Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra
Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra | |
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Screen wall of the mosque | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Hindu and Jain temple |
Location | |
Location | Andar Kot Rd, jharneshwar Mandir road |
Municipality | Ajmer |
State | Rajasthan |
Geographic coordinates | 26°27′18″N 74°37′31″E / 26.455071°N 74.6252024°E |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | Abu Bakr of Herat |
Style | early Indo-Islamic |
Founder | Qutb ud-Din Aibak |
Groundbreaking | 1192 CE |
Completed | 1199 CE |
Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra (literally "shed of 2½ days") is a historical mosque in the city of Ajmer in Rajasthan, India. It is one of the oldest mosques in India, and the oldest surviving monument in Ajmer.
Commissioned by
The structure was used as a mosque up to 1947. After the independence of India, the structure was turned over to the Jaipur circle of ASI (Archaeological Survey of India) and is today visited by people of all religions, as a fine example of a mix of Indian, Hindu, Muslim and Jain architectures.
Etymology
"Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra" literally means "
According to the ASI, the name probably comes from a two-and-a-half-day-long fair that used to be held at the site.[2] Indian academic Har Bilas Sarda points out that the name "Adhai-Din-ka-Jhonpra" is not mentioned in any historical source. Before the 18th century, the mosque was simply known as a "Masjid" ("mosque"), since it had been the only mosque in Ajmer for centuries. It came to be known as a jhonpra ("shed" or "hut") when fakirs started gathering here to celebrate urs (death anniversary fair) of their leader Panjaba Shah. This happened during the Maratha era, in the second half of the 18th century. The urs lasted for two-and-a-half days, resulting in the modern name of the mosque.[3][4]
Alexander Cunningham described the building as the "Great Mosque of Ajmer".
History
Pre-Islamic structure
The site of the mosque originally had another structure. According to Jain tradition, this structure was constructed by Seth Viramdeva Kala in 660 CE as a Jain shrine to celebrate Panch Kalyanaka.[3] Epigraphic evidence suggests that the site had a Sanskrit college building commissioned by Vigraharaja IV (alias Visaladeva), a king of the Shakambhari Chahamana (Chauhan) dynasty. The original building was square-shaped, with a tower-chhatri (dome-shaped pavilion) at each corner.[5][6] A temple dedicated to Sarasvati was located on the western side. A tablet dated to 1153 CE was found at the site in the 19th century; based on this, it can be inferred that the original building must have been constructed sometime before 1153 CE.[3]
The relics in the modern building show both Hindu and Jain features. According to KDL Khan, the building materials were taken from Hindu and Jain temples.[1] According to Caterina Mercone Maxwell and Marijke Rijsberman, the Sanskrit college was a Jain institution, and the building materials were taken from Hindu temples.[7] ASI Director-General Alexander Cunningham hypothesized that the pillars used in the building were probably taken from 20–30 demolished Hindu temples, which featured at least 700 pillars in total. Based on the pillar inscriptions, he concluded that these original temples dated to 11th or 12th century CE. Alexander Cunningham further attributed Lieutenant-Colonel of the British empire James Tod, who had visited the mosque, in the report. Tod had said that the whole building could have been originally a Jain Temple.[8]
Conversion into a mosque
The original building was partially destroyed and converted into a mosque by
The central
Iltutmish, the successor of Qutb-ud-Din-Aibak, subsequently beautified the mosque in 1213 CE, with a screen wall pierced by corbelled engrailed arches — a first in India.[2] An inscription on the central arch of the screen as well as two inscriptions of the northern minaret contain his name. The second arch from the south names one Ahmed ibn Muhammad al-Arid as the construction supervisor.[9]
Archaeological survey and restoration
The mosque seems to have been ignored by the later kings. It does not find a mention in Taj-ul-Maasir, the earliest history of the Mamluk dynasty. It is not mentioned in
In 1818, Ajmer came under the Company rule. James Tod visited the mosque in 1819, and described it in his Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan as "one of the most perfect as well as the most ancient monuments of Hindu architecture." Subsequently, Alexander Cunningham, the Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) inspected the building in 1864, and described it in the ASI report of that year.[3] Tod believed the earlier structure to be a Jain temple. However, Cunningham pointed out that this could not be correct, since the pillars in the building feature several four-armed figures (characteristic of Hindu gods) besides a figure of the Hindu goddess Kali.[8]
During an 1875–76 archaeological survey, inscriptions referring to a Sanskrit college were unearthed in the mosque premises.[12] Several sculptures and 6 Devanagari basalt tablets (slabs) were recovered from the site. These artifacts are now exhibited at the Ajmer Museum.[1] The tablets are as follows:[3]
- Tablets 1 and 2 contain large fragments of a Sanskrit play Lalita-Vigraharaja Nataka. It was composed by Mahakavi Somadeva, in honour of the king Vigraharaja. The play, as restored by Lorenz Franz Kielhorn from the fragments, depicts the story of king Vigraharaja. It tells of his love for princess Desaldevi, and his war preparations against a Turushka (Turkic) king named Hammir.
