fbpx
Wikipedia

History of domes in South Asia

Domes first appeared in South Asia during medieval period when it was constructed with stone, brick and mortar, and iron dowels and cramps. Centering was made from timber and bamboo. The use of iron cramps to join together adjacent stones was known in Ancient India, and was used at the base of domes for hoop reinforcement. The synthesis of styles created by this introduction of new forms to the Hindu tradition of trabeate construction created a distinctive architecture.[1]

Domes in pre-Mughal India have a standard squat circular shape with a lotus design and bulbous finial at the top, derived from Hindu architecture. Because the Hindu architectural tradition did not include arches extensively, flat corbels were used to transition from the corners of the room to the dome, rather than squinches.[2] In contrast to Persian and Ottoman domes, the domes of Indian tombs tend to be more bulbous.[3]

Medieval period edit

 
The Alai Dawarza in Delhi.

The earliest examples include the half-domes of the late 13th century tomb of Balban and the small dome of the tomb of Khan Shahid, which were made of roughly cut material and would have needed covering surface finishes. The Alai Dawarza, a gate in the Qutb complex built in 1311, has the first dome in India made of finely dressed stone cut into voussoir blocks. Arches transition a square chamber to an octagon, which transitions to a sixteen-sided polygon through the use of corbelled brackets. The cut stone dome over the tomb of Ghiyath al-Din Tughluq (d. 1325) uses alternating rings of shallow and deep stones to produce a better bond with the core material. The use of finely cut stone voussoirs for these domes suggest the migration of masons from the former Seljuk Empire.[4]

Domes from the late 14th century use roughly shaped stones covered in render, due to the dispersal of skilled masons following the movement of the capital from Delhi to Daulatabad and back again. Examples include the Khirki Masjid (c. 1375) and the tomb of Firoz Shah (d. 1388). The domed tomb of Khan-i-Jahan Tilangani (1368) is generally referred to as "the first octagonal tomb in Delhi with the domed central chamber surrounded by an ambulatory verandah with three arched openings on each facet", although it is predated by the tomb of Zafar Khan.[5]

Under the Lodi dynasty there was a large proliferation of tomb building, with octagonal plans reserved for royalty and square plans used for others of high rank, and the first double dome was introduced to India in this period. There are multiple candidates. The tomb of Sikander Lodi was built from 1517 to 1518 and is cited, but is predated by the brick tomb of Zain-ul-Abidin's mother, built around 1465 in Zaina Kadal, Srinagar. The Sabz Burj in Delhi may be earlier still, but is dated to 1530-40 by written sources.[6] Although the tomb of Sikander Loki clearly has a double dome, with a distinct space between inner and outer shells, the earlier tomb of Shihab-ud-din Taj Khan (1501) has "an attempt in this direction". Although double domes had long been used in Persia, Iraq, and western Asia, Indian domes prior to this time domes had a single shell of stonework. Afterward, most of the large domes were built with two shells in order to preserve good proportions in both the interior and exterior.[7] Mosques with three domes and one aisle were developed by the end of the Lodi period and were further developed under the Mughals.[8]

 
The Data durbar in Lahore, Pakistan, is the largest Sufi complex in South Asia.[9]

According to Anna Suvorova, author of Muslim Saints in South Asia: The Eleventh to Fifteenth Centuries:[10]

The domed cupola design of Data Durbar is typical of the pre-Mughal Muslim architecture of South Asia: while erecting the cupolas topping a square building, an intermediate form of squinches or arched transitional supports was used. These squinches are the arches built diagonally across the corners of a square to create this transition from the square to the spherical base of the dome. However, the technique of erecting domes on squinches did not prove strong enough when the domes were excessively high or had too large a radius: such structures could not withstand natural calamities.

 
The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Makli Hills in Thatta, Sindh Province, Pakistan.

The Makli Necropolis, near Thatta, Sindh province is described in the Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Death and Burial as:[11]

The most common form of Muslim funerary monument is a square cube-like building covered with a dome. The origin of this architectural form is a matter of debate, though it may relate either to pre-Islamic Iranian or to Byzantine forms. There are a vast number of variations on this basic theme, including tall honeycomb-like domes seen in Iraq (e.g. Sitt Zubayda), polygonal tent-shaped domes in Turkey and Iran, and bulbous domes, as seen in India and South Asia. ... One of the largest collections of mausolea is located in the Makli hills near Thatta in And province, Pakistan, in a vast cemetery with a circumference of 8 kilometres. Many of these medieval mausolea are decorated with Islamic and Hindu motifs, whilst the later mausolea resemble the domed constructions of Central Asia.

