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600bc The question asked 'where'. The famous hanging gardens were in Babylon.
The gardens had waterways to get water to the gardens as the roman did.
The historian Herodotus (484 BC-ca. 425 BC), and the scholar Callimachus of Cyrene (ca 305-240 BC) listed the seven wonders (including the hanging gardens). Unfortunately, their writings haven't survived, but references to them have. or A for thucidydes:)
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The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
Water had to be brought to the gardens so it was the one of the first examples of an actuator.
Those were destroyed by an earthquake in the first century BC.
their hanging gardens and created the first sundial and Hammurabi's code of laws.
In the first century BC an earthquake destroyed the city including the hanging gardens.
The hanging gardens of Babylon was destroyed by minor disasters like erosion or warfare. It was destroyed in around 600BC. Since then it has levelled with the ground.
King Nebuchadnezzar II was the inventor of the screw. He is also credited with the building of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.