Posted on: 24 March 2010

Entrance gateway to Akbar's mausoleum, Sikandra - 1814.
Watercolour by an anonymous artist of the entrance gatehouse to Akbar's mausoleum at Sikandra, dated between 1808 and 1820. The image is inscribed on the front: 'Entrance Akbar's Tomb'; and on the back: 'The Gateway of Entrance to Ackbar's Tomb at Secundra near Agra.' The mausoleum of the Mughal emperor Akbar (r. 1556-1605) is set in a large square garden surrounded by battlemented walls with a red sandstone gateway at the centre of each of the four sides. The main entrance to the mausoleum comprises a high arched gateway flanked by recessed arches and interior chambers. Its surface is inlaid with white marble floral motifs and tessellated coloured stone patterns and has an inscription from the Quran, the Surah-i-Mulk. There are four three-storeyed marble minarets at each corner of the gateway, the first of their kind built in India. The mausoleum itself comprises a series of tiered storeys culminating in a white marble pavilion at the very top. The burial chamber lies deep within the building and on the top floor is a replica tomb, placed exactly above the grave further below, carved from a single block of marble and inscribed with the ninety-nine names of Allah. During Akbar's reign he encouraged a synthesis of Hindu and Islamic artistic traditions and his tomb may be seen as a culmination of this style. The building remained unfinished at his death and was completed by his son Jahangir.


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