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Perched atop
a rocky ridge 37 km west of Agra, Fatehpur Sikri came into being four centuries
ago when the Emperor Akbar, not yet 28 years old, created the first planned city
in Indo-Islamic style. The city was actualised with great energy, but was
completely abandoned a little more than a decade later.
In 1568, Akbar was secure and powerful but he had no son and
heir. His search for blessing for the birth of a successor brought him to the
Sufi mystic Shaikh Salim Chisti, who lived in Sikri village. The saint
prophesied the birth of three sons and soon after was born Prince Salim, later
to become Emperor Jahangir. In gratitude for the blessing Akbar decided to
create imperial residences in Sikri, which would function as a joint capital
with Agra. As a mark of his faith and his recent victories, he named his new
city Fatehpur Sikri. Akbar was a keen builder and the plan of Fatehpur Sikri
reveals an architectural mastermind at work. Research has proved that it was
planned on a definite mathematical grid.
The siting of the Jama Masjid marked the actual beginning of
the city which came up around it. The palace courts were laid out parallel to
the cardinally aligned mosque and the sequential order of the palaces were
emphasised by change in level. The most public space was at the lowest level,
while the royal harem was at the highest.
Fatehpur
Sikri is built in red sandstone, and is a beautiful blend of Hindu and Islamic
architectural elements. The sandstone is richly ornamented with carving and
fretwork. Fatehpur Sikri was abandoned 14 years after its creation. A shortage
of water is believed to be the reason. Today it is a ghost city, its
architecture is in a perfect state of preservation, and wandering through the
palaces it is easy to imagine that this was once a royal residence and a dynamic
cultural centre.
Fair and Festival::Annual Urs of Sheikh Slaim
Chisti.
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