Charbagh

The charbagh at the Tomb of Jahangir in Lahore, Pakistan

A charbagh or chaharbagh (Persian: چهارباغ, romanizedchahārbāgh, lit.'four gardens'; Hindi: चारबाग़ chārbāgh, Urdu: چار باغ chār bāgh, Bengali: চারবাঘ) is a Persian and Indo-Persian quadrilateral garden with a layout of four gardens traditionally separated by waterways, together representing the four gardens and four rivers of Paradise mentioned in the Quran.[a] The chaharbagh may also be divided by walkways instead of flowing water.[1] Such gardens are found in countries throughout West Asia (which includes Iran), South Asia (which includes Pakistan and India), North Africa and the former al-Andalus.[2] A famous example of a charbagh is that of the Taj Mahal in India.


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  1. ^ Cornell, Vincent J. (2007) Voices of Islam: Voices of art, beauty, and science (volume 4 in the Voices of Islam series) Praeger, Westport, Connecticut, pp. 94–95, ISBN 978-0-275-98735-0
  2. ^ Begde, Prabhakar V. (1978). Ancient and Mediaeval Town-planning in India. Sagar Publications. p. 173.