The Archaeology of Gardens

Features March/April 2018

ARCHAEOLOGY’s editors explore the many reasons people have tended the earth
(Leemage/Corbis via Getty Images)
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Fresco, House of Livia, Prima Porta, 1st century B.C.

People have created gardens across the world and throughout time, and these spaces have been an essential part of the human experience. Gardens such as Eden, and also Gethsemane, where Jesus prayed and his disciples slept the night before his crucifixion, are, to this day, regarded as sacred. Gardens are also a key element in some of the best-known myths. One of the Labors of Hercules required the hero to steal, from a place on the far edge of the world called the Garden of the Hesperides, the golden apples that the goddess Hera had given to her husband Zeus as a wedding present. The palaces of the ancient Near East are known to have had spectacular gardens, including the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, whose precise location is still unknown.

Beginning in the mid-twentieth century, archaeologists started to apply the full range of methods available to identifying and understanding ancient gardens. As technology has evolved, researchers have not only been able to discover where gardens were located and, generally, what they were used for, but also to determine which individual plants were cultivated and how long they thrived. Along with written sources, this has allowed researchers to see how gardens changed over time and what they can tell us about the people and cultures who nurtured them.

  • The Archaeology of Gardens March/April 2018

    Villa Gardens

    Bay of Naples, Italy

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    (Mike P. Shepherd/Alamy Stock Photo)
  • The Archaeology of Gardens March/April 2018

    Commercial Gardens

    Cerén, El Salvador

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    (Courtesy Payson Sheets)
  • The Archaeology of Gardens March/April 2018

    Medical Gardens

    Naantali, Finland

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    (Ranta Images/Shutterstock.com)
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    Funeral Gardens

    Luxor, Egypt

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    (Courtesy © Proyecto Djehuty/Jose Latova)
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    Urban Gardens

    Aphrodisias, Turkey

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    (Courtesy R.R.R. Smith/The Mica and Ahmet Ertegün South Agora Pool Project)
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    Scientific Gardens

    The Woodlands, Philadelphia

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    (Franklinia alatamaha / Natural History Museum, London, UK / Bridgeman Images)
  • The Archaeology of Gardens March/April 2018

    Royal Gardens

    Seoul, South Korea

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    (Courtesy Cultural Heritage Administration)
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    Food and Wine Gardens

    Pompeii, Italy

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    (Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY)