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Red Fort, Delhi

 

Built during the reign of Shah Jahan, the Lal Qila (or Red Fort) has been a mute witness to innumerable conspiracies, scandals, battles..... Completed in a span of nine years, it cost about ten million rupees , with about half the sum going towards the building of palaces. Emperor Shah Jahan built Delhi's most magnificent monument, the Red Fort and above is the  red fort photo In 1638 Shah Jahan shifted the Mughal Empire's capital from Agra to Delhi. Besides the Lahori Gate, the entry point is the Hathipol (elephant gate), where the king and his visitors would dismount from their elephants. The other major attractions of the Red Fort are the Mumtaz Mahal, the Rang Mahal, the Khas Mahal, the Diwan-i-Am, the Diwan-i-Khas, the Hamam and the Shah Burj.

 

The Red Fort with thick red sandstone walls, bulging with turrets and bastions is one of the largest and oldest monument in Delhi India. The Fort rises above a wide dry moat in the northeast corner of the original city of Shahjahanabad, now Old Delhi. Today, although the Diwan-i-Khas is only a pale shadow of its original glory, yet the verse of Amir Khusro " If there is Paradise on the face of earth, it is here, it is here, it is here" reminds us of its former glory.  Its walls extend from 2 kms and vary in height from 18 m on the river side to 33 m on the city side.  The Fort also houses the Diwan-i-Am or the Hall of Public Audiences where the Emperor would sit and hear complaints of the common folks. The Diwan-i-Khas is the hall of private audiences where the Emperor held private meetings. This hall is made of marble and its centre-piece used to be the Peacock Throne, which was carried away to Iran by Nadir Shah in 1739.
  Akshardham Temple
  Azad Hind Gram
  Bahai Temple
  Birla Mandir
  Dilli Haat
  Garden of Five Senses
  Humayun's Tomb
  India Gate
  Jama Masjid
  Jantar Mantar
  Lodi Tomb
  Parliament House
  Purana Quila
  Qutub Minar
  Safdarjang Tomb
  Red Fort
     
     

 

 

 
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