Lecture-8 Islamic Architecture - Combined
Lecture-8 Islamic Architecture - Combined
Lecture-8 Islamic Architecture - Combined
Ar.Asha Sreenivas.
SCMS School of Architecture
Indo-Islamic architecture encompasses a wide range of styles from various backgrounds that helped
shape the architecture of the Indian subcontinent from the advent of Islam in the Indian subcontinent around
the 7th century.
It has left influences on modern Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi architecture.
Both secular and religious buildings are influenced by Indo-Islamic architecture which
exhibit Indian, Islamic, Persian, Central Asian, Arabic and Ottoman Turkish influences, many of which
themselves were influenced by Indian architecture through the spread of Indian culture before the advent of
Islam
India produced more notable buildings than all the other countries that came under the influence of Islam. Because of two factor .1.relatively later development of the
style. 2. remarkable genius of the indigenous craftsman. Most of the Islamic buildings are made of dressed stones, while in other countries it was made by brick, plaster
and rubble.
Islamic Architecture
a) Religious – Mosque and tombs
b) Secular – Buildings for public and civic
purpose , Houses, Pavilions, Town-gates,
wells, Gardens etc.
MOSQUE
-The place of Prostration.
Design derived from humble dwelling of the founder at medina in Arabia.
Basically an open courtyard surrounded by a pillared veranda.
Parts of Mosque
• Rectangular open space – Sahn
• Four sides being enclosed by pillared cloisters – Liwans
• Fountain or tank in the center
• To meet the demand for some focal point-west side(in india) of the courtyard were
expanded and elaborated into a pillared hall or sanctuary with a wall at back contain a
recess or alcove called a Mihrab indicating qibla or the direction of prayer.
• Right side of Mihrab – Mimbar or pulpit
• A portion of sanctuary is screened into compartment for women.
• Elevated platform from which the muezzin summons the faithful to prayer. Usually takes
the form of a high tower or Minaret
• In every large city there is one mosque known as Jamma Masjid (collecting mosque)
where faithful assemble for Friday ( Jum’ah) prayer
TOMB
Introduced into the country an entirely new kind of structure.(only the pyramids of pharaohs
and few other funerary monument have excelled in size and architectural splendour than
Islamic tombs of India).
In course of time, tomb-building especially in northern India introduced itself into the
landscape, much of the finest indo-Islamic architecture.
Parts of Tomb
• Tomb chamber- in the center cenotaph or Zarih. Whole structure being roofed by a
dome.
• In the ground underneath – resembling crypt –Mortuary chamber –Maqbarah or
Takhana with grave or Qabr.
• Western wall with Mihrab. larger mausoleums contains a mosque as a separate building.
• Whole being combined within an enclosure.-Rauza (got name from the Garden in prophets
tomb ar-rauza)
• Occassionaly important tombs are called -Dargahs
Architecture thus produced may resolved into Three main division
1. Delhi or Imperial
2. Provincial
3. Mughal
Earliest Mosque in India (Bhambore) –remains of a mosque built during A.D 727
• Paved courtyard- 23m x 18m
• Outer dimension -39m x 37m
• Cloisters on three sides with two rows
of pillars
• West side – 3 rows with 33 pillars
• May destroyed in natural calamity-
earthquake of AD 893
• Multiple invansions of the turks and Afghans
• Ghor Succeeded the Ghazhavids continued to lured by the riches of india
• Mohammed Ghori -Defeated prithviraj Chauhan.Rajput ruler of Ajmer
and Delhi in the battlefield of Tarrain
• Slave dynasty started in india
SLAVE DYNASTY
SLAVE DYNASTY - 1191-1246
First Muslim dynasty to rule India.
• Muhammad Ghori
• Qutub-ud-din Aibak descended the throne.
The first ruler of the slave dynasty was Qutub-ud-din Aibak who ruled from 1206 to 1210. He established his
capital at two places, first at Lahore and then shifted it to Delhi. It was during his reign that the construction of the
famous Qutub Minar started. He was succeeded by his son Aram Shah but due to his incompetence, he was
defeated in just one year by Iltumish.
Iltumish - 1211 to 1236.
Under his strong governance, the slave dynasty was able to find a strong footing and establish itself as an
important kingdom. It was during his reign that the construction of Qutub Minar got completed. After ruling
successfully for a period of 25 years, he died, but nominated his daughter Raziya Sultan as the heir to the throne.
She was an able ruler, but since she was a woman, she faced stern opposition from nobles who got her
murdered.
Ghiyasuddin Balban
The last effective emperor of the slave dynasty was Ghiyasuddin Balban. He ruled from 1266 to 1286. During his
reign, the administration was strengthened and he paid much attention to governance in his empire. The army
was trained effectively to use weapons and the production of arms and other war weaponry was at its peak. This
is what helped them fight against attacks by the Mongols. He died in 1286 and after him the slave dynasty
collapsed.
QUTUB- UD-DIN AND SLAVE DYNASTY
2
4
1
3
TUGHLAQ DYNASTY
TUGHLAQ DYNASTY(1320-1413)
• The rulers of the Tughlaq Dynasty also undertook
considerable construction activities, including
building three of the seven ancient
cities of Delhi.
• Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq (1320-1325 AD) built
Tughlaqabad, the third city of Delhi, in 1321-
23 AD.
• The Tomb of Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq, built of red
sandstone, is an irregular pentagon in its
exterior plan and its design is of the pointed
or "Tartar" shape and is crowned by a finial
resembling the kalasa and amlaka of a Hindu
temple.
• Tughlaqabad
• Tomb of Giyas-ud-din Tughlaq
• Feroz Shah Kotla
• Khirki Masjid
• Hauz Khas
• Tomb of Telangani
• Tughlaqabad Fort is a
ruined fort in Delhi, stretching across
6.5 km, built by Ghiyas-ud-din Tughlaq,
the founder of Tughlaq dynasty, of the Delhi
Sultanate of India in 1321.
• Its a massive structure that lies along the
Mehrauli-Badarpur road.
• The pentagon shaped like plan is
guarded with parapet walls that support
massive cone-shaped bastions at every
intersection.
• The borderline walls are inclined inward
and stand tall at a height of 11.75 meters
seen with continuous battlements furnish
with crenels.
• The arch shaped corridors and concave
chambers stretch along the interiors of the
courts borderline wall.
to build a capital that was strong enough to
• One of the primary concerns of Ghiyas-ud-din was
repulse Mongol attacks and provide security to its citizens. Hence, in a short period of four years,
the massive Tughlaqabad Fort was constructed.
• The crumbling ruins of the Tughlaqabad Fort convey a sense of lost grandeur. The massive ramparts,
battlements, and the mammoth stonework of this fort speak highly of the engineering skills of the
workers who constructed it. The fort served the dual purpose of a defensive structure as well as
the imperial capital of Ghiyas-ud-din Tughlaq, the founder of the Tughlaq dynasty. There are a
number of monuments within the precincts of this massive fort.
Rampart Leading to the Fort Entrance Pointy Barbicans Surround Circular Bastion with Defensive
the Tomb Complex Barbican-like Parapet
PARTS
• Tughlaqabad is divided into three parts :
1. A Palace section
2. A Citadel and
3. A Residential city.
TOMB OF GIYASUDIN TUGHAQ
• Further into the gardens, are remains of a watercourse connected to the Yamuna River to Sikander Lodi's
tomb.
• The tomb of Mohammed Shah, the last of the Sayyid dynasty rulers, the earliest of the tombs in the garden, was
built in 1444 by Ala-ud-din Alam Shah as a tribute to Mohammed Shah.
BARA GUMBAD
• Bara Gumbad, or Big Dome, consist of a square tomb with a predominant white dome, built during
the Lodi period (1451-1526).
• it consists of a large rubble-construct dome, it is not a tomb but a gateway to an attached a three
domed masjid (mosque), both built in 1494 during the reign of Sikander Lodi, there is also a
residence surrounding a central courtyard, where the remains of a water tank can be seen.
BARA GUMBAD MOSQUE
• His tomb is an example of Indo-Islamic architecture, it was designed by the architect Aliwal Khan and
built between 1540 and 1545, this red sandstone mausoleum (122 ft high), which stands in the middle
of an artificial lake, which is nearly square.
• The tomb stands at the centre of the lake on a square stone plinth with domed
kiosks, chhatris at each of its corners, further there are stone banks and stepped moorings on
all sides of the plinth, which is connected to the mainland through a wide stone bridge.
• The main tomb is built on octagonal plan, topped by a dome, 22-metre in span and surrounded
ornamental domed kiosks which were once covered in coloured glazed tile work.
• The tomb was built during the reign of his son Islam Shah.
• An inscription dates its completion to August 16, 1545, three months after the death of Sher Shah.
TOMB OF SHER SHAH SURI, SASARAM, BIHAR (CIR. 1540 AD)
• Lodi prototype as base for design
• Octagonal in plan and raised to the height of 45.6 m up on the square base of 76 m side
• Huge pyramidal mass arranged in five distinct stages
• Pillared kiosks in each storey
• Located in the unique setting, as placed in the middle of 426.7 m sided artificially created water
body approached through a gateway along a causeway
• Advanced structure till date with great imaginative efforts
• The upper structure (tomb) being placed slightly off in diagonal way with the lower platform probably
due to the correction of error in the orientation of tomb
TOMB OF SHER SHAH SURI, SASARAM, BIHAR (CIR. 1540 AD)
REFERENCES
• Grover Satih, The Architecture of India (Islamic), Vikas Publishing House Pvt. Ltd.
• Indian Architecture-Islamic period – Percy Brown
• Nath, R. 1978. History of Sultanate Architecture. New Delhi: Abhinav Publications.
• Williams, John A. and Caroline. 1980. Architecture of Muslim India: The Sayyids and the Lodis 1414-
1526. Santa Barbara, California: Visual Education, Inc.
• Related sites.
• Slides- Dr.Binumol Tom.RIT kottayam.