The word 'horticulture' was coined in the seventeenth century from two Latin elements: 'hortus' (garden) and 'cultūra' (cultivation, tending), on the model of 'agriculture' (Latin 'ager,' field + 'cultūra'). The word means, with transparent literalness, 'garden-cultivation' — the art and science of growing plants in gardens, as distinguished from agriculture (the cultivation of open fields for food production).
Latin 'hortus' (garden) descends from the PIE root *gʰer-, meaning 'to enclose' or 'to grasp.' This root is fundamental to understanding how ancient peoples conceptualized cultivated space: a garden was first and foremost an enclosed area — a piece of land fenced off, separated from the wild. The PIE root generated a remarkable cluster of English words, all sharing the core concept of enclosure.
Through Latin 'hortus': 'horticulture' and 'horticulturist.' Through Frankish *gardo (an enclosure), which entered French as 'jardin' and English as 'garden': the entire vocabulary of gardening. Through Old English 'geard' (an enclosure, a yard): 'yard' (an enclosed area around a building). Through Old Norse 'garðr' (an enclosure): 'garth' (a yard or garden, surviving in place names
Greek 'khórtos' (χόρτος, an enclosed feeding place, a pasture) is another reflex of the same root, and it appears in the English word 'chorus' (originally a circular dancing place — an enclosed area for performers). Russian 'gorod' (city, enclosed settlement — as in Novgorod, 'new city') also descends from *gʰer-.
The second element, 'cultūra,' comes from Latin 'colere' (to cultivate, to tend, to inhabit), from PIE *kʷel- (to move around, to dwell, to cultivate). This root produced 'culture' (cultivation, both of land and of the mind), 'cultivate,' 'colony' (a settlement of cultivators), 'agriculture,' 'cult' (a system of worship — the tending of a god), and 'cycle' (a moving around, through Greek).
Horticulture as a distinct discipline emerged in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as botanical science separated from folk gardening. The Royal Horticultural Society (founded 1804) in London became the world's leading horticultural institution. Horticulture differs from agriculture primarily in scale and focus: agriculture produces staple crops on large fields for mass consumption, while horticulture tends gardens for ornamental plants, fruits, vegetables, and specialty crops, often with greater attention to individual plant care.
The word preserves an ancient truth about the relationship between cultivation and enclosure. The first gardens were not open fields but walled or fenced spaces — the Persian 'paradeisos' (walled garden, the origin of 'paradise'), the Egyptian temple gardens, the Roman 'hortus conclusus' (enclosed garden). Horticulture began, and etymologically remains, the art of tending an enclosed space.