Building Details of Taj Mahal
Despite several controversies that claim thatthe Taj Mahal was designed
by an Italian Geronimo Veroneo, or a French silversmith Austin de Bordeaux,
the first real evidence of the architect's identity emerged in the 1930s
when a seventeenth century manuscript called the Diwan-i-Muhandis was found
to mention the Taj Mahal.
This manuscript contains a collection of severalpoems written by Luft Allah,
including several verses in which he describes his father, Ustad Ahmad from
Lahore, as the architect of the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort at Delhi. Ahmad
was a Persian engineer-astrologer.
Luft Allah also states that Shah Jehanconferred upon his father the title
"Nadir al-Asr" (the Wonder of the Age); unfortunately court histories
do not corroborate this claim. Other sources record that Ustad Ahmad was
one of the architects of the Red Fort.
Further evidence has beenfound of other large projects undertaken by Ustad
Ahmad, strengthening the plausibility of his son's claim. It is interesting
to note that Ustad Ahmad had a number of aliases : Ustad Khan Effendi, Ustad
Mohammed, Isa Khan, Isa Effendi and a number of permutations of the name
- fictional amalgam of Muslim sounding names, most likely the invention
of latter-day British guidebook writers.
It must be emphasised thatthe design of the Taj Mahal cannot be ascribed
to any single master-mind. The Taj is the culmination of an evolutionary
process. It is the perfected stage in the development of Mughal architecture.
The names of many of the builders who participated in the construction of
the Taj in different capacities have come down to us through Persian sources.
A project as ambitious as the tombof Mumtaz Mahal demanded talent from many
quarters. From turkey came Ismail Khan a designer of hemispheres and the
a builder of domes. Qazim Khan, a native of Lahore travelled to Agra to
cast the solid gold finial that crowned the Turkish master's dome.
Chiranjilal, a local lapidary fromDelhi was chosen as the chief sculptor
and mosaicist. Amanat Khan from Shiraz was the chief calligrapher, and this
fact is attested on the Taj gateway where his name has been inscribed at
the end of the inscription.
Muhammad Hanif was the Supervisorof masons, while Mir Abdul Karim and Mukkarimat
Khan of Shiraz handled finances and the management of daily production.
Sculptors from Bukhara, calligraphers from Syria and Persia, inlayers from
South India, stonecutters from Baluchistan, a man who specialised in building
turrets, another who carved only marble flowers - thirty seven men in all
formed the creative nucleus, and to this core was added a labour force of
twenty thousand workers recruited from across North India.
Building Details of Taj Mahal, Taj Mahal in Agra
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