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The Red Fort

 

Baby Taj


 
 
India

 

Agra

 

Taj Mahal



 

The Taj Mahal is one of the most splendid pieces of architecture in the world. It was built by the 5th Mogul emperor of India, Shah Jahan, as a mausoleum to his beloved wife Ar-ju-mand Banu Begum, a Muslim Persian princess better known by her other name, Mumtaz Mahal, which means, the Distinguished of the Palace.  The couple met in 1607, when he was 15, and he fell in love, although they weren't married until 1612 when she became his second wife. She was his companion on all his journeys and military expeditions. It was on one of his expeditions when giving birth to their 14th child that she died.  Overpowered by grief, Shah Jahan resolved to immortalize the memory of his beloved wife by building the finest sepulchre ever built; which was to become a monument to eternal love.
 
The Taj Mahal is in fact an architectural complex and not just the one building. It stands in a formally laid-out walled garden entered through a pavilion and comprises of five main elements:  The Mausoleum (which is what most people know as the Taj Mahal) with  four minarets, a Mosque, a Rest House or the Response placed opposite to give it symmetry, the main Gateway and the garden. All were built as integral part of a single unit, carefully planned to harmonise, as a law of Islam decrees that once a tomb is completed nothing can be added or be taken away.
 
The mausoleum stands on a raised platform (186 feet square) with its four corners truncated, forming an unequal octagon. The mausoleum is constructed of brick and covered with white marble. Its central dome is 58 feet in diameter and rises to a height of 213 feet and is flanked by four subsidiary domed chambers. At the side of the Mausoleum are four detached minarets rising from the plinth, these are 138 feet high. They were built out of plumb, slanting so that if they were to topple, they would fall away from the Taj. They also form a visual framework to the Taj and enhance the symmetry of the building.
 
The interior is beautifully decorated with carvings and semi precious inlaid stones and at the centre is the room with the tombs. The tombs of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal are actually located in a burial crypt below, above them; in the main chamber are false tombs, a common practice in mausoleums built during the Mughal period. These lie in the centre of the room which is surrounded by a marble screen. The tomb of Shah Jahan is the only asymmetrical thing in the Taj which indicates that the original plans for the mausoleum did not include Shah Jahan's cenotaph. The entire mausoleum - inside and outside - is decorated with inlaid design of flowers and calligraphy using semi precious gems such as agate and jasper. The designs are inlaid into the marble using the process known as Pietre Dura.
 
To the west of the mausoleum on a plinth stands the Mosque which is made from red sandstone and measures 210 feet in length and 90 feet in width.  It has a marble facing which provides a contrast of colours and has one dominant portal, with smaller portals on each side.  Opposite is The Rest House which is a mirror of the mosque.
 
From its inception in 1631 it took 22 years to complete and nearly bankrupted the nation.  In 1658 Shah Jahan was deposed by his son and imprisoned in the Red Fort where he was only able look at the Taj; he was never allowed to visit it again. He remained in the Red Fort until his death in 1666 when he was interred in the Taj next to Mumtaz.

































 






 

To see more photographs and take a virtual tour of the site click on the photoshow below.
 




 

View in Google Street View and Google Earth

Panorama Available at airpano.com

Addition information can be seen on Encyclopaedia Britannica

 


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