Tomb of I'timād-ud-Daulah - Monument

Monument

The stone outside the monument states:

TOMB OF ITIMAD-UD-DAULAH (1622-28 AD)

This is the tomb of Mirza Ghiyas Beg and his wife Asmat Begum. He hailed from Iran and served Akbar. He was father of the famous 'Nur-Jehan'and grand father of 'Mumtaz-Mahal' of the Taj Mahal fame. He was made Vazir (Prime Minister) after Nur Jehan's marriage with Jehangir in 1611. He held the Mansab of 7000/ 7000 and the title, "Itimad-ud-Daulah" (The Lord Treasurer). He died at Agra in 1622, a few months after his wife's death. Nur Jehan built this tomb for her parents between 1622 and 1628. Her own tomb and that of Jehangir are at Lahore.

The tomb, situated on the eastern bank of the river Jamuna, is planned in the centre of a Char-Bagh (four quartered garden) with the usual enclosing walls and side buildings. As conditioned by its situation, the main gate is on the eastern side. Ornamental gateways with prominent iwans are built in the middle of north and south sides. A multi- storeyed open pleasure pavilion is there on the western side overlooking the river impressively. These buildings are of red sandstone with bold inlaid designs in white marble. Shallow water channels, sunk in the middle of the raised stone paved pathways, with intermittent tanks and cascades divide the garden into four equal quarters. They are only slightly raised from the parterres which could be converted into flower beds. Space for large plants and trees was reserved just adjoining the enclosing walls, leaving the mausoleum fully open to view.

The main tomb of white marble, is marvelously set in the centre of this garden. It stands on a plinth of red stone having in the middle of each side, facing the central arch a lotus-tank with corners. Each façade has three arches, the central one providing the entrance, and the other two on the sides being closed by jalis. Each side is protected by a chhajja and jalied balustrade above it. There is no dome. Instead, the building is roofed by a sqaure 'Barahdari' having three arched openings on each side which are closed by Jalis except in the middle of north and south sides. It is protected by a chhajja above which is the Chaukhandi (pyramidal) roof, crowned by lotus petals and kalash finials. The interior is composed of a central square hall housing the cenotaphs of Asmat Begum and Mirza Ghiyas, four oblong rooms on the sides and four square rooms on the corners all inter-connected by common doorways. The cenotaph of Asmat Begum occupies the exact centre of the hall. Corner rooms have tombstones of Nur Jejan's daughter Ladli Begum and her other relations.

The most important aspect of this tomb is its polychrome ornamentation. Beautiful floral stylized arabesque and geometrical designs have been depicted on the whole exterior in inlay and mosaic techniques, in various pleasing tints and tones. Wine-vase, dish-and-cup, cypress honey suckle guldasta and such other Iranian motifs, typical of the art of Jehangir have been emphatically used. Some compositions have been inspired by the plant-studies of 'Ustad Mansur Naqqash', the famous 'fauna and flora' painter of Jehangir. Some stylized deigns have also been done in exquisite carving. Both incised and relief, they look like embroidery work done in ivory. Delicacy is their quality. Stucco and painting have been done in the interior where minute animal and human figures have also been shown. The inspiration has come from the contemporary art of painting. There is no glazed tiling and the decoration is largely by color stones which is an indigenous development. By far, it is the most gorgeously ornamented Mughal building. It testifies that the Mughals began like Titans and finished like jewellers. Chapters 48 and 73 of the Quran have been carved on the 64 panels on the external sides of the ground floor. The date of writing A.H. 1037/ 1627 AD is mentioned in the last panel. Chapter 67 of the Quran is inscribed on the 12 internal panels of the upper pavilion.

The tomb of Itimad-ud-Daula is a masterpiece of the domeless class of Mughal tombs. It is the first building finished with white marble and marks the transitional phase from red stone to white marble. From Akbar's tomb Sikandra to the Taj Mahal. It reflects the personality of the polished Iranian who lies buried here, and more than that, the formal and ornamental character of its builder Nur Jehan who ruled the Mughal empire from behind the curtain for 16 years (1611 -27). This is protected and conserved by the Archaeological Survey of India.

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