Sunday, January 23, 2011

TAJ MAHAL

Taj Mahal Story


Male Protagonist: Shah Jahan (Prince Khurram)
Female Protagonist: Mumtaz Mahal (Arjumand Baionabnu Begum)


Taj Mahal Story
The story of Taj Mahal is one of great passion and grief. The story of Taj Mahal is incomplete without the mention of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal. Shah Jahan chose to express his grief through architecture.



Shah Jahan and Arjumand Banu Begum famous as Mumtaz Mahal fell in love
at first sight about twenty four years earlier. After five years they
finally married on March 27, 1612. Soon after the marriage Mumtaz Mahal
instantly became his beloved wife and constant companion. Over the years
the couple had fourteen children. Seven survived beyond childbirth but
on June, 1631, Mumtaz Mahal died at Burhanpur while giving birth to her
fourteen child. In accordance with the emperor’s wishes, the mortal
remains of the deceased were a mausoleum worthy of the empress could be
built.



Six months after the death of Mumtaz Mahal, Shah Jahan left the
arid plains of the Deccan in central India, where for more than a year
he has been warring against the rulers of the Muslim kingdoms hostile to
Mughal hegemony, and returned to Agra with his wife’s body. In the
imperial capital he acquired some land below the Red Fort, a piece of
ground on a bend in the Yamuna River. On January 9, 1632, the body of
Mumtaz Mahal was buried facing the river under a hastily raised dome,
and thus the foundations of the most famous mausoleum in the world were
laid. This mausoleum which the chroniclers of the reign of Shah Jahan
quite simply called rauza, the tomb, was to go down in history as the Taj Mahal__ a deformation of Mumtaz Mahal,
“The Chosen one of the Palace”, a title that the emperor had conferred
on his spouse, Arjumand Banu Begum, on the day of their marriage.
Review The True Taj Mahal Story


A year after construction began (it would take nearly twelve to
complete), the body of the empress was transferred to a crypt surrounded
by gold railing to await, in secret and in silence.
Refuting the romanticism of these “facts” and the charm of legend, today
rational, contemporary minds affirm that the Taj Mahal
is a mausoleum far too imposing to commemorate the memory of a woman,
even the favorite wife of an emperor and the mother of his fourteen
children. Behind the beauty and the majesty of the forms, the purity of
line of the monument, and the sober refinement of the decoration, it is
more logical to discern an autocratic ruler vaunting his grandeur and
munificence to the world. Now this legendary monument to love can be
seen as no visitor to the site has ever viewed it.

7 comments:

  1. Great post with lots of really good information!

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  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. Hey, nice site you have here! Keep up the excellent work!

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  4. Hi there - it been over 20 years since I saw this building in the flesh (well marble!) and I still cant get over how great it looked. It was raining, and for once it seemed that a look of people had stayed away. I was not on my own - but I could find my own space. It was a great day.

    Cheers Stewart M - Australia

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