Badshahi Mosque Lahore
The Badshahi Mosque is the landmark of Lahore, built by empror Aurangzeb Alamgir in . The Badshahi mosque or Shahi Mosque is located west of Lahore Fort along the outskirts of the Walled City of Lahore.
The mosque is an important example of Mughal architecture, with an exterior that is decorated with carved red sandstone with marble inlay. It remains the largest mosque of the Mughal-era, and is the second-largest mosque in Pakistan. After the fall of the Mughal Empire, the mosque was used as a garrison by the Sikh Empire and the British Empire, and is now one of Pakistan's most iconic sights.
The Badshahi mosque entrance lies on the western side of the rectangular Hazuri Bagh, and faces the famous Alamgiri Gate of the Lahore Fort, which is located on the eastern side of the Hazuri Bagh. The mosque is also located next to the Roshnai Gate, one of the original thirteen gates of Lahore, which is located to the southern side of the Hazuri Bagh.
Architectural features of Badshahi mosque
The mosque's interior is embellished with Mughal frescoes and carved
marble.while the arches are beautifully arrangesd in perfect line. The Mehrab is
also beautifully decorates with frescos painted on stuco plaster (Gypsum and
lime)
The mosque's domes
As a gateway to the west,
and Persia in particular, Lahore had a strong regional style which was heavily
influenced by Persian architectural styles. Earlier mosques, such as the Wazir
Khan Mosque, were adorned in intricate kashi kari, or Kashan style tile work,
from which the Badshahi Mosque would depart. Aurangzeb chose an architectural
plan similar to that of Shah Jehan's choice for the Jama Masjid in Delhi, though
built the Badshahi mosque on a much larger scale.Both mosques feature red
sandstone with white marble inlay, which is a departure from typical mosque
design in Lahore, in which decoration is done by means of intricate tile work.
The intricately painted entryway
Entrance to the mosque
complex is via a two-storey edifice built of red sandstone which is elaborately
decorated with framed and carved paneling on each of its facades. The edifice
features a muqarna, an architectural feature from the Middle East that was first
introduced into Mughal architecture with construction of the nearby and ornate
Wazir Khan Mosque.
The mosque's full name "Masjid Abul Zafar Muhy-ud-Din Mohammad Alamgir Badshah Ghazi" is written in inlaid marble above the vaulted entrance. The mosque's gateway faces east towards the Alamgiri Gate of the Lahore Fort, which was also commissioned by Aurangzeb. The massive entrance and mosque are situated on a plinth, which is ascended by a flight of steps at the mosque's main gate which. The gateway itself contains several chambers which are not accessible to the public. One of the rooms is said to contain hairs from the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him)'s, and that of his son-in-law Hazrat Ali Karam Ullah Wajahu.
Courtyard
After passing through the massive gate, an
expansive sandstone paved courtyard spreads over an area of , square feet, and
which can accommodate , worshipers when functioning as an Idgah. The courtyard
is enclosed by single-aisled arcades.
Prayer hall
The main edifice at the site was also built
from red sandstone, and is decorated with white marble inlay. The prayer chamber
has a central arched niche with five niches flanking it which are about one
third the size of the central niche. The mosque has three marble domes, the
largest of which is located in the centre of the mosque, and which is flanked by
two smaller domes.
Both the interior and exterior of the mosque are decorated with elaborate white marble carved with a floral design common to Mughal art. The carvings at Badshahi mosque are considered to be uniquely fine and unsurpassed works of Mughal architecture. The chambers on each side of the main chamber contains rooms which were used for religious instruction. The mosque can accommodate , worshippers in the prayer hall.
Minarets
At each of the four corners of the mosque, there
are octagonal, three-storey minarets made of red sandstone that are feet (
m) tall, with an outer circumference of feet and the inner circumference
is eight and half feet. Each minaret is topped by a marble canopy. The main
building of the mosque also features an additional four smaller minarets at each
corner of the building.
Near the entrance of the mosque lies the Tomb of Muhammad Iqbal, a poet widely revered in Pakistan as the founder of the Pakistan Movement which led to the creation of Pakistan as a homeland for the Muslims of British India. Also located near the mosque's entrance is the tomb of Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan, who is credited for playing a major role in preservation and restoration of the mosque.
Background
Entrance to the main prayer hall is through
arches made of red sandstone city was made an imperial capital by the earlier
Emperor, Akbar, who established the nearby Lahore Fort.
The eighth Mughal emperor, Aurangzeb, chose Lahore as the site for his new imperial mosque. Aurangzeb, unlike the previous emperors, was not a major patron of art and architecture and instead focused, during much of his reign, on various military conquests which added over million square kilometres to the Mughal realm.
