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Agra has long been renowned as the
city of the Taj Mahal. This has often overshadowed the fact
that this royal Mughal has, in addition to the legendary Taj, many
magnificent monuments that epitomise the high point of the Mughal
architectural achievement. Not even Delhi the seat of kings
and emperors for over a thousand years, can boast such a heritage
of architectural and cultural splendour from the golden age of the
Great Mughals.
The Chosen City
Agra was the chosen city of
the Mughal emperors during the early years. It was here that the
founder of the dynasty, Babur, laid out the first formal Persian
garden on the banks of the River Yamuna. Here, Akbar, his grandson,
raised the towering ramparts of the great Red Fort. Within its walls,
Jehangir built rose-red palaces, courts and gardens. Shahjehan embellished
it with marbled mosques, palaces and pavilions of gem-inlaid white
marble. At Sikandra, on the outskirts
of Agra, Akbar built his own garden mausoleum. And at Fatehpur
Sikri he created a whole new city — a leap of the imagination
that made real a unique concept of planning and design and gave
expression to a style of architecture that was a perfect blend of
Islamic spatial concepts and the Hindu genius for decorative sculpture.
Across the river, Jehangir's gifted queen, Noorjehan, designed an
exquisite marble-inlaid tomb for her parents. But Agra's crowning
glory remains the Taj Mahal, a monument to love built by Shahjehan
in memory of his beloved queen, Mumtaz Mahal.
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Full moon dates for Taj Viewing.
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A Monument
of Love
The Taj Mahal stands serene and perfect
in its garden of cypresses and reflecting pools on the banks of the River
Yamuna. Its pure white marble shimmers silver in the moonlight, glows
softly pink at dawn, and at close of day reflects the fiery tints of the
setting sun. The Taj in all its timeless beauty is still the inspiration
of poets and painters, writers and photographers. And lovers still meet
here in the moonlight in the shadow of the world's most famous monument
to love.
Shahjehan built the Taj in
memory of Mumtaz Mahal who died giving birth to their 14th child. No cost
was spared to make it the most beautiful monument the world had ever seen.
White marble and red sandstone, silver and gold, camelian and jasper,
moonstone and jade, lapiz lazuli and coral were fashioned by 20,000 skilled
workers to make the emperor's dream a reality. It took 22 years to complete
— a symbol of eternal love where Shahjehan too lies buried, re-united
at last with his beloved Mumtaz.
Set at the north end of a
formal Persian garden with water courses, paved walkways and rows of dark
cypresses, the Taj rises on a high red sandstone base topped by a huge
white marble terrace, its flawless double dome flanked by four tapering
minarets. Within lies the jewel-inlaid cenotaph of the queen, and a little
to one side — the only asymmetrical feature in the Taj — the richly decorated
casket of the emperor. Both are enclosed by an octagonal screen of finely
pierced marble. So perfect are the proportions of the Taj, so exquisite
its workmanship, that it has been described as having been designed by
giants and finished by jewellers.
Excursions
: include visit to Fatehpur
Sikri, the capital of Emperor Akbar for 16 years; Mathura,
the birth place of Lord Krishna; Bharatpur,
best known for its bird sanctuary.
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PLACE TO SEE :
AGRA FORT :
Few forts in the world have a more fascinating story to tell than the
Great Fort of Agra. Originally planned as an impregnable military
structure by Akbar, the Agra Fort, over a period of time, acquired all
the elegance, lavishness and majesty of an imperial palace.
Situated 3 km upstream of the Taj Mahal
on the right bank of the Yamuna, the Agra Fort was built under the direction
of Akbar, by Mohammed Quasim Khan, his Commander-in-Chief and Governor
of Kabul. It took eight years to complete and entailed an expenditure
of three and a half million rupees.
ITMAD-UD-DAULAH'S TOMB
:
About 4 km north of the Taj, on the left bank of the Yamuna, is the perfectly
proportioned marble mausoleum of ltmad-ud-Daulah. Noor Jehan constructed
this splendid marble monument in her father's memory. This double-storied
marble tomb is replete with mosaic, inlaid with semi-precious stones.
SIKANDRA
:
Sikandra is 8 km north-east on the Agra-Delhi road. It is on the same
side of the river Yamuna as the Taj. Sikandra was built in 1492 by Sikander
Lodhi, a ruler of one of the last dynasties of the Delhi Sultanate.
Akbar, in his time, ordered the construction of Sikandra again, this time
as a site for his mausoleum, but he died before it could be completed.
The work was completed by his son Jehangir in 1613. The tomb is a combination
of Muslim and Hindu architectural styles. The building of red sandstone
is four storeys tall, approximately 31 metres in height. The first three
storeys are of red sandstone, while the fourth is entirely of marble.
DAYALBAGH (SOAMI
BAGH) :
Situated 12 km from the hotel, this is the headquarter of the Radhasoami
religious sect, founded in 1861 by Shri Shiv Dayal Singh, also known as
Swamiji Maharaj. Being built to commemorate the Supreme Creator, this
tall, unfinished facade of marble, lined with exquisitely carved pillars
and panels, was estimated to cost about five million rupees when it was
conceived. Today, the cost of work finished and work still to be done
will run into ten million.
About 500 devotees stay in the colony adjoining the samadhi. It is claimed
that it may rival the Taj Mahal in splendour when it is completed.
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