🌍 English Origins #30
Old Persian
paradise
/ˈpærədaɪs/
낙원, 천국
From Old Persian pairidaēza ("a walled garden") — the royal gardens of Persia became the very symbol of religious paradise.
✍️ ONGO · 2026-04-06 · 5 min read
01

Origin Story

Era
Ancient Persia, 6th century BCE

The journey of paradise begins in the gardens of the ancient Persian Empire. The Old Persian word pairidaēza was a compound of pairi ("around") and daēza ("wall"), meaning "a walled garden." In the age of Cyrus the Great, Persian kings channeled water into the heart of the desert to create lavish gardens — and these were the pairidaēza. When the Greek historian Xenophon visited Persia, he called such a garden a paradeisos (παράδεισος). In the arid Middle East, a walled world where water flowed and flowers bloomed was nothing less than an earthly ideal. The word was later used in the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible (the Septuagint) to render the Garden of Eden, and it passed through Latin paradisus to become English paradise. A physical garden had become a spiritual heaven.

The traditional Iranian garden form known as Chahār Bāgh ("Four Gardens") divides the garden into four quarters with water channels, symbolizing the four rivers of paradise described in the Quran. The gardens of the Alhambra in Spain are a direct descendant of this same Persian tradition.

📚 Sources
  • Oxford English Dictionary
    paradise: from Old French paradis, from Latin paradisus, from Greek paradeisos "park, paradise," from Old Persian pairidaēza "enclosure, park"
  • Online Etymology Dictionary
    paradise (n.): late 12c., from Old French paradis, from Late Latin paradisus, from Greek paradeisos "park, garden," from Old Persian pairidaeza "enclosure"
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica
    The concept traveled from Persian royal gardens through Greek, Hebrew, and Latin texts to become the Western concept of heaven — a remarkable cultural journey spanning millennia
02

Word Evolution

1
Old Persian
pairidaēza
a walled garden
2
Ancient Greek
paradeisos
a royal garden, a park
3
Biblical Latin
paradisus
the Garden of Eden, heaven
4
Modern English
paradise
paradise, an ideal place
03

Words from the Same Root

park
The same idea of an "enclosed space" — from Old French parc.
garden
From Germanic gardin ("fence") — the same notion of a walled-in space.
Eden
From Hebrew eden ("delight") — paradise was used to translate it.
04

Memory Hook

paradise = pairi ("around") + daeza ("wall") — "a dream garden behind walls." Remember that a Persian king's garden became heaven itself.

""The moment humankind raised a wall in the middle of the desert and led water inside, it invented paradise.""

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