Sunday, September 9, 2007

Humayun's Tomb

More about our neighbourhood; our home is situated around the corner from the beautiful Mughal tomb and garden of the Emperor Humayun.





From our roof we have a good view of the magnificent dome of 16th c. Mughal emperor Humayun’s tomb, set in a 30 acre garden that was recently restored by the Aga Khan foundation.
I call it "the Great-Grandfather of the Taj Mahal", as the innovative architectural design of Humayun's tomb later inspired that masterpiece of architectural grace, the Taj Mahal, which was built by his great-grandson, Emperor Shah Jehan.
Humayun suffered an accidental death, in 1556, after falling down the spiral stairs in his library, leaving his young son Akbar as heir apparent.

His widow, Haji Begum, began construction on the tomb in either 1565, or 1569 (sources disagree). She contracted a Persian architect, Mirak Mirza Ghiyas, to create the building in the Persian style, and he gave India it's first full double dome. Red sandstone outlined by white marble was a design feature indigenous to the subcontinent, as were the chattris (roof pavilions).


The interior is quite austere, but the surface designs of intricate geometrical stone inlay, play with the poetry of filtered light, entering from the multi-layered chiseled stone screens.




The morning sun lays a network of lace shadows in the eastern burial chambers, where the queen and other royal ladies are buried, and the setting sun sends molten gold jigsaw shapes across the west-facing starry-patterned floor. At each corner of the octagonal chamber, light filters in through three sets of separate carved screens, creating a somber dappled light.



The building is known as the "dormitory of the Mughals", as, beneath the massive plinth, hundreds of later royals lie buried. Each archway marks a burial chamber.
The complex contains 3000 meters of hand-chiseled sandstone water channels, pathways, fountains, several other beautiful tombs and a mosque. The Mughal garden is an earthly reflection of Paradise, divided into orderly quadrants, sectioned by sparkling running water in channels and water chutes and fountains, and ornamented by favoured trees and shrubs, cypress, neem, fig and other fruit trees, and flowering shrubs like jasmine.


The engineering entailed to manage the smooth flow of water by gravity from end to end of the 30 acre garden is mind-boggling. When the Aga Khan foundation undertook the extensive restoration project, much stonework, cleaning, and channel repair was required, but correction of the original water levels of the garden channels was minimal.


The peace and quiet in the garden is sublime.
Many residents of our neighbourhood enjoy early morning walks in the garden.



coming next; more about the restoration work, and other buildings in the complex

2 comments:

AzizA MeelaS said...

These are great images. I am using them for reference for a project that I am working on. Do you have any more that I can see?

Petergriy said...

Nice post, Thankyou for sharing.
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