The mosque was built to commemorate Aurangzeb's military campaigns in southern India, in particular against the Maratha king Shivaji. As a symbol of the mosque's importance, it was built directly across from the Lahore Fort and its Alamgiri Gate, which was concurrently built by Aurangzeb during construction of the mosque.
History of Badshahi Mosque
Construction
The Badshahi Mosque features a monumental
gateway that faces the Hazuri Bagh quadrangle and Lahore Fort.
The mosque was
commissioned by the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb in , with construction overseen by
the Emperor's foster brother, and Governor of Lahore, Muzaffar Hussein - also
known by the name Fidai Khan Koka. Aurangzeb had the mosque built in order to
commemorate his military campaigns against the Maratha king Chhatrapati Shivaji.
After only two years of construction, the mosque was opened in .
Sikh era
The Samadhi of Ranjit Singh (white edifice) is a Sikh shrine that was built
next to the mosque in .
On July , the Sikh army of Ranjit Singh took
control of Lahore. After the capture of the city, Maharaja Ranjit Singh used its
vast courtyard as a stable for his army horses, and its Hujras (small
study rooms surrounding the courtyard) as quarters for his soldiers and as
magazines for military stores. In , he built a marble edifice in the Hazuri Bagh
facing the mosque, known as the Hazuri Bagh Baradari, which he used as his
official royal court of audience. Marble slabs for the baradari may have been
plundered by the Sikhs from other monuments in Lahore.
During the First Anglo-Sikh War in , Ranjit Singh's son, Sher Singh, used the mosque's large minarets for placement of zamburahs or light guns which were used to bombard the supporters of Chand Kaur, who had taken refuge in the besieged Lahore Fort. In one of these bombardments, the fort's Diwan-e-Aam (Hall of Public Audience) was destroyed, but was subsequently rebuilt in the British era. During this time, Henri de La Rouche, a French cavalry officer employed in the army of Sher Singh, also used a tunnel connecting the Badshahi mosque to the Lahore fort to temporarily store gunpowder.
In , the Samadhi of Ranjit Singh was built for the Sikh ruler Ranjit Singh at a site immediately adjacent to the mosque after his death.
British Rule
Badshahi Mosque had fallen into disrepair after the city's Sikh rule
In
the British seized control of Lahore from the Sikh Empire. During the British
Raj, the mosque and the adjoining fort continued to be used as a military
garrison. The cells built into the walls surrounding its vast courtyard
were demolished by the British after the Indian Rebellion of , so as to prevent
them from being used for anti-British activities. The cells were replaced by
open arcades known as dalans.
Because of increasing Muslim resentment against the use of the mosque as a military garrison, the British set up the Badshahi Mosque Authority in to oversee the restoration and to re-establish it as a place of religious worship. From then onwards, piecemeal repairs were carried out under the supervision of the Badshahi Mosque Authority. The building was officially handed back to the Muslim community by John Lawrence, who was the Viceroy of India. The building was then re-established as a mosque.
In April , after the Amritsar Massacre, a mixed Sikh, Hindu and Muslim crowd of an estimated ,-, gathered in the mosque's courtyard in protest. A speech by Gandhi was read at the event by Khalifa Shuja-ud-Din, who would later become Speaker of the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab.
Extensive repairs commenced from onwards, when Sikandar Hayat Khan began raising funds for this purpose. Renovation was supervised by the architect Nawab Alam Yar Jung Bahadur. As Khan was largely credited for extensive restorations to the mosque, he was buried adjacent to the mosque in the Hazuri Bagh.
Post-independence
The mosque is heavily used during the Islamic month of Ramadan.
Restoration works begun in continued after the Independence of Pakistan,
and were completed in at a total cost of . million Rupees
On the occasion of the nd Islamic Summit held at Lahore on February , thirty-nine heads of Muslim states offered their Friday prayers in the Badshahi Mosque, including, among others, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto of Pakistan, Faisal of Saudi Arabia, Muammar Gaddafi, Yasser Arafat, and Sabah III Al-Salim Al-Sabah of Kuwait. The prayers were led by Mawlānā Abdul Qadir Azad, the then khatib of the mosque.
In , the Badshahi Mosque in a tentative list as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In , the marble inlay in the main prayer hall was repaired. In , replacement work on the red sandstone tiles on the mosque's large courtyard was begun using red sandstone imported from the original Mughal source near Jaipur, in the Indian state of Rajasthan.
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