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Place to see in
Agra.
Agra's Taj Mahal is one of the most
famous buildings in the world, the mausoleum of Shah Jahan's
favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. It is one of the New Seven Wonders of
the world, and one of three World Heritage Sites in Agra.
Completed in 1653, the Tāj Mahal was built by the Mughal king Shāh
Jahān as the final resting place for his beloved wife, Mumtāz Mahal.
Finished in marble, it is perhaps India's most fascinating and
beautiful monument. This perfectly symmetrical monument took 22
years (1630-1652) of hard labour and 20,000 workers, masons and
jewellers to build and is set amidst landscaped gardens. Built by
the Persian architect, Ustād 'Īsā, the Tāj Mahal is on the bank of
the Yamuna River. It can be observed from Agra Fort from where
Emperor Shāh Jahān gazed at it, for the last eight years of his
life, a prisoner of his son Aurangzeb. It is an acknowledged
masterpiece of symmetry. Verses of the Koran are inscribed on it and
at the top of the gate are twenty-two small domes, signifying the
number of years the monument took to build. The Tāj Mahal was built
on a marble platform that stands above a sandstone one. The most
elegant dome of the Tāj Mahal has a diameter of 60 feet (18 m), and
rises to a height of 80 feet (24 m); directly under this dome is the
tomb of Mumtāz Mahal. Shah Jahān's tomb was erected next to hers by
his son Aurangzeb. The interiors are decorated by fine inlay work,
incorporating semi-precious stones.
Agra Fort (sometimes called the Red Fort), was commissioned by the
great Mughal Emperor Akbar in 1565, and is another of Agra's World
Heritage Sites. A stone tablet at the gate of the Fort states that
it had been built before 1000 but was later renovated by Akbar. The
red sandstone fort was converted into a palace during Shāh Jahān's
time, and reworked extensively with marble and pietra dura inlay.
Notable buildings in the fort include the Pearl Mosque, the
Dīwān-e-'Ām and Dīwān-e-Khās (halls of public and private audience),
Jahāngīr's Palace, Khās Mahal, Shīsh Mahal (mirrored palace), and
the Musamman Burj. Reference required
The great Mughal Emperor Akbar commissioned the construction of the
Agra Fort in 1565 CE., although it was converted into a place by his
grandson Shāh Jahān, being reworked extensively with marble and
pietra dura inlay. Notable buildings in the fort include the Pearl
Mosque or Motī Masjid, the Dīwān-e-'Ām and Dīwān-e-Khās (halls of
public and private audience), Jahāngīr's Palace, Khās Mahal, Shīsh
Mahal (mirrored palace), and the Musamman Burj. The forbidding
exteriors of this fort conceal an inner paradise. The fort is
crescent shaped, flattened on the east with a long, nearly straight
wall facing the river. It has a total perimeter of 2.4 kilometres
(1.5 mi), and is ringed by double castellated ramparts of red
sandstone punctuated at regular intervals by bastions. A 9 metres
(30 ft) wide and 10 metres (33 ft) deep moat surrounds the outer
wall.
Chhatrapati Shīvajī visited the Agra Fort, as a result of the
conditions of the Treaty of Purandar entered into with Mirzā Rājā
Jaisingh to meet Aurangzeb in the Dīwān-i-Khās (Special Audience
Chamber). In the audience he was deliberately placed behind men of
lower rank. An insulted Shīvajī stormed out of the imperial audience
and was confined to Jai Sing's quarters on 12 May 1666. Fearing the
dungeons and execution he escaped on 17 August 1666. A heroic
equestrian statue of Shīvajī has been erected outside the fort.
The fort is a typical example of Mughal architecture.Even it is
difficult to compare but It shows how the North Indian style of fort
construction differentiated from that of the South. In the South the
majority of the beautiful forts were built on the seabed like the
one at Bekal in Kerala.
[ visit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agra#Places_of_interest for more..] |