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FATEHPUR SIKRI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 199 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FATEHPUR SIKRI  , a
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town in the
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Agra
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district in the
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United Provinces of India, on the road from Agra to Jaipur . Pop . (1901) 7147 . It is a ruined city, and is interesting only from an archaeological point of view . It was founded by
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Akbar in 1569 as a thank-offering for the birth of a son,
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Selim, afterwards the emperor Jahangir, foretold by Selim Chisti, a famous
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Mahommedan saint . The
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principal
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building is the
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great mosque, which is said by Fergusson to be hardly surpassed by any in India . " It
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measures 55o ft. east and west by 470 ft. north and south, over all . The mosque itself, 250 ft. by 8o ft., is crowned by three domes . In its courtyard, which measures 350 ft. by 440 ft., stand two tombs . One is that of Selim Chisti, built of white marble, and the windows with pierced
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tracery of the most exquisite geometrical patterns . It possesses besides a deep cornice of marble, supported by brackets of the most elaborate design . The other tomb, that of
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Nawab
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Islam Khan, is soberer and in excellent taste, but quite eclipsed by its surroundings .

Even these parts, however, are surpassed in magnificence by the

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southern gateway . As it stands on a rising ground, when looked at from below its appearance is noble beyond that of any portal attached to any mosque in India, perhaps in the whole
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world." Among other more noteworthy buildings the following may be mentioned . The palace of Jodh Hai, the
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Rajput wife of Akbar, consists of a courtyard surrounded by a gallery, above which rise buildings roofed with blue enamel . A rich gateway gives access to a terrace on which are the " houses of Birbal and Miriam "; and beyond these is another courtyard, where are Akbar's private apartments and the exquisite palace of the
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Turkish sultana . Here are also the Panch Mahal or five-storeyed building, consisting of five galleries in tiers, and the audience chamber . The
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special feature in the architecture of the city is the softness of the red
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sandstone, which could be carved almost as easily as wood, and so lent itself readily to the elaborate
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Hindu embellishment . Fatehpur Sikri was a favourite residence of Akbar throughout his reign, and his establishment here was of great magnificence . After Akbar's
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death Fatehpur Sikri was deserted within 5o years of its foundation . The reason for this was that frequent cause in the East, lack of
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water . The `only water obtainable was so brackish and corroding as to cause great mortality among the inhabitants . The buildings are situated within an enclosure, walled on three sides and about 7 M. in circumference . They are all now more or less in ruins, and their elaborate
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painting and other decoration has largely perished, but some
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modern restoration has been effected .

See E . B . Havell, A Handbook to Agra and the Taj, Sikandra, Fatehpur Sikri, &c . (1904) .

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