Agra is home to the Taj Mahal.
Very year on the Journey Around the World, I have the pleasure to re visit and discover this unique place.
For the first time, we have an absolute beautiful weather , correct temperature and surprisingly a rather small amount of tourist and most of them are Indian.
Here is how to enjoy the Taj:
The Taj
Mahal is located on the right bank of the Yamuna River in a vast Mughal garden
that encompasses nearly 17 hectares, in the Agra District in Uttar Pradesh. It
was built by Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan in memory of his wife Mumtaz Mahal with
construction starting in 1632 AD and completed in 1648 AD, with the mosque, the
guest house and the main gateway on the south, the outer courtyard and its
cloisters were added subsequently and completed in 1653 AD. The existence of
several historical and Quaranic inscriptions in Arabic script have facilitated
setting the chronology of Taj Mahal. For its construction, masons,
stone-cutters, inlayers, carvers, painters, calligraphers, dome builders and
other artisans were requisitioned from the whole of the empire and also from
the Central Asia and Iran. Ustad-Ahmad Lahori was the main architect of the Taj
Mahal.
The Taj
Mahal is considered to be the greatest architectural achievement in the whole
range of Indo-Islamic architecture. Its recognised architectonic beauty has a
rhythmic combination of solids and voids, concave and convex and light shadow;
such as arches and domes further increases the aesthetic aspect. The colour
combination of lush green scape reddish pathway and blue sky over it show cases
the monument in ever changing tints and moods. The relief work in marble and
inlay with precious and semi precious stones make it a monument apart.
The
uniqueness of Taj Mahal lies in some truly remarkable innovations carried out
by the horticulture planners and architects of Shah Jahan. One such genius
planning is the placing of tomb at one end of the quadripartite garden rather
than in the exact centre, which added rich depth and perspective to the distant
view of the monument. It is also, one of the best examples of raised tomb
variety. The tomb is further raised on a square platform with the four sides of
the octagonal base of the minarets extended beyond the square at the corners.
The top of the platform is reached through a lateral flight of steps provided
in the centre of the southern side. The ground plan of the Taj Mahal is in
perfect balance of composition, the octagonal tomb chamber in the centre,
encompassed by the portal halls and the four corner rooms. The plan is repeated
on the upper floor. The exterior of the tomb is square in plan, with chamfered
corners. The large double storied domed chamber, which houses the cenotaphs of
Mumtaz Mahal and Shah Jahan, is a perfect octagon in plan. The exquisite
octagonal marble lattice screen encircling both cenotaphs is a piece of superb
workmanship. It is highly polished and richly decorated with inlay work. The
borders of the frames are inlaid with precious stones representing flowers
executed with wonderful perfection. The hues and the shades of the stones used
to make the leaves and the flowers appear almost real. The cenotaph of Mumtaz
Mahal is in perfect centre of the tomb chamber, placed on a rectangular
platform decorated with inlaid flower plant motifs. The cenotaph of Shah Jahan
is greater than Mumtaz Mahal and installed more than thirty years later by the
side of the latter on its west. The upper cenotaphs are only illusory and the
real graves are in the lower tomb chamber (crypt), a practice adopted in the
imperial Mughal tombs.
The four
free-standing minarets at the corners of the platform added a hitherto unknown
dimension to the Mughal architecture. The four minarets provide not only a kind
of spatial reference to the monument but also give a three dimensional effect
to the edifice.
The most
impressive in the Taj Mahal complex next to the tomb, is the main gate which
stands majestically in the centre of the southern wall of the forecourt. The
gate is flanked on the north front by double arcade galleries. The garden in
front of the galleries is subdivided into four quarters by two main walk-ways
and each quarters in turn subdivided by the narrower cross-axial walkways, on
the Timurid-Persian scheme of the walled in garden. The enclosure walls on the
east and west have a pavilion at the centre.
The Taj
Mahal is a perfect symmetrical planned building, with an emphasis of bilateral
symmetry along a central axis on which the main features are placed. The
building material used is brick-in-lime mortar veneered with red sandstone and
marble and inlay work of precious/semi precious stones. The mosque and the
guest house in the Taj Mahal complex are built of red sandstone in contrast to
the marble tomb in the centre. Both the buildings have a large platform over
the terrace at their front. Both the mosque and the guest house are the
identical structures. They have an oblong massive prayer hall consist of three
vaulted bays arranged in a row with central dominant portal. The frame of the
portal arches and the spandrels are veneered in white marble. The spandrels are
filled with flowery arabesques of stone intarsia and the arches bordered with
rope molding.
The old British way of cutting the Grass
we are going in and need to protect our steps
The cleaning of the white Marble is done by hands
The Inlay work is amazing and think about been nearly 600 years old
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