What did Indian gardens look like before the invaders arrived? The Mughals imposed their 16th century Persian constraints—they were all for walls and the fussy geometry of symmetry—and then came the British, to foist their water-guzzling lawns on a climate ill-prepared to keep grass green. But before all that?
While those early gardens are mostly lost to history, they would have been refuges: designed for fragrance, cooling breezes, and privacy. "In a hot climate, people mostly didn't stir until the evenings, and their gardens would draw them out," says garden historian Eugenia Herbert, author of Flora's Empire: British Gardens in India ($45 from University of Pennsylvania Press).
The gardens we think of today as being quintessentially Indian are those with Persian roots: with raised walkways, and intersecting water channels and quadrants (microcosm gardens, in effect) and flowers and fruit trees and high walls.
Wondering how to incorporate such 16th century ideas into a modern garden design? Here are 10 must-have features:
Water
Above: A lap pool in Awas, India. Photograph via RMA Architects.
Canals and reflecting pools remain typical features of Indian gardens, where water is perhaps the greatest luxury of all. "Most of the year is very hot and very dry, and you crave water," says Herbert.
Floating Lotus
Above: Floating lotus plants. Photograph via Shutterstock.
As the baby Buddha took his first steps, lotus flowers bloomed beneath his feet. "Lotus is the quintessential Indian plant; it grows in ponds, often muddy ponds," says Herbert.
Will lotus grow in your pond? The plant, hardy in zones 4-10, needs fresh water. "It will not tolerate any level of salt," warns Pond Plants, which sells ten varieties (available seasonally, now through June).
Fountains
Above: A fountain created by Lutsko Associates is set in a curving bronze garden wall.
"They are tremendously important in gardens for obvious reasons: for the cooling effect in a hot climate," says Herbert. "If you strolled in a garden in the evening, there would be a wonderful sound of water from the fountains and highly scented shrubs, and moonlight on the flowers. It's a magical effect."
Want to add a fountain to your garden? See some of our favorite backyard fountains in In Praise of the Water Fountain.
Shade
Above: Spasm Design Architects' cantilevered overhang creates a shady, sheltered outdoor space with a hanging daybed at a weekend house in Khopoli, in Maharashtra, India.
Most of the year is hot and dry in India. To make a garden hospitable, "Brahmins choose shade to fight the heat," says Herbert.
Boundary Walls
Above: Fruit trees espaliered in a walled garden. Photograph by Kendra Wilson.
"The tradition goes back to very, very distant times in Persia. The Mughal gardens were always walled," says Herbert. "There were portions of the garden that were only for women, and the rule of thumb was that the walls had to be high enough so that nobody sitting on an elephant could see over."
Symmetry
Above: The 16th century Mughal ruler Humayun's tomb in Delhi served as inspiration for the Taj Mahal; two acres of gardens are divided into eight squares, each bisected by canals and walkways. Photograph by ZipandZim.
Persian gardens, separated into symmetrical quadrants designed to emulate the purported layout of Paradise, are often crisscrossed by waterways or tree-lined paths. Create a similarly pleasant visual symmetry with repetition: two identical planters flanking an entryway, for example.
Sandstone
Quarried in India, sandstone is a ubiquitous hardscaping material. It's available in all sort of shades—including tan, red, pink, white, and black.
Fragrance
Above: Fragrant jasmine vines in the garden. Photograph by Michelle Slatalla.
"In antiquity, there weren't that many flowers—many that we associate with India, like marigolds, were imports—and there was a tremendous importance of scented shrubs. Also jasmine. It would bloom at night, and the smell heavenly in moonlight," says Herbert. "That's where the British got the idea of a white garden."
Fresh Flowers
Above: Jasmine garlands at the market in Madurai, India. Photograph by Scott Norsworthy.
Drape a flower garland anywhere: in a door, over an entryway, on a table. "Flowers are woven profoundly into all aspects of Indian culture," says Herbert. "In India, they'll cover anything sacred in a garland. It really is striking to see, when you go to a flower market, that it's just the flower heads there, and they're being strung."
Fruit Trees
Above: Bananas ripen on a tree in Saharanpur, in Northern India. Photograph via India Garden.
"The Mughal gardens were meant to support themselves—they planted trees that produced fruit for market," says Herbert. "A grove of orange blossoms once surrounded the Taj Mahal, and it must have smelled fantastic."
For more garden design tips, see:
- 10 Garden Ideas to Steal from France.
- Top 10 Garden Design Trends of 2015.
- 11 Garden Ideas to Steal from Martha Stewart.
Looking for more Garden Inspiration from India? Browse through the images in our Gardenista Gallery.
For modern indoor-outdoor living on India's coast, see A River Runs Through It: Brio Architects in India on Remodelista.
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