- Tablet 3 and 4 contain fragments of Kiratarjuniya. The play is dated to 22 November 1153 in an inscription.
- Tablet 5 contains portions of an untitled Sanskrit poem, which praises several Suryavanshi).
- Tablet 6 contains the fragments of a Vanaprastha (retirement) in the forest of Pushkar. His son adorned Ajmer with the blood of the Turushkas (Turkic people) and captured the elephants of the kings of Malwa. The inscription also mentions the name "Kumar Pal", but nothing can be made out of this name because of missing portions.
The tablets containing the plays were engraved by Bhaskar, son of Mahipati and grandson of Govinda, hailing from a family of Huna chiefs.[3]
Another Devanagari inscription is located on a marble pillar in the balcony of an entrance gate. It records the visit of Dharma, a mason of Bundi in the Jyeshtha 1462 VS (1405 CE), during the reign of Rana Mokal.[3]
During the tenure of
Architecture
The mosque is among the earliest examples of the Indo-Islamic architecture. It was designed by Abu Bakr of Herat, an architect who accompanied by Muhammad Ghori. The mosque was built almost entirely by Hindu masons, under the supervision of Afghan managers.[1]
The mosque is much larger than the
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Arcade pillars
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Arcade ceiling
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Mihrab arcade
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Entrance staircase
The front
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Ornate carvings and Kufic inscriptions
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Floral motif
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Arches with inscriptions from Koran
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Decorative screen wall
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Inscriptions on the screen wall
The interior of the building is a quadrangle measuring 200 × 175 feet. It comprises the main hall (248 × 40 feet) supported by cloisters of
The
Alexander Cunningham praised the architecture of Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra and Quwwat-ul-Islam mosques in the following words:[8]
In boldness of design, and grandeur of conception, which are perhaps due to the genius of the Islamite architect, these two splendid mosques of the first Indian Muhammadans are only surpassed by the soaring sublimity of the Christian Cathedrals. But in the gorgeous prodigality of ornament, in the beautiful richness of tracery, and an endless variety of detail, in delicate sharpness of finish, and the laborious accuracy of workmanship, all of which are due to the Hindu masons, I think that these two grand Indian mosques may justly vie with the noblest buildings which the world has yet produced.
Scottish architectural historian James Fergusson similarly remarked:[5][15]
As examples of surface-decoration, these two mosques of Altumush at Delhi and Ajmir are probably unrivaled. Nothing in Cairo or in Persia is so exquisite in detail, and nothing in Spain or Syria can approach them for the beauty of surface decoration.
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Window
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Niche
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Dome interior
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Minaret
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Bracket
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Arcade Pillars
Today, the site is visited by people of all religions, as a fine example of a mix of Indian, Hindu, Muslim and Jain architectures.[16]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h K.D.L. Khan (2 September 2007). "Ajmer's Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra". The Tribune Spectrum. Chandigarh.
- ^ a b "Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra". Archaeological Survey of India. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Har Bilas Sarda (1911). "Adhai-Din-ka-Jhonpra". Ajmer: Historical and Descriptive. Scottish Mission. pp. 68–74.
- ISBN 978-81-207-0432-9.
...Adhai din ko Jhompra at Ajmer was built by him out of the material of demolished Hindu temples...the masjid at Ajmer was erected on the ruins of a Sanskrit college
- ^ a b c Har Bilas Sarda (1935). Speeches And Writings Har Bilas Sarda. Ajmer: Vedic Yantralaya. pp. 256–259.
- ISBN 9788122411980.
- ISBN 9781884964046.
- ^ a b c d e f g Alexander Cunningham (1871). Four Reports Made During the Years, 1862-63-64-65. Vol. 2. Archaeological Survey of India. pp. 258–263.
- ^ a b c d Michael W. Meister (1972). "The Two-and-a-Half-Day Mosque" (PDF). Oriental Art. 18 (1): 57–63.
- ISBN 9780684133362.
- ISBN 9781843530893.
- ISBN 978-0-19-569512-0.
- ISBN 81-230-1001-X.
- ^ John F. Hurst (1891). Indika. The country and the people of India and Ceylon. New York: Harper & Brothers. pp. 726–727.
- ^ James Fergusson (1876). A History of Architecture in All Countries. Vol. 3. John Murray. p. 513.
- ^ "Our structures - Ajmer". www.asijaipurcircle.nic.in. ASI (official website). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
External links
- Media related to Adhai Din-ka-Jhonpra at Wikimedia Commons