Monday 7 September 2015

Black Taj Mahal: Mystic facet of the Taj Mahal?


The Taj Mahal is one of the most recognized architecture in the world. And, the Black Taj Mahal is a popular but intriguing mystery that has become complementary part of the Taj Mahal. If we look back, the origin of the story is based upon the two sources; written notes from a contemporary traveller, and age old prevailing-belief of the people of Agra.

Almost after 30 years of the construction of the Taj Mahal, in 1679, a book, “Les Six Voyage De Jean Baptiste Tavernier” was published in France. The book was written by a French traveller who was one among a few European travellers who could reach the court of the great Mughals. In those days traders from all over the world were attracted to India as it had become an important trade centre. Tavernier visited India five times in his life between 1641 and 1665. About the Black Taj Mahal, he wrote: “I witnessed the commencement and accomplishment of this great work, on which they have expended 22 years, during which twenty thousand men worked incessantly; this is sufficient to enable one to realize that the cost of it has been enormous. It is said that the scaffolding alone cost more than the entire work, because, from wand of wood, they had all to be made of brick, as well as the support of arches; this has entailed much labour and a heavy expenditure. Shah Jahan began to build his own tomb on the other side of the river, but the war which he had with sons interrupted his plan, and Aurangzeb, who reigns at present, is not disposed to complete it.”  As per the description of Tavernier, the place of Shahjahan’s tomb was Mahtab Bagh (Moon Garden).

On the other hand, there was a prevailing-belief among the citizens of Agra (city of the Taj Mahal) that “Shahjahan wanted to build one more tomb with black-stone on the other side of the river for himself resting-in-peace. The tomb of black stone had to be built in straight line with the Taj Mahal.
The probe about the origin of prevailing-belief related to Black Taj ended at the following result: In Agra, there is a colony near the Taj Mahal called Tajganj. It was the place where workers of the Taj Mahal resided some 350 years back. Even today, the huge population of the descendants of the workers of Taj Mahal live in Tajganj and are still engaged in making artefacts of marble and inlay work which is being sold in local markets and exported the world over. While interviewing some senior artisans of Tajganj in 2003, it was discovered that the history of the Black Taj Mahal is alive among them from generation to generation. They said that they knew about it from their fathers, the same way their fathers heard about it from their ancestors. According to them, “the work on the Black Taj Mahal started but stopped after Aurangzeb elevated on the throne”. In their local language, black marble is spelled as “Sang-e-Musa” which was to be used in Shahjahan’s mausoleum.

The above mentioned proclamation of the people of Agra seems realistic. Because, British archaeologist Archibald Carlyle had excavated the site and submitted his report in 1871-72. He confirmed that the Mahtab Bagh was the place of Shah Jahan’s mausoleum in the following words. “This garden enclosure, now a mere waste piece of ground, though it now bears the name of Mahtab Khan, is, without doubt, the site on which Shah Jahan intended to have built a mausoleum for himself, to correspond to that of his queen, namely, the Taj Mahal opposite.” Why Carlyle was searching place of Shahjahan’s mausoleum? One can comprehend that, the public-belief about the Black Taj was so strong that compelled the archaeologist Carlyle to search and submit his report in this regard.

Before the 1990s, the story of the Black Taj Mahal was believed to be real by the people of Agra, tourists and world-wide admirers of the Taj Mahal. But what had happened that Black Taj Mahal was declared to be a myth?

If fact, another excavation was carried out in 1993 at Mahtab Bagh, ruins of a well planned garden were discovered at the site, but without any trace of black marble. It indicated that any structure of black-stone ever existed there. Since then, the story of the Black Taj Mahal was declared to be a myth.
However, the absence of black-stone at the site of Mahtab Bagh should never be the base of rejection of Shahjahan’s mausoleum. Tavernier, who noted the construction of another mausoleum for Shahjahan, never declared that the tomb was completed, but he said, Shah Jahan began to build his own tomb on the other side of the river, but the war which he had with sons interrupted his plan, and Aurangzeb, who reigns at present, is not disposed to complete it”.

As a matter of fact, there are three strong points that put the subject of Black Taj Mahal, in the category of possibility and certainty:

  • Taj Mahal was not planned to be the place of Shahjahan’s burial, because it bears a striking asymmetry in its sanctum; the only anomaly in the most perfect architecture. Perhaps, the Taj Mahal is the only architecture in the world that fits hundred per cent on the empirical rules as defined by Christopher Alexander; the well known “Fifteen properties” which are considered as an important element of any perfect architecture. But the funerary chamber of the Taj Mahal bears a permanent asymmetry which leaves the admirers astounded. Shahjahan’s cenotaph is obtruding as it is placed on the floor without border, besides this, it is superimposed on the border of Mumtaz’s cenotaph which caused inharmonious appearance and unneeded congestion in the funerary chamber. This abnormality indicates that Shah Jahan was not to be buried there. The following image of the funerary chamber of the Taj Mahal makes the point clear:

Many analysts have said that "there is nothing abnormal in the placement of Shahjahan's cenotaphs in the Taj Mahal; it is set with the pattern of Ittemad-Ud-Daula which is predecessor of the Taj Mahal". However, one can note the remarkable difference; the following image shows the comparison between the funerary chamber of the Taj Mahal and Ittemad-ud-Daula:


As it seems clear that Shahjahan was not planned to be buried in the Taj Mahal, then, question arises - what was the place where he was intended to be buried.

