Ram Bagh
The Ram Bagh is the oldest Mughal Garden in India, originally built by the Mughal Emperor Babur in 1528, located about five kilometers northeast of the Taj Mahal in Agra, India. Babur was temporarily buried there before being interred in Kabul.
The garden is a Persian garden, where pathways and canals divide the garden to represent the Islamic ideal of paradise, an abundant garden through which rivers flow. The Aram Bagh provides an example of a variant of the charbagh in which water cascades down three terraces in a sequence of cascades. Two viewing pavilions face the Jumna river and incorporates a subterranean 'tahkhana' which was used during the hot summers to provide relief for visitors. The garden has numerous water courses and fountains.
The name is a corruption
of the Persian Aaram Bagh meaning 'Garden of Rest'. It is also variously known
as Bagh-i Nur Afshan 'Light-Scattering Garden', Aalsi Bagh or 'Lazy Garden':
according to legend, Emperor Akbar proposed to his third wife, who was a gardner
there, by lying idle for 6 days until she agreed to marry him.
Jahangir waited in the
garden in early March 1621 for the most astrologically auspicious hour for him
to enter Agra after he took the Fort of Kangra. The preserved, surviving
architecture dates to his reign and demonstrates the skill of his wife Nur
Jahan as a garden designer.
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