Humanyun Tomb

Humayun Tomb-Delhi


Description:

Humayun, the eldest son of Babur, succeeded his father and became the second emperor of the Mughal Empire. He ruled India for nearly a decade but was ousted by Sher Shah Suri, the Afghan ruler. Humayun took refuge at the court of the Safavid ruler, Shah of Persia, who helped in regain Delhi in 1555 AD. Unfortunately, he was not able to rule for a long time and met with his untimely death after he fell from the stairs of the Sher Mandal library. The Humayun's Tomb was a landmark in establishing some of the essential norms for later Mughal mausoleums in India. The tomb can be compared with the mausoleums of Timur and Bibi Khanam at Samarqand. In Islam, there is a concept that paradise or jannat is a place set somewhere in the middle of the garden with water flowing through the. It is called the Char Bagh as the entire garden is divided into four parts. The garden is divided into 36 squares by a grid of water channels and paths. The square garden is surrounded by a high rubble wall divided initially into four large squares separated by causeways and channels, each square divided again into smaller squares by pathways creating a char bagh. The entry to The Humayun's Tomb is through a long axial processional track. On the way, there are gateways, which offer a glimpse of the tomb. The tomb is octagonal in shape and placed over a platform with colonnades, under which there are numerous graves of lesser known people and can be ascribed to various nobles and workers of Humayun's period. A great central chamber has four offsets, double storeyed in height and with arcade on their facades. Three emphatic arches dominate each side, the central one being the highest. The central room contains the cenotaph of the Humayun. and his queen Bega begum. The tomb is crowned by 42.5 m high colossal double dome. The structure is built mainly with red sandstone along with use of white and black marble to relieve the monotony. The dome is made of white marble.The Humayun's Tomb is the first Indian building to use the Persian concept of a double dome. There are graves of Hamida Begum, Akbar's mother, Dara Shikoh, Shah Jahan's son and Bahadur Shah II, the last Mughal Emperor.

The Humayun's Tomb is a protected monument under the ownership of Archaeological Survey of India. It is the first significant example of the Mughal architecture with high arches and double dome, which occurs for the first time in India.

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Humayun Tomb-Delhi

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Humayun Tomb-Delhi

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Humayun Tomb-Delhi

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Humayun Tomb-Delhi

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Humayun Tomb-Delhi

Click here to see in original size...

Humayun Tomb-Delhi

Click here to see in original size...

Humayun Tomb-Delhi

Click here to see in original size...

Humayun Tomb-Delhi

Click here to see in original size...

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