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See also: town in the See also: Agra See also: district in the See also: United Provinces of See also: India, on the road from Agra to See also: Jaipur
.
Pop
.
(1901) 7147
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It is a ruined city, and is interesting only from an archaeological point of view
.
It was founded by See also: Akbar in 1569 as a thank-offering for the See also: birth of a son, See also: Selim, afterwards the emperor See also: Jahangir, foretold by Selim Chisti, a famous See also: Mahommedan See also: saint
.
The See also: principal See also: building is the See also: great mosque, which is said by Fergusson to be hardly surpassed by any in India
.
" It See also: measures 55o ft. See also: east and west by 470 ft. See also: north and See also: 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
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One is that of Selim Chisti, built of See also: white marble, and the windows with pierced
See also: tracery of the most exquisite geometrical patterns
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It possesses besides a deep cornice of marble, supported by brackets of the most elaborate design
.
The other See also: tomb, that of See also: Nawab See also: Islam Khan, is soberer and in excellent taste, but quite eclipsed by its surroundings
.
Even these parts, however, are surpassed in magnificence by the See also: southern gateway
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As it stands on a rising ground, when looked at from below its appearance is See also: noble beyond that of any portal attached to any mosque in India, perhaps in the whole See also: world." Among other more noteworthy buildings the following may be mentioned
.
The palace of Jodh See also: Hai, the See also: Rajput wife of Akbar, consists of a courtyard surrounded by a gallery, above which rise buildings roofed with blue enamel
.
A See also: rich gateway gives See also: 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 See also: Turkish sultana
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Here are also the Panch Mahal or five-storeyed building, consisting of five galleries in tiers, and the See also: audience chamber
.
The See also: special feature in the architecture of the city is the softness of the red See also: sandstone, which could be carved almost as easily as See also: wood, and so lent itself readily to the elaborate See also: Hindu embellishment
.
See also: Fatehpur Sikri was a favourite residence of Akbar throughout his reign, and his establishment here was of great magnificence
.
After Akbar's See also: death Fatehpur Sikri was deserted within 5o years of its foundation
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The reason for this was that frequent cause in the East, lack of See also: 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 See also: painting and other decoration has largely perished, but some See also: 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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