Early modern period edit

The first major Mughal building is the domed tomb of Humayun, built between 1562 and 1571 by a Persian architect. The central dome likely has a core of brick, as can be seen in the later stripped tomb of Khan-i-Khanan. The central dome is faced with marble blocks in attached to the core by alternating wide and narrow layers and there is evidence of the use of iron cramps to secure them. Iron cramps may also help form a tension ring at the base of the dome. The central double dome covers an octagonal central chamber about 15 meters wide and is accompanied by small domed chattri made of brick and faced with stone. Smaller domes were widely made with rectangular bricks beginning in the 16th century, the necessary curvature being created by tapering the mortar joints.[12] Chatris, the domed kiosks on pillars characteristic of Mughal roofs, were adopted from their Hindu use as cenotaphs.[13]

 
The Taj Mahal in Agra, India.

The Taj Mahal in Agra, also a brick structure clad primarily in marble, was begun in 1632 and mostly completed in 1636; the rest of the extensive complex would not be finished before 1643. The tomb was built for Mumtaz Mahal, a wife of emperor Shah Jahan, after her death in 1631. The central double dome covers a diameter of 22 meters. The inner dome is three meters thick and over 30 meters below the outer dome. The outer dome rests upon drum walls five metes thick.[14] The drum acts as an optical correction for the view from ground level. The height of the dome, half the total height, is consistent with early Timurid architecture, but against the trend of Mughal architecture up to that point.[15] The fusion of Persian and Indian architecture can be seen in the dome's shape: the bulbous shape derives from Persian Timurid domes, and the finial with lotus leaf base is derived from Hindu temples.[2] The inner dome has a decorative triangulated pattern modeled after plaster mold work, but here carved in marble. The entire complex is highly symmetrical. On the western side of the tomb is a red sandstone mosque with three bulbous domes faced with marble, and on the eastern side is mirror-image assembly hall that likewise has three marble domes.[16] At the center of the tomb hall lies the cenotaph of Mumtaz Mahal, with her husband's off-center to the west. The actual sarcophagi lie directly below, in the crypt, but in the same arrangement.[17]

The last major Islamic tomb built in India was the tomb of Safdar Jang (1753–54). It is a brick structure clad in sandstone and marble stripped from the earlier tomb of Khan-i-Khanan (d. 1627). Shallow brick domes cover the perimeter chambers of the building, and the central dome is reportedly triple-shelled, with two relatively flat inner brick domes and an outer bulbous marble dome, although it may actually be that the marble and second brick domes are joined everywhere but under the lotus leaf finial at the top.[18]

 
The Gol Gumbaz in Bijapur, India.

The tomb of Mohammed Adil Shah (d. 1656) in Bijapur is one of the largest masonry domes in the world. Called the Gol Gumbaz, or Round Dome, it has an internal diameter of 41.15 meters and a height of 54.25 meters. The dome was built with layers of brick between thick layers of mortar and rendered on both faces, so that the dome acts as a concrete shell reinforced with bricks. It is 2.6 meters thick at the base.[19] The dome was the most technically advanced to be built in the Deccan, and exemplifies the flowering of art and architecture that occurred during the period of the Adil Shahi Sultanate's greatest extent.[20] Radial cracks were repaired in 1936-7 by the application of reinforcement to the outside of the dome, which was then covered by sprayed concrete.[21] Both the Gol Gumbaz dome and the smaller dome of the Jama Masjid, a 57-foot wide dome also at Bijapur, are above distinctive transition zones consisting of eight intersecting arches that narrow the openings to be covered.[22]

 
The bulbous domes of the Badshahi mosque in Lahore, Pakistan.[23]

Mughal mosques, such as Jama Mosque, Fatehpur Sikri, Jama Masjid, Delhi, and Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan, had a prayer hall covered with three domes along the qibla wall.[24] The Badshahi Mosque, one of the jewels of Mughal architecture,[25] and South Asia's second-largest mosque,[26] built by Aurengzeb in 1673,[25] is described by historian Catherine B. Asher as:[23]

The prayer chamber adheres generally to the plan of Shah Jahan's Delhi mosque constructed about two decades earlier, although it is considerably larger. While closely modeled on Shah Jahan-period congregational mosques, the Badshahi mosque reveals a greater sense of spatial tension in keeping with the new aesthetic established early in Aurangzeb's reign. This is achieved, in part, by the sheer scale of the complex and by the facade's arched openings that are small in comparison to the building's overall massive size. Further underscoring this spatial tension are the bulbous domes and the minarets at the compound corners that emphasize the sense of verticality.