·       According to Tavernier, Mahtab Bagh was the place where construction of Shahjahan’s mausoleum begun. Excavation at Mahtab Bagh discovered the ruins of a well planned garden of Mughal era, with breezy pavilions, pathways, pools and fountains that was enclosed by a wall with towers at the corners. The wall of the southern side (river facing) remains in a ruinous condition but the wall of the west, north and east has been destroyed completely. The width of Mahtab Bagh is equal to the width of the Taj Mahal complex and both are situated in a straight alignment which eloquently says that the site of Mahtab Bagh was an integral part of the original scheme of the Taj Mahal. Prince Aurangzeb had written a letter to his father in December 1652, in which, besides referring the Taj Mahal he also mentioned Mahtab Bagh that was flooded by monsoon rain. The letter is an additional confirmation. The following satellite image shows Taj Mahal complex and Mahtab Bagh:


Seemingly, Mahtab Bagh is part of the Taj Mahal but its landscape does not bear the true Shahjahanian spirit; the act of architectural-balancing by mirroring of all the elements on the opposite side. If landscape of both the sites are analysed, one can notice that Mahtab Bagh is incoherent with its counter-part. In the Taj Mahal, each quarters of the garden are squire but in Mahtab Bagh they are rectangle. The octagon water-tank of Mahtab Bagh is absolutely mismatched with the Taj Mahal complex. See the following image; comparison between the two sites and the corrected scheme that bears the Shahjahanian spirit.

Even, if both the sites are observed from the side, the height of Mahtab bagh seems to be abnormally low. This improper height of the riverfront-terrace of Mahtab Bagh was the grave technical error. Mahtab bagh submerged regularly during monsoon and finally buried under the silt within very short span of time. In those days, riverbanks were prone to monsoon flooding for almost three months every year. That is why all the important constructions were made on the high plinth as we see in case of Ittemad-ud-daula or other river bank structures. See the following images; comparison between the two sites and its correction.


If Mahtab Bagh was conceived as a garden and completed under the regime of Shahjahan, even then, all the four-quarters of the garden must be squire instead of being rectangle and the height of the riverfront terrace of the Taj Mahal must be equal to the Taj Mahal as the corrected scheme describe in above drawings. The outcome of such analysis makes it clear that the development of the site of Mahtab Bagh begun with the Taj Mahal, but it was finished by someone other than Shahjahan. The person, who completed Mahtab Bagh, did not bother about the technical flaws or quality of construction. That is why most of the structures of the Mahtab Bagh were razed to the ground soon after the construction. And the point emerges from here, who was he?
·       The sixth Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb was the youngest son of Shahjahan but he was not the legal heir of the empire. He usurped on the throne by defeating his three brothers and killing them one by one, Darashikoh was also among them who was the eldest son and appointed heir by Shahjahan. Aurangzeb had also imprisoned his father in Agra fort.
After controlling the reign of empire, some act of Aurangzeb has made his position suspicious. He closed the department of royal-history-writing after ten years of his reign; a tradition which continued from the first Mughal Emperor Babur. After Shahjahan died, Aurangzeb did not permit his sister to organize the procession of royal funeral and distribution of food and cloth among poor and needy. And many more...
After becoming Emperor, Aurangzeb had also presented himself as a theologian and religious leader. He de-codified the shariya-law and managed to write a book “Fatwa-e-Alamgiri” which is still considered to be a religious book among a sect of Muslims.
As mentioned by Tavernier, the construction at Mahtab Bagh was stopped by the order of Aurangzeb. Might be, Aurangzeb had considered his order to be right as he stopped wasting the public-money in the project of royal-tomb. But he must have monitored to destroy all the evidence that was indicative of his act of cruelty which he did with his father and brothers. The unfinished site of Mahtab Bagh, with the half-dug foundation and scattered building-material, was the potent object to publicize the fact among generations to generations.
Aurangzeb knew that only powerful people write the right history. He converted the site of Shahjahan’s tomb into a garden by using the material which was already bought to the site. The low-budget working caused the overlooking of technical-requirements and poor-quality construction.
          
If Mahtab Bagh was not the place of Shahjahan’s tomb, then the reason of its existence need to be answered. And the reason, given by the scholars who oppose the theory of Black Taj Mahal, is not acceptable if analysed on practical ground i.e. It was developed to view Taj Mahal in moonlit night etc.
The notes of Tavernier cannot be taken as a “fanciful-writing” as some people have described. Because, the place where he indicated that construction began for Shahjahan’s mausoleum, bears contemporary structures. Is the existence of such structures merely a probability??
The famous art-historian, Percy Brown had expressed his view in 1943: “That it was Shah Jahan’s intention to duplicate the entire scheme of the Taj by the erection of another mausoleum in black marble to enshrine his own remains, on the opposite bank of the Jumnan and to connect the two by a bridge, seems fairly well established.”
 Tavernier, the French traveller and trader, who visited the Mughal court during the regimes of both Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb stated that “the former emperor began to build his own tomb on the other side of the river, but the war which he had with his son interrupted his plan, and Aurangzebe, who reigns at present, is not disposed to complete it”.
 And supplementing this contemporary record is the testimony of the cenotaphs in the Taj Mahal itself, their position with that of the queen in the centre, and that of the emperor to one side, seems to signify that the location of the latter was an afterthought brought about because his own separate mausoleum never matured.”
The above article is an abridgement of one of the chapter of the book; BLACK TAJ MAHAL: The Emperor’s Missing Tomb. For more explanation and details kindly refer the same.
I N Khan (Arshi)
Author:

BLACK TAJ MAHAL: The Emperor’s Missing Tomb

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