Afghanistan

Bagh-e Babur

WHS Score 0.76
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  • Wojciech Fedoruk
Bagh-e Babur is a Mughal garden in Kabul and the final resting-place of the first Mughal emperor Babu. It is an intentionally designed cultural landscape with shifting goals between the 16th and the 20th century. The gardens were heavily damaged during the Afghan Civil War (1992-96) but are being rehabilitated with a focus on the Timurid islamic garden.

Site Info

Official Information
Full Name
Bagh-e Babur (ID: 5469)
Country
Afghanistan
Status
Nominated 2027 Site history
History of Bagh-e Babur
2009: Added to Tentative List
Added to tentative list
2024: Incomplete - not examined
Criteria
Links
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org

Community Information

  • Community Category
  • Secular structure: Park or garden
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First published: 07/10/24.

Wojciech Fedoruk

Bagh-E Babur

Bagh-e Babur (Nominated)

Bagh-e Babur by Wojciech Fedoruk

Babur's Gardens were founded by Babur, an eminent ruler and warrior, founder of the Mughal dynasty. Babur loved Kabul and the oasis of peace he had created so much that he ordered to be buried there in a roofless tomb, so that after his death the Kabul’s rain and the Kabul’s wind would cool him. At first, the wish was not fulfilled - Babur was buried in Agra, but after a few years his body was moved to Kabul and placed in a white tomb. In addition to the tomb, there is the Shah Jahan Mosque (the builder of the Taj Mahal) and the so-called The Queen's Palace from the 19th century. Babur Gardens suffered terribly during the civil war of 1992-1996, but was later very comprehensively rebuilt.

Babur Gardens is a candidate for inclusion on the UNESCO list in 2026, but I must admit that I am not entirely convinced by this proposal. There is nothing special about the gardens themselves today, they look like a moderately attractive park. Do constructions like Babur's Grave and other buildings warrant entry? In my opinion, not necessarily. The state party submitted a very extensive description justifying the OUV, based, among others, on the statement that Babur’s Gardens are the first example of Mughal gardens, but is this enough for becoming a WHS? Hopefully we will find out in 2026 and that this proposal will be eventually assessed.

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