 
The Golden Temple in Amritsar

Domes appear frequently in Sikh architecture, which was greatly influenced by Mughal architecture. Most of Historical Sikh buildings were built towards the end of 18th century. Domes in Sikh architecture are mostly ribbed with lotus design at the top and floral motifs at the bottom. These domes start with wide base and reach maximum circumference when they are less than halfway up.[27]

Later modern period edit

 
The Victoria Memorial in Kolkata, West Bengal

After the fall of the Mughal Empire, a new form of revivalist architecture developed under the British, known as Indo-Saracenic architecture. It draws heavily from Gothic, Rajput, and Mughal architectural forms, and extensively used domes.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1941, 1943-1944.
  2. ^ a b Peterson 1996, p. 68.
  3. ^ Nuttgens 1997, p. 157.
  4. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1944, 1946-1947.
  5. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1947.
  6. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1948.
  7. ^ Brown 2013.
  8. ^ Saquib & Ali 2023, p. 745.
  9. ^ Dandekar & Tschacher 2016, p. 232.
  10. ^ Suvorova 2004, p. 57.
  11. ^ Tarlow & Stutz 2013, p. 253.
  12. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1944, 1948-1949.
  13. ^ Peterson 1996, p. 200.
  14. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1949.
  15. ^ Parodi 2000, p. 537.
  16. ^ Koch 2005, p. 140-143.
  17. ^ Tillotson 2012, p. 75.
  18. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1950-1951.
  19. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1949-1950.
  20. ^ Michell & Zebrowski 1987, p. 15.
  21. ^ Tappin 2003, p. 1951.
  22. ^ Spiers 1911, p. 961.
  23. ^ a b Asher 1992, pp. 257–258.
  24. ^ Saquib & Ali 2023, p. 747.
  25. ^ a b Heitzman 2008, p. 75.
  26. ^ Avari 2013, p. 118.
  27. ^ Randhir 1990, pp. 14–15.

Bibliography edit

  • Asher, Catherine (1992), Architecture of Mughal India, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-26728-1
  • Avari, Burjor (2013), Islamic Civilization in South Asia: A History of Muslim Power and Presence in the Indian Subcontinent, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-58061-8
  • Brown, Percy (2013). Indian Architecture (The Islamic Period). Read Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-447-49482-9.
  • Dandekar, Deepra; Tschacher, Torsten (2016), Islam, Sufism and Everyday Politics of Belonging in South Asia, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-1-317-43596-9
  • Heitzman, James (2008), The City in South Asia, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-28963-9
  • Koch, Ebba (2005). "The Taj Mahal: Architecture, Symbolism, and Urban Significance" (PDF). Muqarnas. 22: 128–149. doi:10.1163/22118993-90000087.
  • Michell, George; Zebrowski, Mark (1987). Architecture and Art of the Deccan Sultanates. The New Cambridge History of India. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56321-5.
  • Nuttgens, Patrick (1997). The Story of Architecture. Hong Kong: Phaidon Press Limited. ISBN 0-7148-3616-8.
  • Parodi, Laura E. (2000). "'The Distilled Essence of the Timurid Spirit': Some Observations on the Taj Mahal". East and West. 50 (1). Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO): 535–542. JSTOR 29757466.
  • Peterson, Andrew (1996). The Dictionary of Islamic Architecture. Routledge. ISBN 0-203-20387-9.
  • Randhir, G. S. (1990). Sikh Shrines in India. Publications Division Ministry of Information & Broadcasting. ISBN 978-8-123-02260-4.
  • Saquib, Mohammad; Ali, Asif (2023). "Persian Architecture: A Source of Inspiration for Mughal Imperial Mosques in North India". Journal of Islamic Architecture. 7 (4). Jawa Timur, Indonesia: International Center for Islamic Architecture: 744–749. doi:10.18860/jia.v7i4.21013.
  • Suvorova, Anna (2004), Muslim Saints of South Asia: The Eleventh to Fifteenth Centuries, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-37006-1
  • Tappin, Stuart (2003). "The Structural Development of Masonry Domes in India". In Huerta, S. (ed.). (PDF). Madrid: I. Juan de Herrera. pp. 1941–1952. ISBN 84-9728-070-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2013.
  • Tarlow, Sarah; Stutz, Liv Nilsson, eds. (6 June 2013), The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Death and Burial, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-165039-0
  • Tillotson, Giles (2012). Taj Mahal. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-06365-5.
  • Spiers, Richard Phené (1911). "Vault" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 956–961.

