Taj Mahal, the breathtakingly elegant monument is one of the most beautiful
masterpieces of architecture found in the world. Listed as the seventh
wonder of the world and a World heritage Monument by the Unesco, this
perfectly symmetrical dream in marble is located in the city of
Agra, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, on the banks of the
Yamuna River.
Taj Mahal is famous as an enduring monument to love.
It was built by the fifth Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan as the final resting
place for his second wife, Mumtaz Mahal. |
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History says that Arjuman Banu alias Mumtaz, the daughter of Emperor Jahangir's
Prime Minister, supposedly captured the heart of Prince Khurram (Shah
Jahan) the minute he saw her. In 1612, at the age of 21, she married him
and became his beloved consort Mumtaz Mahal. Mumtaz used to accompany
Shah Jahan in his military campaigns. She was his comrade, his advisor
and she inspired him to acts of charity and benevolence towards the weak
and the needy, but even these qualities were diminished by the love that
bound her to Shah Jahan. She bore her husband 14 children. In 1630, in
Burhanpur, while accompanying her husband on a military campaign she died
giving birth to her fourteenth child, at the age of 39. On her deathbed,
it is said that Mumtaz asked the king to build a monument so beautiful
to show the world how much they loved each other. When her body was brought
to Agra, she was laid to rest in a temporary crypt in a garden along the
banks of the Yamuna River. The foundation of her mausoleum was laid in
1631. It is also said that his wife's death left Shah Jahan so heartbroken
that he locked himself in his private chambers for a month, and when he
finally emerged his hair had turned white.
Construction of the Taj Mahal began in the same year
and was completed after 22 years in 1653 at a cost of 32 Million Rupees.
Twenty thousand workmen and master craftsmen- from Persia, France, Iran,
Italy and Turkey worked on the building. Although no one knows who planned
the Taj, the name of a Persian architect, Ustad Isa, was involved in the
construction of this marble monument.
Materials
such as red sandstone, silver and gold, carnelian and jasper, moonstone
and jade, lapiz lazuli and coral were brought in from all over India and
central Asia. The white Makrana marble from Jodhpur took a fleet of 1000
elephants to transport. Precious stones for the inlay came from Baghdad,
Punjab, Egypt, Russia, China, Afghanistan, Ceylon and Persia.
The
unique Mughal style architecture combines elements and styles of Persian,
Central Asian and Islamic architecture. The Taj Mahal complex (590x300m)
mainly consists of the Darwaza or main gateway, the Bageecha or symmetrically
planned garden(300x300m), the Masjid or mosque, the Naqqar Khana or rest
house, and the Rauza or the Taj Mahal mausoleum. The actual Tomb is situated
inside the Taj.
The main entrance is from the west, but there are also
two other entrances from the east and from the south. The majestic main
gateway completed in 1648, is a large three-floored red sandstone
structure, 50ft wide and 100ft high with an octagonal central chamber
and a vaulted roof, with smaller rooms on each side. The gateway
consists of a lofty central arch with doubles storeyed wings on either
side. Above the central portal in the north and south side, there is a
series of 11 attached chattiris (umbrellas) with marble cupolas, flanked
by pinnacles. The walls are inscribed with verses from the Quran in Arabic
and is done in black calligraphy. A fine feature of the gateway is that
the lettering appears to be the same size from top to bottom. This was
done by heightening the letters as the distance from the eye increased.
The small domed pavilions on top are Hindu in style and looks regal. The
gate was originally lined with silver, now replaced with copper and decorated
with 1,000 nails whose heads were contemporary silver coins.
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