- Source: Tughlaqabad Fort
Tughluqabad Fort is a ruined fort in Delhi, India. Ghiyasuddin Tughluq, the founder of the Tughlaq dynasty and ruler of the Delhi Sultanate, constructed it in 1321 when he established the third historic city of Delhi. However, it was later abandoned in 1327.
The fort lends its name to the nearby Tughluqabad residential-commercial area as well as the Tughluqabad Institutional Area. Ghiyasuddin Tughluq also built the Qutub-Badarpur Road, which connected the new city to the Grand Trunk Road. The road is now known as Mehrauli-Badarpur Road.
Its environs are an important biodiversity area within the Northern Aravalli leopard wildlife corridor stretching from Sariska Tiger Reserve to Delhi. Historical places around the sanctuary are Badkhal Lake, 6 km (3.7 mi) northeast, the tenth century ancient Surajkund reservoir and Anangpur Dam, Damdama Lake, Tughlaqabad Fort and Adilabad ruins (both in Delhi). It is contiguous to the seasonal waterfalls in Pali-Dhuaj-Kot villages of Faridabad, the sacred Mangar Bani and the Asola Bhatti Wildlife Sanctuary. There are several dozen lakes formed in the abandoned open pit mines in the forested hilly area of Delhi Ridge.
History
Ghazi Malik was a feudatory of the Khalji rulers of Delhi, India. The Khaliji dynasty is a Turco-Afghan dynasty which ruled India. Once, while on a walk with his Khalji master, Ghazi Malik suggested that the king build a fort on a hillock in the southern portion of Delhi. The king jokingly told Ghazi Malik to build the fort himself when he would become king.
In 1321, Ghazi Malik drove away the Khaljis and assumed the title of Ghias-ud-din Tughlaq, commencing the Tughlaq dynasty. He promptly ordered the construction of his legendary city, envisioning it as a beautiful yet impregnable fortress that would ward off Mongol marauders. However, destiny would not be as he would have liked.
= The Curse of Nizamuddin Auliya
=Ghias-ud-din is usually perceived as a liberal ruler. However, he was so inordinately passionate about his dream fort that he issued a dictate that all labourers in Delhi must work on his fort. Nizamuddin Auliya, a revered Sufi saint of the 13th century, got incensed owing to the cessation of construction of his baoli (step-well) triggered by the labour requisitioning. The confrontation between the Sufi saint and the royal emperor eventually transmogrified into a legend in India. The saint uttered a curse which was to resonate throughout history until today.
= The death of the ruler
=Another of the saint's curses was "Hunuz Dilli door ast" (Delhi is still far away). The Emperor was engrossed in a campaign in Bengal at this time. He was successful and was on his way to Delhi. However, his son, Muhammad bin Tughlaq, met him at Kara in Uttar Pradesh. Allegedly at the prince's orders, a Shamiana (Tent) was made to fall on the Emperor, who was crushed to death (1324).
Mausoleum of Ghiyas ud-Din Tughluq
The 'Mausoleum of Ghiyath al-Din Tughluq' is connected by a causeway to the southern outpost of the fortification. This elevated causeway 180 metres (600 ft) in length, supported by 27 arches, leads across a former artificial lake. However, sometime around the twentieth century, a portion of the causeway was pierced by the Mehrauli-Badarpur road. After passing an old Pipal tree, the complex of Ghiyas ud-din Tughluq's tomb is entered by a high gateway made up of red sandstone with a flight of steps.
The actual mausoleum is made up of a single-domed square tomb about 8 by 8 metres (26 ft × 26 ft) with sloping walls crowned by parapets. In contrast to the walls of the fortification made up of granite, the sides of the mausoleum are faced by smooth red sandstone and inlaid with inscribed panels and arch borders from marble. The edifice is topped by an elegant dome resting on an octagonal drum that is covered with white slabs of marble and slate.
Inside the mausoleum reside three graves: the central one belongs to Ghiyas ud-din Tughluq, whereas the other two are believed to be those of his wife and his son (and successor) Muhammad bin Tughluq. In the north-western bastion of the enclosure wall with its pillared corridors is another octagonal tomb in a similar style with a smaller marble dome and inscribed marble and sandstone slabs over its arched doors. According to an inscription over its southern entrance, this tomb houses the remains of Zafar Khan. His grave was at the site prior to the construction of the outpost and was consciously integrated into the design of the mausoleum by Ghiyath al-Din himself.
Architecture
Tughluqabad still consists of remarkable, massive stone fortifications that surround the irregular ground plan of the city. The sloping rubble-filled city walls, a characteristic endemic to monuments of the Tughluq dynasty, are between 10 and 15 metres (33 and 49 ft) high, topped by battlemented parapets and strengthened by circular bastions of up to two stories height. The city is supposed to once have had as many as 52 gates, of which only 13 remain standing today. The fortified city contained seven rainwater tanks. The fort is a half hexagon in shape with a base of 2.4 km (1.5 mi), and a whole circuit of about 6.4 km (4 mi).
Tughluqabad is trifurcated into the following sections:
the wider city area with houses built along a rectangular grid between its gates
the citadel with a tower at its highest point known as Bijai-Mandal, and the remains of several halls and a long underground passage
the adjacent palace area containing the royal residences; a long underground passage below the tower still remains
Today, the vast majority of the city is inaccessible owing to dense thorny vegetation and neglect. An ever increasing part of the former city area is occupied by a burgeoning modern illegal settlement, especially in the vicinity of its lakes.
South of Tughlaqabad was a vast artificial water reservoir within the fortified outpost of Ghiyath al-Din Tughluq's Tomb. This well-preserved mausoleum remains connected to the fort by an elevated causeway that still stands today.
Visible to the southeast are the remains of the Fortress of Adilabad, built years later by Ghiyath al-Din's successor, Muhammad bin Tughluq (1325–1351). It shares the main construction characteristics with the Tughlaqabad Fort.
Gallery
See also
Capital forts/palaces in Delhi, oldest first
Purana Qila, earliest Hindu rulers
Indraprastha, earlier than 1000 BCE
Edicts & additions by Ashoka the Great (r. 268 to 232 BCE) of Maurya Empire
Anangpur, by Anangpal I of Tomara dynasty (r. 736–1152 CE)
Qila Rai Pithora
Lal Kot, by Tomara dynasty (1152–1177 CE) as capital
Qila Rai Pithora, the Lal Kot expended by Prithviraj Chauhan (also called Rai Pithora, r. 1177–92 CE) of Chauhan dynasty
Siri Fort, by Alauddin Khalji (r. 1296–1316), second ruler of Khalji Dynasty
Tughlaqabad Fort, by Ghiyassudin Tughluq (r. 1320–25 CE) of Tughluq dynasty
Feroz Shah Kotla, by Feroz Shah Tughluq (r. 1351–88 CE) of Tughluq dynasty
Salimgarh Fort, in 1546 CE by Salim Shah Suri (r. 1545–54 CE), son of Sher Shah Suri
Red fort, built in 1639–48 CE by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan when he moved his capital from Agra to Delhi
Rashtrapati Bhavan, built in 1912–29 by colonial British raj
History of Delhi
Paleolithic sites in & around Tughlaqabad Fort
Stepwells of Delhi
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Benteng Chunar
- Benteng Bhangarh
- Benteng Ramnagar
- Benteng Bhimgarh
- Tughlaqabad Fort
- Tughlakabad (village)
- Red Fort
- Battle of Tughlaqabad
- Siri Fort
- Salimgarh Fort
- Qila Rai Pithora
- Tughlaq dynasty
- Purana Qila
- Chhatarpur Temple