history, domes, south, asia, domes, first, appeared, south, asia, during, medieval, period, when, constructed, with, stone, brick, mortar, iron, dowels, cramps, centering, made, from, timber, bamboo, iron, cramps, join, together, adjacent, stones, known, ancie. Domes first appeared in South Asia during medieval period when it was constructed with stone brick and mortar and iron dowels and cramps Centering was made from timber and bamboo The use of iron cramps to join together adjacent stones was known in Ancient India and was used at the base of domes for hoop reinforcement The synthesis of styles created by this introduction of new forms to the Hindu tradition of trabeate construction created a distinctive architecture 1 Domes in pre Mughal India have a standard squat circular shape with a lotus design and bulbous finial at the top derived from Hindu architecture Because the Hindu architectural tradition did not include arches extensively flat corbels were used to transition from the corners of the room to the dome rather than squinches 2 In contrast to Persian and Ottoman domes the domes of Indian tombs tend to be more bulbous 3 Contents 1 Medieval period 2 Early modern period 3 Later modern period 4 References 5 BibliographyMedieval period edit nbsp The Alai Dawarza in Delhi The earliest examples include the half domes of the late 13th century tomb of Balban and the small dome of the tomb of Khan Shahid which were made of roughly cut material and would have needed covering surface finishes The Alai Dawarza a gate in the Qutb complex built in 1311 has the first dome in India made of finely dressed stone cut into voussoir blocks Arches transition a square chamber to an octagon which transitions to a sixteen sided polygon through the use of corbelled brackets The cut stone dome over the tomb of Ghiyath al Din Tughluq d 1325 uses alternating rings of shallow and deep stones to produce a better bond with the core material The use of finely cut stone voussoirs for these domes suggest the migration of masons from the former Seljuk Empire 4 Domes from the late 14th century use roughly shaped stones covered in render due to the dispersal of skilled masons following the movement of the capital from Delhi to Daulatabad and back again Examples include the Khirki Masjid c 1375 and the tomb of Firoz Shah d 1388 The domed tomb of Khan i Jahan Tilangani 1368 is generally referred to as the first octagonal tomb in Delhi with the domed central chamber surrounded by an ambulatory verandah with three arched openings on each facet although it is predated by the tomb of Zafar Khan 5 Under the Lodi dynasty there was a large proliferation of tomb building with octagonal plans reserved for royalty and square plans used for others of high rank and the first double dome was introduced to India in this period There are multiple candidates The tomb of Sikander Lodi was built from 1517 to 1518 and is cited but is predated by the brick tomb of Zain ul Abidin s mother built around 1465 in Zaina Kadal Srinagar The Sabz Burj in Delhi may be earlier still but is dated to 1530 40 by written sources 6 Although the tomb of Sikander Loki clearly has a double dome with a distinct space between inner and outer shells the earlier tomb of Shihab ud din Taj Khan 1501 has an attempt in this direction Although double domes had long been used in Persia Iraq and western Asia Indian domes prior to this time domes had a single shell of stonework Afterward most of the large domes were built with two shells in order to preserve good proportions in both the interior and exterior 7 Mosques with three domes and one aisle were developed by the end of the Lodi period and were further developed under the Mughals 8 nbsp The Data durbar in Lahore Pakistan is the largest Sufi complex in South Asia 9 According to Anna Suvorova author of Muslim Saints in South Asia The Eleventh to Fifteenth Centuries 10 The domed cupola design of Data Durbar is typical of the pre Mughal Muslim architecture of South Asia while erecting the cupolas topping a square building an intermediate form of squinches or arched transitional supports was used These squinches are the arches built diagonally across the corners of a square to create this transition from the square to the spherical base of the dome However the technique of erecting domes on squinches did not prove strong enough when the domes were excessively high or had too large a radius such structures could not withstand natural calamities nbsp The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Makli Hills in Thatta Sindh Province Pakistan The Makli Necropolis near Thatta Sindh province is described in the Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Death and Burial as 11 The most common form of Muslim funerary monument is a square cube like building covered with a dome The origin of this