Tomb of Ataga Khan
Tomb of Ataga Khan | |
---|---|
General information | |
Architectural style | Mughal architecture |
Location | Delhi, India |
Coordinates | 28°35′29″N 77°14′32″E / 28.59146°N 77.24216°E |
Construction started | 1562 |
Completed | 1566 |
Technical details | |
Material | Sandstone |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Ustad Khuda Quli |
The Tomb of Ataga Khan is a 16th-century mausoleum located in the outer limits of the
History
Ataga Khan was Mughal Emperor Akbar's prime minister, and husband to Jiji Anga, a wet nurse of Akbar. In 1562, he was murdered by Adham Khan, a general of Akbar, as a result of jealousy and court intrigue. Adham Khan himself was then killed as punishment by Akbar. Subsequently, Akbar ordered the construction of a mausoleum for Ataga Khan. Anthony Welch speculates that Ataga Khan's second son Mirza Aziz Koka was more directly responsible for the patronage of the tomb. The tomb's architect was Ustad Khuda Quli, while its calligrapher was Baqi Muhammad from Bukhara. Construction of the tomb began in 1562 and was completed in 1566.[1][2]
In 1905, the colonial government's Archaeology Department reached an agreement with the hereditary guardians of the tomb to split custody, whereby conservation of the site would be directed by archaeologists, and repairs would be financed by the government. In return, public access to the site would be allowed, save the central tomb, and with the exception of the urs ceremony, when the site would be closed. This agreement was made through the terms of the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act of 1904.[3]
Architecture
The tomb of Ataga Khan draws from the form of previous Indian tombs.
The primary building material of the tomb is rough sandstone. This is faced with red sandstone (inlaid with coloured stones) and white marble (featuring carved verses from the Quran). This kind of decoration draws from the Qila-i-Kuhna mosque. The interior of the tomb was once covered in plaster decoration, which today only exists in fragments. The particular choices made for the Quranic epigraphy on the tomb, as well as the structure's location in the saintly Nizamuddin Dargah, have been argued by scholars to be indicative of the honor and martyrdom status ascribed to Ataga Khan by the Mughals after his death.[1][2]
See also
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-521-26728-1.
- ^ ISSN 0732-2992.
- ISSN 0021-9118.
- OCLC 26808918.