Question:
Who did build Taj-Mahal in India?
nibiru
2005-12-24 23:48:14 UTC
Who did build Taj-Mahal in India?
Four answers:
spiderman???
2005-12-25 00:00:55 UTC
The origin of the name "Taj Mahal" is not clear. Court histories from Shah Jehan's reign only call it the rauza (tomb) of Mumtaz Mahal. It is generally believed that "Taj Mahal" (usually translated as either "Crown Palace" or "Crown of the Palace") is an abbreviated version of her name, Mumtaz Mahal.



The construction of this marble masterpiece is credited to the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan who erected this mausoleum in the memory of his beloved wife, Arjumand Bano Begum, popularly known as Mumtaz Mahal, who died in AH 1040 (AD 1630). Her 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.



The construction of Taj Mahal was started in AD 1631 and completed at the end of 1648 AD. For seventeen years, twenty thousand workmen are said to be employed on it daily, for their accommodation a small town, named after the deceased empress-'Mumtazabad, now known as Taj Ganj, was built adjacent to it. Amanat Khan Shirazi was the calligrapher of Taj Mahal, his name occurs at the end of an inscription on one of the gates of the Taj. Poet Ghyasuddin had designed the verses on the tombstone, while Ismail Khan Afridi of Turkey was the dome maker. Muhammad Hanif was the superintendent of Masons. The designer of Taj Mahal was Ustad Ahmad Lahauri. The material was brought in from all over India and central Asia and it took a fleet of 1000 elephants to transport it to the site. The central dome 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 rare, semi precious and precious stones were used for inlay work in the Taj Mahal. The chief building material, the white marble was brought from the quarries of Makrana, in distt. Nagaur, Rajasthan





Read this article
2005-12-24 23:59:00 UTC
The Taj Mahal is a monument located in Agra, India, constructed between 1631 and 1653 by a workforce of more than twenty thousand. The Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan commisioned its construction as a mausoleum for his wife, Arjumand Banu Begum, who was known as Mumtaz Mahal.





The Taj Mahal

Enlarge

The Taj Mahal

View from southwest garden

Enlarge

View from southwest garden

View from northwest, across the Yamuna River

Enlarge

View from northwest, across the Yamuna River



The Taj (as it is often called) is among the most recoginizable and celebrated buildings in the world -- a masterpiece of Mughal architecture that brilliantly combines elements of Persian and Hindu architecture. Admirers find every aspect of its aesthetic to be elegant and refined -- from its overall design to the precision of the semiprecious inlays that decorate its stunning white marble walls. The Taj has achieved special note because of the romance of its inspiration -- the most famous memorial to a man's love for his wife.
?
2016-05-20 07:11:18 UTC
Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan built Taj Mahal in memory of his beloved wife, Mumtaz Mahal.
kojava
2005-12-24 23:53:35 UTC
"The Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan commisioned its construction as a mausoleum for his wife, Arjumand Banu Begum, who was known as Mumtaz Mahal."


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...