New Logo: 2/5 The Garden Through the Years

The Jardin des Plantes in Montpellier, founded in 1593 by Henry IV, is the oldest botanical garden in France and one of the oldest in Europe. Affiliated with our faculty from its inception, this 4.5-hectare space in the heart of Montpellier has always been dedicated to research and teaching. Over the centuries, it has become a jewel of Montpellier’s historical heritage.

At the end of the 16th century, Pierre Richer de Belleval, a professorat the Faculty of Medicine, obtained permission from King Henry IV to establish a botanical garden intended for the cultivation and “demonstration” of medicinal plants.

Of the original garden, laid out in the years following the garden’s founding, the “Montagne de Richer” remains today, running from east to west through the garden. On this hill, Richer sought to replicate the diversity of plant life found in various habitats (shaded, sunny, moist, etc.), with special areas set aside for exotic plants.

Over the centuries, the Jardin des Plantes has evolved while retaining its educational and scientific mission. Illustrious botanists have worked there, notably Pierre Magnol, François Boissier de Sauvages, and—after the Revolution—Antoine Gouan (director from 1794 to 1803), who brought the famous “Ginkgo” to the Jardin des Plantes—a tree that would later become the symbol of the School of Public Health—as well as Auguste Broussonet (1803–1807), Augustin Pyrame de Candolle (1807–1816), Alire Raffenau-Delile (1819–1850), and Charles Frédéric Martins (1851–1879), who had a temperate greenhouse (the Serre Martins) and a lotus pond known as the “Lac aux Nélumbos” built, as well as Jules-Emile Planchon (1879–1888), who discovered phylloxera.

Over time, this botanical aspect has been enriched by a literary dimension. EThis is evidenced by the cenotaph of Narcissa, daughter of the early Romantic English poet Edward Young, before which André Gide and Paul Valéry spent long hours discussing and daydreaming, along with many other writers, such as Valery Larbaud…

Recognized for its heritage value, the Jardin des Plantes was designated a historic site in 1982 and protected as a in 1992. It has also been awarded the “remarkable garden” designation.

Today, this space continues to attract researchers, students, and tourists. The Jardin des Plantes in Montpellier, withmore than 400 years of history, continues to fulfill its mission of botanical education and research, while offering an exceptional green oasis in the heart of the city.