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Art & Architecture Architecture Religious Architecture

The Taj Mahal

A white marble tomb built in 1631-48 in Agra, seat of the Mugal Empire by Shah Jehan for his wife, Arjuman Banu Begum, the monument sums up many of the formal themes that have played through Islamic architecture.

Major General Sir W.H. Sleeman, administrator in the Bengal Army who had been to the Taj (Mahal) in 1836, published Rambles and Recollections of an Indian official in 1844. He wrote that for him the building stood alone in architecture for its `entire harmony of parts, a faultless congregation of architectural beauties, on which (the mind) could dwell for ever without fatigue'. (His wife wished for a similar burial place: `I would die tomorrow to have such another over me.')

The dome of the Taj, however, surpassed for the American Bayard Taylor the finest European dome that he could think of. Its lightness reminded him of a `silver bubble, about to burst in the sun'.

Such was the teasing marvel of the Taj, simultaneously and mysteriously aloof and alluring, that the English artist Edward Lear could not paint it. Confronted by the great building on his visit of 16 February 1874, he concentrates on the luxuriant gardens with their bright green parrots `flitting across like live emeralds', and goes on: `What can I do here? Certainly not the architecture, which I naturally shall not attempt, except perhaps in a slight sketch of one or two direct garden views'. He mentally divides the human race into two categories: those who have seen the Taj and those who have not.

The Mughals `designed like giants, and finished like jewellers' (the remark was by Bishop Heber). For Kipling it was `the Ivory gate through which all dreams pass.

by: FSTC Limited, Fri 20 December, 2002


Related Articles:
Architecture of Early Islam (622-661) by: FSTC Limited
The early period of Islam is characterised by the foundation of Muslim Caliphate (state) and the establishment of the congregational mosque. This period witnessed the introduction of a number of architectural design principles and rules.

Introduction to Islamic Architecture by: FSTC Limited
Muslim architecture attests to the high level of power and sophistication that the Muslim community had reached at a time when Europe was living in the dark ages. The world owes much of its architectural development to early Muslim architects.

References:
The Oriental Obsession by: John Sweetman
John Sweetman: The Oriental Obsession: Cambridge University Press, 1987. pp. 155-7.


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