardens. They were likely located by the Euphrates River in what is now modern-day Iraq. The gardens didn't actually hang: They draped over the sides of terraces on a brick structure. Some accounts of the gardens claim that they grew as high as 75 feet (22.86 meters) in the air and that people could walk beneath them. Accounts from the classical writer Diodorus Siculus describe that the brick walls were 22 feet (6.7 meters) thick and 400 feet (121 meters) wide. And Philo wrote that there were several strata of flora and many levels of irrigation. The gardens wouldn't have been the only grand sight in Babylon. This ancient city was filled with shining palaces and sturdy ziggurats. Even the city gates were adorned with carvings and gleamed with glazed bricks [source: Smithsonian]. But in a desert country as dry as Iraq, canopying fronds and blooms would have been an awesome sight to see. If Babylon's buildings boasted of its great wealth, then the gardens would've demonstrated the engineering skills of their architect. It's no small feat to keep plants thriving in the desert, but to transport water to flowers perched atop a nearly five-story building is a monstrous challenge. The gardens would have relied on the Euphrates as their irrigation source, and the water would likely have been transported through a pumping system made of reeds and stone and stored in a massive holding tank. From the tank, a shaduf (a manually-operated water-lifting device) would have delivered water to the plants. According to legend, King Nebuchadnezzar built the gardens for his wife, Amytis. Amytis was a princess from Media, a region of Iran near the Caspian Sea. Nebuchadnezzar is said to have built the gardens for her as a reminder of her homeland. But it's strange that Nebuchadnezzar, who recorded his many accomplishments in cuneiform, a type of ancient writing used in record-keeping, didn't mention the gardens. This has led some scholars to theorize that the gardens were actually built by an Assyrian queen or even by Sennacherib, the ruler of Nineveh. Today, our knowledge of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon comes from interpretations of ancient accounts and artists' renderings of the wonder.