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The Tughlaq Years

It was a time of elation. It was a time of rediscovery. From the corners of the land
they came, the master builders, for a new Sultan had taken his seat. And in his old
years, he had seen history. Seen empires rise and fall. And was laying the
foundation of what he hoped would be an empire that would last far beyond his
approaching death. Of the three rulers of the Tughlaq dynasty, the first, Ghiyas-
ud-Din Tughlaq (1320-1325 A.D.) was already aged when he became Sultan, and
ruled for barely five years. The warlike conditions prevailing throughout his reign
are best exemplified by his architecture, which though secular or religious, always
has strong military overtones, being able to be adapted for a spirited defence if
necessary. The major efforts of this man were concentrated on the building of his
citadel, the city of Tughlaqabad, one of the historical seven cities of Delhi. Today a
neglected but magnificent ruin.

According to Percy Brown, “all that remains of this great enterprise is a haunting
scene of savage splendor...Nothing resembling this picture (of treasures and
palaces) can now be seen in the huge masses of broken masonry, the unadorned
nature of which suggests that the project took more the form of a stern and
practical stronghold, than a work of architectural significance.”

The citadel integrates outer defence with the inner city buildings, though little
remains of the latter but scattered ruins. The massive outer walls were sloping,
following approximately the topography of the land, sited on a high outcrop of the
southern Delhi ridge. At close intervals are semi-circular bastions with eyelets for
archers to look down and shoot at the enemy.

Little can be identified within these walls, but it is clear that there was some kind
of royal palace with its accompanying residences, rooms for the women, halls of
audience as well as a connecting passageway to the monument just opposite,
Ghiyas-ud-Din’s tomb.

The Tomb of Ghiyas-ud-Din

In stark contrast to
the dilapidated condition of the fortress, the tomb of Ghiyas-ud-Din is almost
perfectly preserved. This originally stood in the middle of an artificial lake, and
the arched causeway which connected it to the citadel has now been replaced, with
the drying up of the water body, by an offshoot of Mathura Road leading to the
Qutb. The tomb itself is almost like a miniature fortress, with sloping crenellated
outer walls, complete with eyelets for archery. It is almost like a rallying point for
a last, hopeless defence, much in the manner of Sultan Ghari’s tomb.
The plan of this fortress-tomb is an irregular pentagon, with a bastion at each
angle of its outer walls. The tomb walls are clad for the most part with red
sandstone and the dome with marble. The most distinctive feature, however, are its
sloping walls, about which much excited scholarly discussion has taken place. The
commonly accepted view is that the tomb is an offshoot, or a descendant, of a
similar contemporaneous tomb at Multan (in modern Pakistan) of Shah Rukn-i-
Alam.

In the latter, the use of sun-dried brick made sloping walls a structural necessity,
much like Egyptian temple pylons, but this feature was transferred unchanged to
the tomb of Ghiyas-ud-Din, where stone was used for the walls.

The tomb continues the lotus-bud fringes found in the arch of the Alai Darwaza,
and there are many other stylistic similarities. Another interesting feature is the
presence of a structurally redundant lintel over the arched gateways. It is almost as
if the indigenous craftsmen, still not trusting the true arch as a means of support,
were being safe by introducing a lintel. That this lintel also introduces an element
of style was incidental.

It is in this tomb that we first begin to get a hint of what would follow in the
coming centuries. There is the same vocabulary - begun in the Alai Darwaza - of
red sandstone cladding and white marble. The massive outer walls, made for
defence, could be easily toned down to graceful perimeter guards. Today, the tomb
is overrun by monkeys, hundreds of them at a time, bereft of tourists unlike the
nearby Qutb, yet its importance cannot be denied, the last stand of a Sultan who
was destined to die at the hands of his son.
The site of Tughlaqabad is
desolate, ruined and
magnificent - very much like
the history of the Sultanate
which set the base for Muslim
rule in India.

The Bara-Khamba
Barakhamba Road in modern
Delhi is one of the major
entrances to Connaught Place,
and its high buildings with
corporate offices and banks contributes mainly to the city’s burgeoning skyline. It is
also famous for Modern School (Barakhamba Road) which has makes a regular
contribution to the ranks of India’s rich and famous every year.

However, the name Bara-khamba or Twelve Pillars derives from the house of a
nobleman originally erected there, of which little remains. The surviving evidence
is of interest because this is one of the few cases when secular architecture - as
opposed to religious or military - has been found in any degree of preservation this
far back in time. A reconstruction of the house would show it enclosed in a high
perimeter wall containing an open courtyard with rooms around, a roof terrace, a
court with a chabootra or platform for sitting in the open, as well as a quirky three-
story high tower, probably used for looking at the city.
Sultan Mohammed Tughlaq (1325-1351 A.D.) in whose reign this was built, was
not known for much else except his wacky, ill-timed policy decisions which,
visionary though they may have been, lacked the authority and persistence of the
Sultan to make them really work. Among these were the shifting of the Capital to
Daulatabad in the Deccan (to administer the empire from a central location). One
side effect of this was the undoing of all the good work of the previous generations
in Delhi, which became for a time desolate and abandoned. A significant proportion
of the population died en route to Daulatabad, and another percentage on the way
back, some years later, when it was apparent that the scheme had failed. The
introduction of token money instead of precious metals also had similar results,
with confusion and even chaos resulting for a time.
The throne of Delhi, emasculated by years of incessant warfare in the Deccan and
the profligacies of Muhammed bin Tughlaq, had its coffers nearly empty by the
time Firoz Shah (1351-1388 A.D.) came to power. This ruler leaves behind a wealth
of architectural evidence that is a testimony both to the age in which they were
built, as well as to his propensity for architecture. Today, Firoz Shah Kotla and
Hauz Khas are more famous, respectively, as a cricket ground and the feeding
grounds of Delhi’s hoi-polloi, but they stand as mute witnesses to the dying flickers
of the Sultanate. These, and more, in the next column.

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