Herodotus was the first author to give a full description of the Hanging Gardens. According to him, the gardens were built by Nebuchadnezzar II to make his wife Amytis happy because she didn't like the Babylonian desert. She had lived in Persia, which had many plants and fountains. It was about 350 feet tall and was covered with trees, flowers, lawns, plants, fountains, pools, and miniature water falls. It had every kind of plant available in the kingdom. It was made of mud brick and stone, a series of terraces, one on top of the other. The plants couldn't survive without water, so they had to pump water from the Euphrates River to flow down through channels to the plants.
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Reading Herodotus' description, you'll see that what he described was Babylon itself. If you try to sketch out the city plan as he describes it, it can be done. What's more, it's pretty accurate in relation to archaeological maps. In the plan below, Herodotus' Temple of Zeus Belos is the central and above it is his King's Palace where we'd look for the Hanging Gardens. In the early 1900's German archaeologist, Robert Koldewey traced the area where the Hanging Gardens of Babylon had been laid. Only crumbling mud brick can be seen today.
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon's ruins are about 50 miles southwest of Baghdad in Iraq. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon were one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. They were a present to Nebuchadnezzar's wife.
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Cypress, ebony, ash ,cedar, oak, willow, and fir trees. Are some trees in the hanging gardens of Babylon
Nebuchadnezzar II.Nebuchanezzar II, rule of Babylonia from 605 to 562 B.C., brought the capital city of Babylon back to its former grandeur- and then some! Destroyed by the Assyrians around 689 B.C., the city was rebuilt by Nebuchadnezzar, who decorated temples and palaces with lavish gold and silver ornamentation, making it the most magnificent city of the day. Nebuchadnezzar's most noted contribution to the glory of Babylon was a series of terraced gardens called the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. Kept lush and green by an elaborate irrigation system, these towering gardens were considered one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Nebuchanezzar may have built the gardens to please his wife, who was from Mede and missed the forested mountains of her homeland.Courtesy of Kids Discover 'Mesopotamia'
The hanging gardens brought a radical change in the Babylonian life. Some stories indicate the Hanging Gardens towered hundreds of feet into the air, but archaeological explorations indicate a more modest, but still impressive, height. In the heart of the desert, the gardens had all kinds of plants and trees and a number of animals. The wife of the King, Amytis, was from Persia and she didn't like the dessert so the king built the gardens. So King Nebuchadnezzar II made the city the center of Babylon.
Some think it is and some think it is not real. But thereis no proof.
Nebuchadnezzar's famous gardens, known as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, were believed to have been built in the ancient city of Babylon, located near present-day Hillah, Babil, in Iraq. However, there is some debate among historians about the exact location and even the existence of these gardens.
The eastern hemisphere according to some websites ive searched
There is some controversy as to whether the Hanging Gardens were an actual creation or a poetic creation owing to the lack of documentation of them in the chronicles of Babylonian history.
The existence of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon is debated among historians, with some suggesting it may have been a fictional creation or later embellishment. There is limited archaeological evidence to definitively prove its existence.
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon's ruins are about 50 miles southwest of Baghdad in Iraq. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon were one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. They were a present to Nebuchadnezzar's wife.
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camels and elephants and they climbed up to the top of the palace with big water supplies on their backs, and poured the water into a big hole. there where pipes every where that led to the hanging gardens, and the people would open the gates, and late out some water to the hanging gardens.
It is not possible to see all the Seven Wonders of the World, as some (such as the "Hanging Gardens of Babylon") have been destroyed.
The exact location is unknown but some people believe they are located on the bank of the river Tigris in Iraq.
Cypress, ebony, ash ,cedar, oak, willow, and fir trees. Are some trees in the hanging gardens of Babylon
The ruins are located in southern Iraq.