TAJ MAHAL - symbol of TRUE LOVE

Taj Mahal- symbol of love - Taj Mahal was built by Shahjahan in mrmory for his wife Mumtaz
India
December 23, 2006 4:36am CST
Taj Mahal Story The history of Taj Mahal dates back to the Mughal Era in India between 16th & 19th. The construction of this masterpiece is credited to the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, who erected this mausoleum in the memory of his beloved mistress, Arjumand Bano Begum, popularly known as Mumtaz Mahal, who died in 1630 AD. Taj Mahal - Agra Mumtaz Mahal's last wish to her husband was "to build a tomb in her memory such as the world had never seen before". Thus emperor Shah Jahan set about building this fairytale like marvel. Mumtaz Mahal died, after delivering her fourteenth child "Gauharar". While Mumtaz was on her deathbed Shahjahan had promised her, never to remarry and to build the richest mausoleum over her grave. The body was temporarily buried in the Zainabadi Garden in Burhanpur and in six months time removed to Agra. He decided to build the mausoleum in a plot on the riverside. The work on the tomb started with thousands of artisans and labourers. Shahjahan requested Raja Jai Singh to immediately and constantly supply the Makrana marble for the tomb. To carry huge marble slabs to the top, an inclined two and a half mile long road ramp was built. The construction materials were brought in from all over India and central Asia and it took a fleet of 1000 elephants to transport it to the construction site. The central dome of the tomb is 187 feet high at the centre. Red sandstone was brought from Fatehpur Sikri, Jasper from Punjab, Jade and Crystal from China, Turquoise from Tibet, Lapis Lazuli and Sapphire from Sri Lanka, Coal and Cornelian from Arabia and diamonds from Panna. In all 28 kind of semi precious and precious stones were used for inlay work in the Taj Mahal. The main building material, the white marble was brought from the quarries of Makrana, in distt. Nagaur, Rajasthan. In almost six years the main edifice of the tomb was complete. Ustad Ahmad Lahori was the chief architect of the project. For twenty two years, twenty thousand workmen were employed on the construction of the Taj daily. A small town called Mumtazabad, now known as Taj Ganj, was settled for the accommodation of the workers on the site. Amanat Khan Shirazi was the calligrapher of Taj Mahal. Poet Ghyasuddin had designed the verses on the tombstone and Ismail Khan Afridi of Turkey was the dome maker. Muhammad Hanif was the superintendent of Masons. Humayun's Tomb and the tomb of Abdul Rahim Khan-i-Khana in Delhi, Akbar's tomb at Sikandara and the tomb of Itmad-ud-Daula at Agra, built by Nurjahan for her father had served as model for the Taj Mahal. The dome-topped structure raised on a high platform and the grand pietra dura decoration and exquisitely coloured hard precious stones infixed into the white marble were an inspiration for Shahjahan. The lyrical rhythm of the floral motifs had an awesome beauty, which the Taj greatly copied from the tomb of Itmad-ud-Daula. The expenses in the construction of Taj was worked out to be 50 lakhs on those days. Father Manrique in 1641 advanced the claim of the Italian jeweler Geronimo Veroneo as the architect of the Taj, not willing to allow the native artisans all the credit for this excellent work. But the claim made by him was never be proved, hence remained a legend only. Even after more than three centuries have passed, the Taj is seen by millions of tourists every year. Taj Mahal is best described by the English poet, Sir Edwin Arnold, as "Not a piece of architecture, as other buildings are, but the proud passions of an emperor's love wrought in living stones." The Taj Mahal The most beautiful building in the world. In 1631 the emperor Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal in memory of his wife Mumtaz, who died in childbirth. The white marble mausoleum at Agra has become the monument of a man's love for a woman. Shah Jahan came to power in 1622 when he seized the throne from his father, while murdering his brothers to ensure his claim to rule. He was known as an extravagant and cruel leader. But he redeemed himself by his generosity to his friends and the poor, by his passion in adorning India with some of its most beautiful architecture, and by his devotion to his wife Mumtaz Mahal - "Ornament of the Palace." He had married her when he was 21, when he already had two children by an earlier consort. Mumtaz gave her husband 14 children in eighteen years, and died at the age of 39 during the birth of the final child. Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal as a monument to her memory and her fertility, but then relapsed into a life of scandalous behavior. This tomb was only one of hundreds of beautiful buildings that Shah Jahan erected, mostly at Agra and in the new Dehli that came into being under his planning. Many architects have rated it as the most perfect of all buildings standing on earth. Three artists designed it: a Persian, an Italian, and a Frenchman. But the design is completely Mohammedan. Even the skilled artisans who built it were brought in from Baghdad, Constantinople, and other centers of the Muslim faith. For 22 years more than 20,000 workmen were forced to build the Taj. The Maharaja of Jaipur sent the marble as a gift to Shah Jahan. The building and its surroundings cost more than $200,000,000 in todays currency. Passing through a high wall, one comes suddently upon the Taj - raised upon a marble platform, and framed on either side by handsome mosques and stately minarets. In the foreground spacious gardens enclose a pool in whose waters the inverted palace becomes a quivering dream. Every portion of the structure is of white marble, precious metals, or costly stones. The building is a complex figure of twelve sides, four of which are portals. A slender minaret rises at each corner, and the roof is a massive spired dome. The main entrance, once guarded with solid silver gates, is a maze of marble embroidery; inlaid in the wall in jeweled script are qotations from the Koran, one of which invites the "pure in heart" to enter "the gardens of Paradise." Shah Jahan had begun his reign by killing his brothers; but he had neglected to kill his sons, one of whom was destined to overthrow him. In 1657 his son Aurangzeb led an insurrection from the Deccan. Aurangzeb defeated all the forces sent against him, captured his father, and imprisoned him in the Fort of Agra. For 9 bitter years the deposed emperor lingered there, never visited by his son, attended only by his faithful daughter Jahanara, and spending his days looking from the Jasmine Tower of his prison across the Jumna to where his once-beloved Mumtaz lay in her jeweled tomb. The new emperor Aurangzeb was a more pious Muslim than his father Shah Jahan had been. He memorized the entire Koran, spent days in fasts, and campaigned against infidelity. He cared little for luxuries, but, paradoxically, gave the world one of its most perfect works of art: a marble screen inside the Taj Mahal. Native and European thieves robbed the tomb of its abundant jewels, and of the gold railing, encrusted with precious stones, that once enclosed the sarcophagi of Shah Jahan and his Queen. Aurangzeb replaced the railing with an octagonal screen of almost transparent marble, carved into a miracle of alabaster lace. Few products of human art have ever surpassed the beauty of this screen. From afar the Taj Mahal, with its delicate details, is not imposing. Only a nearer view reveals that its perfection has no proportion to its size. When in our hurried times, we see enormous structures of a hundred stories raised in a year, and then consider how 20,000 men worked for 22 years on this little tomb, hardly a hundred feet high, we begin to sense the difference between industry and art. And perhaps more importantly, we sense the ultimate lesson it offers: beauty and that which lasts, is based on love.
3 responses
• United States
23 Dec 06
I did not see Taj Mahal yet but know the story behind it. It carries a great love story. Even today, people who are in love present Taj Mahal as token of love.
@apostrofy (661)
• Romania
23 Dec 06
i had always been fascinated about misterious and magical love stories. and since u posted this i wanted to share with u that taj mahal is my favorite place in the world, wich i hope one day i get to visit. it's the most perfect handmade symbol of love.
• Malaysia
23 Dec 06
I am not sure how to respond. I am amazed of the facts that you have managed to cramp into this. Thank you for an enlightening history of the Taj Mahal. I have never been there but it seems to read like a movie. Someday, when I visit India or rather Agra, I shall make sure I have time to visit this wonder of the world.