architectural form is a matter of debate though it may relate either to pre Islamic Iranian or to Byzantine forms There are a vast number of variations on this basic theme including tall honeycomb like domes seen in Iraq e g Sitt Zubayda polygonal tent shaped domes in Turkey and Iran and bulbous domes as seen in India and South Asia One of the largest collections of mausolea is located in the Makli hills near Thatta in And province Pakistan in a vast cemetery with a circumference of 8 kilometres Many of these medieval mausolea are decorated with Islamic and Hindu motifs whilst the later mausolea resemble the domed constructions of Central Asia Early modern period editThe first major Mughal building is the domed tomb of Humayun built between 1562 and 1571 by a Persian architect The central dome likely has a core of brick as can be seen in the later stripped tomb of Khan i Khanan The central dome is faced with marble blocks in attached to the core by alternating wide and narrow layers and there is evidence of the use of iron cramps to secure them Iron cramps may also help form a tension ring at the base of the dome The central double dome covers an octagonal central chamber about 15 meters wide and is accompanied by small domed chattri made of brick and faced with stone Smaller domes were widely made with rectangular bricks beginning in the 16th century the necessary curvature being created by tapering the mortar joints 12 Chatris the domed kiosks on pillars characteristic of Mughal roofs were adopted from their Hindu use as cenotaphs 13 nbsp The Taj Mahal in Agra India The Taj Mahal in Agra also a brick structure clad primarily in marble was begun in 1632 and mostly completed in 1636 the rest of the extensive complex would not be finished before 1643 The tomb was built for Mumtaz Mahal a wife of emperor Shah Jahan after her death in 1631 The central double dome covers a diameter of 22 meters The inner dome is three meters thick and over 30 meters below the outer dome The outer dome rests upon drum walls five metes thick 14 The drum acts as an optical correction for the view from ground level The height of the dome half the total height is consistent with early Timurid architecture but against the trend of Mughal architecture up to that point 15 The fusion of Persian and Indian architecture can be seen in the dome s shape the bulbous shape derives from Persian Timurid domes and the finial with lotus leaf base is derived from Hindu temples 2 The inner dome has a decorative triangulated pattern modeled after plaster mold work but here carved in marble The entire complex is highly symmetrical On the western side of the tomb is a red sandstone mosque with three bulbous domes faced with marble and on the eastern side is mirror image assembly hall that likewise has three marble domes 16 At the center of the tomb hall lies the cenotaph of Mumtaz Mahal with her husband s off center to the west The actual sarcophagi lie directly below in the crypt but in the same arrangement 17 The last major Islamic tomb built in India was the tomb of Safdar Jang 1753 54 It is a brick structure clad in sandstone and marble stripped from the earlier tomb of Khan i Khanan d 1627 Shallow brick domes cover the perimeter chambers of the building and the central dome is reportedly triple shelled with two relatively flat inner brick domes and an outer bulbous marble dome although it may actually be that the marble and second brick domes are joined everywhere but under the lotus leaf finial at the top 18 nbsp The Gol Gumbaz in Bijapur India The tomb of Mohammed Adil Shah d 1656 in Bijapur is one of the largest masonry domes in the world Called the Gol Gumbaz or Round Dome it has an internal diameter of 41 15 meters and a height of 54 25 meters The dome was built with layers of brick between thick layers of mortar and rendered on both faces so that the dome acts as a concrete shell reinforced with bricks It is 2 6 meters thick at the base 19 The dome was the most technically advanced to be built in the Deccan and exemplifies the flowering of art and architecture that occurred during the period of the Adil Shahi Sultanate s greatest extent 20 Radial cracks were repaired in 1936 7 by the application of reinforcement to the outside of the dome which was then covered by sprayed concrete 21 Both the Gol Gumbaz dome and the smaller dome of the Jama Masjid a 57 foot wide dome also at Bijapur are above distinctive transition zones consisting of eight intersecting arches that narrow the openings to be covered 22 nbsp The bulbous domes of the Badshahi mosque in Lahore Pakistan 23 Mughal mosques such as Jama Mosque Fatehpur Sikri Jama Masjid Delhi and Madrasa Ghaziuddin Khan had a prayer hall covered with three domes along the qibla wall 24 The Badshahi Mosque one of the jewels of Mughal architecture 25 and South Asia s second