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Mahal Intoduction Taj
Mahal - History and Legends
Taj Mahal - History and Legends
On June 17, 1631 Mumtaz Mahal died, after delivering her fourteenth
child "Gauharar". Shahjahan stood dazed, unable to comprehend
the situation. She had died leaving all her children, mother,
and relations to his care. But he had promised her never to
remarry and to build the grandest mausoleum over her grave.
Her body received a temporary burial in the Zainabadi Garden
in Burhanpur and in six months time removed to Agra. Shahjahan
had already acquired from Raja Jai Singh a plot of land on the
riverside. Here was to be built the Taj Mahal. Work on the tomb
started in a frenzy with thousands of artisans and laborers
toiling ceaselessly. The first anniversary urs was held in June
1632 amid royal pomp and show, attended by Shahjahan and Jahanara.
The Mughal Emperor was a picture of grief.
On the second urs on May 26, 1633 the mausoleum had taken shape
and the crypt chamber and the surrounding works accomplished.
Peter Mundy's eyewitness account relates: "There is already
about her Tomb a rail of gold. The building is begun and goes
on with excessive labor and cost, prosecuted with extraordinary
diligence. Gold and silver esteemed common Metal, and Marble
but as ordinary stones. He intends as some think, to remove
all the City hither, causing hills to be made level because
they might not hinder the prospect of it, places appointed for
streets, shops, etc. Dwellings, commanding Merchants, shopkeepers,
Artificers to Inhabit (it) where they begin to repair and called
by her name, Tage Gunge 'Taj Ganj". This fabulous gold railing
made of 40,000 tolas of gold and encrusted with precious gems
and diamonds, enclosed the grave lying under magnificent golden
constellation of orbs and lamps.
Shahjahan issued farmans to Raja Jai Singh ordering immediate
and constant supply of the Makrana marble for the tomb. An inclined
two and a half mile long road ramp was built to carry huge marble
slabs to the top. In absence of wood, the scaffolding was of
brick. The mausoleum rose higher with every sunset. In nearly
six years time the main edifice of the tomb was complete. In
the words of Ustad Ahmad Lahori, chief architect of the project:
" And above this inner dome, which is radiant like the heart
of angels, has been raised another heaven-touching, a guava-shaped
(amrudi shakl) dome…crowning this dome of heavenly rank,
the circumference of whose outer girth is 110 yards high flittering
like the sun with its summit rising to a total height of 107
yards above the (level of the) ground."
The legendary gold railing was subsequently replaced by an octagonal
latticed screen (Mahajar-i-mushababbak) of the most marvelous
craftsmanship with an entrance fashioned of jasper after the
Turkish style, joined with gilded fasteners. It costed 10,000
rupees but is the most splendid work of art, well worth its
weight in gold. It stands enclosing the two cenotaphs.
Humayun's Tomb and the tomb of Abdul Rahim Khan-i-Khana in Delhi
had served as model for the Taj with their dome-topped structure
raised on a high platform. Akbar's tomb at Sikandara lent its
dominant four-pillar design. Its splendid calligraphic ornamentation
by Amanat Khan inspired Shahjahan to entrust the Taj ornamentation
to the same artist. The tomb of Itmad-ud-Daula at Agra, built
by Nurjahan for her father, had the most innovative and grand
pietra dura decoration, a mosaic of exquisitely colored
hard precious stones inlaid into the white marble. The lyrical
rhythm of the floral motifs had an amazing beauty, which the
Taj greatly emulated. The crypt and the cenotaphs at the Taj
carry pietra dura decoration of a fabulous unexcelled elegance.
In those days the cost of the Taj worked out to 50 lakhs and
the annual revenue of 30 villages was earmarked for the regular
maintenance of the mausoleum.
Unwilling to allow the native artisans all the credit for this
excellence, Father Manrique in 1641 advanced the preposterous
claim of the Italian jeweler Geronimo Veroneo as the architect.
But this claim could never be proved and remained a legend only.
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