Showing posts with label Ahmedabad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahmedabad. Show all posts
Nov 11, 2017
May 8, 2016
Feb 24, 2016
Sep 15, 2015
Jul 12, 2015
Shaikh Hasan Muhammad Chishti's Tomb (Shahpur Mosque), Shahapur, Ahmadabad, Gujarat - 1885
Photograph of Shaikh Hasan Muhammad Chishti's Mosque at Shahapur in Ahmadabad in Gujarat, taken by Henry Cousens in the 1880s, from the Archaeological Survey of India. This mosque was built in 1565 in the Shahapur district, close to Shahapur Gate and the river. The pillars of the facade support nine cusped arches. Over the central five arches is a second storey, supporting a dome. The minarets, with their exuberant carving, particularly that in the niches, are among the most elaborate in Gujarat.
Know more about this architecture in Wikipedia
Source: British Library
Jan 10, 2015
Jul 14, 2012
Aug 12, 2011
Vintage Photograph of a Tile maker at Ahmadabad in Gujarat - 1873
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Labels:
1870s,
Ahmedabad,
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Common People,
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Aug 11, 2011
Jun 25, 2011
Hathee Singh Jain Temple - Ahmedabad c1868
Hathee Singh temple is a famous Jain temple. It was constructed in 1850. The temple was named after its founder Seth Hathee Singh. He was a wealthy Jain merchant. This temple was built in the dedication of the 15th Jain Trithanakara Dharmnath. The temple is famous for its architectural styling and designing that consists of intricate carvings.
Aug 14, 2010
Rani Sipri's Mosk and Tomb - Ahmedabad 1872

Window and base of minaret in Rani Spiri's Mosque, Ahmedabad - 1872

Queen's Mosque (Rani Masjid), Mirzapoor, Ahmedabad - 1880
Photograph of the mosque of Rani Rupmati at Ahmadabad in Gujarat.
The architecture of Ahmadabad reveals a fine synthesis of Hindu and Muslim elements, such as in the mausoleum complex of Rani Rupmati about whose life little is known. It is said that she may have been one of the chief queens of Ahmad Shah.
Source: British Library
Aug 7, 2010
Kootub Shah's Mosque, Ahmedabad - 1880

Photographer: Charles Lickfold
Photograph of the mosque of Qutub Shah at Ahmadabad in Gujarat, taken by Charles Lickfold in the 1880s, part of the Bellew Collection of Architectural Views.
The architecture of Ahmadabad reveals a fine synthesis of Hindu and Muslim elements. Qutub Shah (ruled 1451-1459) was the fifth ruler of the Ahmad Shah Dynasty. Despite its name, this mosque was founded in the reign of his father Muhammad Shah.
Huttising's Jain Temple, Camp Road, Ahmedabad - 1880

Photographer: Charles Lickfold
Photograph of the Jaina temple of Seth Hathisingh at Ahmadabad in Gujarat, taken by Charles Lickfold in the 1880s, part of the Bellew Collection of Architectural Views.
The city contains a mix of Islamic, Jaina and Hindu architecture as well as Indo-Islamic blending of elements. This Jaina temple was built in 1848 in a revivalist style of medieaval Gujarati architecture.
Dhera Khan's Tomb Ahmedabad - 1880

Photographer: Charles Lickfold
This signed photograph was taken by Charles Lickfold in 1880s. The image shows the tomb of Darya Khan, which now lies in the northern suburbs of modern-day Ahmadabad. It was built in 1453 whilst the city was the capital of the thriving sultanate of Gujarat. The majority of tombs of the period in Gujarat are built using local post and lintel or trabeate methods of construction in yellow sandstone. This tomb differs in two ways: first, it is built using baked brick; and secondly, its architects chose to use true arches and domes according to arcuate methods to create a cavernous interior in which the cenotaph is housed with a surrounded arcaded verandah with five entrances on each of the four sides. The use of the arch and dome was imported to South Asia from Islamic lands to the west. It is likely that Darya Khan was himself an immigrant from Persia, where such methods of construction were more familiar, who required that his own tomb be built in a style in keeping with those of his homeland. He is also attributed with the construction of a mosque using similar arcuate methods.
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