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Pilgrimage tours to Delhi also
includes a travel tour to the Quwwat-ul-Islam Masjid can be a
fascinating experience for the tourist visiting this Islamic
mosque.The mosque is an exquisite specimen of Hindu Islamic
architecture splendor.
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India Gate
Thar Desert
Omkareshwar
Shopping in Delhi
Kanyakumari
Quwwat-ul-Islam Masjid in Delhi
¤ A Must Visit Site
The
Quwwat-ul-Islam Masjid can be a bewildering experience for those
unfamiliar with its history. On one hand there is the beautiful,
curvaceous Islamic calligraphy, the arabesque designs and then there
are pillars with clearly pre-Islamic Hindu motifs. The reason is of
course quite simple; the pillars were taken from the 27 temples of
Qila Rai Pithora, the city of the Rajput king Prithviraj Chauhan (see
history). This in fact has been recorded by Qutub-ud-din in his
inscriptions, who calls it the Jami Masjid (Friday Mosque) in his
inscriptions.
¤ The Construction of The Mosque
The mosque was started in 1192 by Qutub-ud-din Aibak, the first ruler
of the Slave Dynasty (called so because the founder was once a royal
slave). It was finished four years later. However the masjid, much
like the Qutub complex itself, never stopped growing and many
subsequent rulers, like Altamash in 1230 and Alauddin Khalji in 1315,
added their own bits to it.
¤ The Exquisite Interiors
As soon as you passing through the entrance (watch out for the steep
steps) of the poetically beautiful Quwwat-ul-Islam mosque the
intricately carved temple ceiling catches your eye. In front of you
will be the spectacular courtyard of the mosque which is lined by the
rows of the profusely adorned pillars talked about earlier on both
sides. Hindu motifs, like tasseled ropes, bells, tendrils, cows and
leaves, frolic all over the mosque. The very first indication of the
Islamic character of the building come from the elegant pointed arches
with curvaceous and serpentine calligraphy of texts from Quran in
Arabic crowning them, towards the west of the mosque.
A massive stone screen was erected in front of the prayer hall, with a
central arch and two similar, though smaller, arches on either side;
all of these are shaped like an 'S' (ogee-shaped). The prayer hall of
the mosque stands to the west. It consists of a central arch which is
over 6.15m (20ft) high and profusely carved, crowded with exquisite
decorations and is one of the earliest and finest examples of the
fusion of Hindu and Islamic art.
¤ The Extension of The Structure
Later Qutub-ud-din's son-in-law and successor, Altamash had the
prayer hall screen extended, and added three more arches besides the
original five. The difference between the two arches is interesting:
the earlier arches are not really the 'true' arch which is such a
hallmark of Islamic architecture, Altamash's arches were built by
workmen from Afghanistan and are stylistically quite distinct. They
use Islamic motifs such as geometrical shapes rather than naturalistic
designs (which were frowned upon by the Muslim clergy) that Hindus
used. Ala-ud-din Khalji added a courtyard to the mosquethe entrance to
which is the amazing Alai Darwaza.
In the mosque compound is the small but pretty tomb of Imam Zamim, who
was the Imam (head priest) of the mosque during Sikander Lodi's
(1488-1517) reign.
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