largest mosque 26 built by Aurengzeb in 1673 25 is described by historian Catherine B Asher as 23 The prayer chamber adheres generally to the plan of Shah Jahan s Delhi mosque constructed about two decades earlier although it is considerably larger While closely modeled on Shah Jahan period congregational mosques the Badshahi mosque reveals a greater sense of spatial tension in keeping with the new aesthetic established early in Aurangzeb s reign This is achieved in part by the sheer scale of the complex and by the facade s arched openings that are small in comparison to the building s overall massive size Further underscoring this spatial tension are the bulbous domes and the minarets at the compound corners that emphasize the sense of verticality nbsp The Golden Temple in Amritsar Domes appear frequently in Sikh architecture which was greatly influenced by Mughal architecture Most of Historical Sikh buildings were built towards the end of 18th century Domes in Sikh architecture are mostly ribbed with lotus design at the top and floral motifs at the bottom These domes start with wide base and reach maximum circumference when they are less than halfway up 27 Later modern period edit nbsp The Victoria Memorial in Kolkata West Bengal After the fall of the Mughal Empire a new form of revivalist architecture developed under the British known as Indo Saracenic architecture It draws heavily from Gothic Rajput and Mughal architectural forms and extensively used domes citation needed References edit Tappin 2003 p 1941 1943 1944 a b Peterson 1996 p 68 Nuttgens 1997 p 157 Tappin 2003 p 1944 1946 1947 Tappin 2003 p 1947 Tappin 2003 p 1948 Brown 2013 Saquib amp Ali 2023 p 745 Dandekar amp Tschacher 2016 p 232 Suvorova 2004 p 57 Tarlow amp Stutz 2013 p 253 Tappin 2003 p 1944 1948 1949 Peterson 1996 p 200 Tappin 2003 p 1949 Parodi 2000 p 537 Koch 2005 p 140 143 Tillotson 2012 p 75 Tappin 2003 p 1950 1951 Tappin 2003 p 1949 1950 Michell amp Zebrowski 1987 p 15 Tappin 2003 p 1951 Spiers 1911 p 961 a b Asher 1992 pp 257 258 Saquib amp Ali 2023 p 747 a b Heitzman 2008 p 75 Avari 2013 p 118 Randhir 1990 pp 14 15 Bibliography editAsher Catherine 1992 Architecture of Mughal India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26728 1 Avari Burjor 2013 Islamic Civilization in South Asia A History of Muslim Power and Presence in the Indian Subcontinent Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 58061 8 Brown Percy 2013 Indian Architecture The Islamic Period Read Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 447 49482 9 Dandekar Deepra Tschacher Torsten 2016 Islam Sufism and Everyday Politics of Belonging in South Asia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 43596 9 Heitzman James 2008 The City in South Asia Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 28963 9 Koch Ebba 2005 The Taj Mahal Architecture Symbolism and Urban Significance PDF Muqarnas 22 128 149 doi 10 1163 22118993 90000087 Michell George Zebrowski Mark 1987 Architecture and Art of the Deccan Sultanates The New Cambridge History of India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56321 5 Nuttgens Patrick 1997 The Story of Architecture Hong Kong Phaidon Press Limited ISBN 0 7148 3616 8 Parodi Laura E 2000 The Distilled Essence of the Timurid Spirit Some Observations on the Taj Mahal East and West 50 1 Istituto Italiano per l Africa e l Oriente IsIAO 535 542 JSTOR 29757466 Peterson Andrew 1996 The Dictionary of Islamic Architecture Routledge ISBN 0 203 20387 9 Randhir G S 1990 Sikh Shrines in India Publications Division Ministry of Information amp Broadcasting ISBN 978 8 123 02260 4 Saquib Mohammad Ali Asif 2023 Persian Architecture A Source of Inspiration for Mughal Imperial Mosques in North India Journal of Islamic Architecture 7 4 Jawa Timur Indonesia International Center for Islamic Architecture 744 749 doi 10 18860 jia v7i4 21013 Suvorova Anna 2004 Muslim Saints of South Asia The Eleventh to Fifteenth Centuries Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 37006 1 Tappin Stuart 2003 The Structural Development of Masonry Domes in India In Huerta S ed Proceedings of the First International Congress on Construction History Madrid 20th 24th January 2003 PDF Madrid I Juan de Herrera pp 1941 1952 ISBN 84 9728 070 9 Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2013 Tarlow Sarah Stutz Liv Nilsson eds 6 June 2013 The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Death and Burial Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 165039 0 Tillotson Giles 2012 Taj Mahal Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 06365 5 Spiers Richard Phene 1911 Vault In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 956 961 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of domes in South Asia amp oldid 1220164235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.