AGRA
TRAVEL GUIDE
Places
of Interest Sikandra
Fort 
Welcome
to Sikandra, a supurb of Agra, only 13 km. from the Agra Fort, the last resting
place of the Mughal emperor Akbar. Akbar was the greatest of the Mughal emperors
and one of the most secular minded royalties of his time. He was the heir to a
long tradition of oriental refinement, a great patron of the arts, literature,
philosophy and science.
A visit to Akbar's monument opens before one,
the completeness of Akbar's personality as completely as the Taj Mahal does of
Mumtaz Mahal's. Akbar's vast, beautifully carved, red-ochre sandstone tomb is
set amidst a lush garden. Akbar himself planned his own tomb and selected a suitable
site for it. To construct a tomb in one's lifetime was a Tartary custom which
the Mughals followed religiously. Akbar's son Jahangir completed the construction
of this pyramidal tomb in 1613.
APPROACH: One can approach
the monument from the Southern gate only. Ticket counter is located to the left
of this gate.
THE
GARDEN: The tomb stands in the center of a vast garden, which is enclosed
by high walls on all sides. In the middles of each enclosing wall is a monumental
gateway. The whole garden is divided into four equal quarters on the conventional
charbhag plan. Each quarter is separated by a high terrace or raised path with
a narrow shallow water channel running at the center. Each terrace has in the
center, a tank with fountains.
GATEWAY: Although there is
only one entrance in use today there exist four red sandstone gates which lead
to the mausoleum complex. The decoration on the gateways is strikingly bold, with
large mosaic patterns set into it. The gateway's four minarets rising from the
corners are particularly striking. Built of red sandstone, the minarets are inlaid
with white marble polygonal patterns; the pleasing Proportions & Profuse surface
ornamentation makes the gateways very impressive. These gateways reflect a curious
hybrid of different styles of architecture-Hindu, Muslim Christian and a patent
mixture of Akbar's typical style.
MAUSOLEUM:
A broad paved causeway lead to the tomb, which has five storeys and is
in the shape of a truncated pyramid. The main tomb has a unique square design
which is unparalleled by all other Mughal buildings,
GROUND FLOOR:
The ground floor has spacious cloisters on all four sides except in the
middle of the southern side. The cloisters are divided into numerous bays by massive
piers & arches. Each bay measures 22 feet square. The centre of the southern
side is occupied by a vestibule, which has been ornamented very profusely with
exquisite carvings, artistic paintings & inlay work in geometric and floral
designs. An inclined and descending passage leads from this vestibule to the mortuary
chamber. The tombstone of Akbar is placed in the centre of this room. Geometrical
designs achieved by the mosaics of glazed tiles or of colored stones, predominate
the tomb. The mosaic work is generally in the tass eleated style, that is, square
or rectangular pieces of colored stones were assembled and arranged together to
form patterns. Semi-precious stones were inlaid into a hollowed depression in
the white marble slab by Emperor Jahangir later on . Akbar's daughters Shakrul
Nisha Begum and Aram Bano are also entombed on this floor.
SECOND
STOREY: The second storey has an arcaded verandah on each side which
is composed of 23 bays. The use of an ornamental arch and square pillar has brought
about unique composition.
THIRD AND FOURTH STOREYS: These
storeys are smaller in size than the one below it. They have an identical arrangement
of arches supported on pilllars and chhatris attached on the exterior to each
façade.
FIFTH STOREY: The fifth storey is entirely
in white marble as against the lower storeys which are finished in red sandstone.
ITMAD-UD-DAULA: Itmad-ud-Daula is the tomb of Mirza Ghiyas
Beg, a Persian who had obtained service in Akbar's court. The tomb set a starting
precedent as the first Mughal building to be face with white inlaid marble and
contrasting stones. Unlike the Taj it is small, intimate and, since it is less
frequented, has a gentle serenity.
ABOUT MIRZA GHIYAS BEG:
Mirza Ghiyas Beg was the son of Khawaja Muhammad Sharif who was the wazir (Prime
Minister) of Khurasan and then of Yazd under the Safawid Emperors of Persia. After
the death of his father, Mirza Ghiyas came to India and was introduced to Akbar
who enrolled him in the imperial service. Mirza was an able man and rose high
by the sheer dint of his merit. On Jahangir's succession in 1605 he became Wazir
and received the title of Itmad-ud-Daula (Pillar of Government). Jahangir fell
in love with his daughter Mehrunnissa, better known as Nurjahan, and married her
in 1611. It was Nur Jahan who built the tomb for her father in 1628 AD, 6 years
after his death.
ENTRANCE: A sandstone pathway leads to
the main tomb which stands on a low platform (4m high and 45m square). The tomb
is in the centre of a Charbagh, the four-quartered garden, measuring 540 ft and
enclosed on all sides by high walls.
THE GARDEN SETTING:
False gateways, which may be appropriately called water-pavilions, have been constructed
in the centre of the north and south sides. The west side has in its middles a
multi- storeyed and multi-roomed pavilion. It overhangs the river impressively
and is so open and abundantly airy that it could have served the purpose of a
pleasure-pavilion during the lifetime of Itmad-ud-Daula . These subsidiary structures
magnificently flank the central edifice on all sides. The shallow water-channels,
which originally took water from two overhead tanks situated on the riverside,
run on all sides of the garden and around the mausoleum. Sunk in the middles of
the raised, stone-paved pathways and associated with regularly set lotus ponds
and cascades, the channels divide the charbagh into four equal quarters, stretching
from the middle of each side to the centre of the plinth of the main mausoleum.
THE MAIN TOMB: The main gateway, and also the side pavilions,
are constructed of red sandstone, with inlaid designs in white marble. The main
tomb is of white marble but it stands on a plinth of red sandstone, having in
the centre, of each side opposite the central arch, a tank with a fountain. The
tomb is square in plan, with octagonal towers attached to the corners. The towers
attain a circular form above the terrace and are surmounted by circular chhatris.
Each façade of the tomb is composed of three arches, the central one providing
the entrance, the other two on the sides being closed with beautiful trellis screens.
Each side is protected above by a chhjja and a perforated balustrade. The jalies
have been carved very delicately and appear more to be made of ivory rather than
of white marble. The tomb has inscriptional designs in abundance. More than seventy
six Quranic verses in the Hiuluth script have been artistically carved on white
marble panels which are distributed all over the building.
THE INTERIOR
OF THE TOMB: The interior is composed of a central mortuary hall housing
the cenotaphs of Nur Jahan's mother Asmat Begum and father Itmad-ud-Daula, four
oblong rooms on the sides and four square chambers on the corners-all interconnected
through common doorways. The corner rooms contain tombstones of some near relations
of Nur Jahan including that of her daughter Ladli Begum from her first husband
Sher Afghan. Marble screens of geometric lattice work permit soft lightning of
the inner chamber. Engraved on the walls of the chamber is the recurring theme
of a wine flask with snakes as handles. The main chamber which contains the tomb
of Itmad-ud-Daula and his wife, is richly decorated with mosaics and semi-precious
stones inlaid in white marble.