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Agra fort is also known as Lal Qila, Fort Rouge and Red Fort of
Agra. It is about 2.5 km northwest of its much more famous
sister monument, the Taj Mahal. The fort can be more accurately
described as a walled palatial city.
It is the most important fort in India. The great Mughals Babur,
Humayun, Akbar, Jehangir, Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb lived here,
and the country was governed from here. It contained the largest
state treasury and mint. It was visited by foreign ambassadors,
travellers and the highest dignitaries who participated in the
making of history in India.

History
This was originally a brick fort and the Chauhan Rajputs held
it. It was mentioned for the first time in 1080 AD when a
Ghaznavide force captured it. Sikandar Lodi (1487-1517) was the
first Sultan of Delhi who shifted to Agra and lived in the fort.
He governed the country from here and Agra assumed the
importance of the 2nd capital. He died in the fort in 1517 and
his son, Ibrahim Lodi, held it for nine years until he was
defeated and killed at Panipat in 1526. Several palaces, wells
and a mosque were built by him in the fort during his period.
After Panipat, Mughals captured the fort and a vast treasure -
which included a diamond that was later named as the Kohinoor
diamond - was seized. Babur stayed in the fort in the palace of
Ibrahim. He built a baoli (step well) in it. Humayun was
coronated here in 1530. Humayun was defeated in Bilgram in 1530.
Sher Shah held the fort for five years. The Mughals defeated the
Afghans finally at Panipat in 1556.
Realizing the importance of its central situation, Akbar decided
to make it his capital and arrived in Agra in 1558. His
historian, Abdul Fazal, recorded that this was a brick fort
known as 'Badalgarh' . It was in a ruined condition and Akbar
had it rebuilt with red sandstone. Architects laid the
foundation and it was built with bricks in the inner core with
sandstone on external surfaces. Some 4000 builders worked on it
for eight years, completing it in 1573.
It was only during the reign of Akbar's grandson, Shah Jahan,
that the site finally took on its current state. The legend is
that Shah Jahan built the beautiful Taj Mahal for his wife,
Mumtaz Mahal. Unlike his grandfather, Shah Jahan tended to have
buildings made from white marble, often inlaid with gold or
semi-precious gems. He destroyed some of the earlier buildings
inside the fort in order to make his own.
At the end of his life, Shah Jahan was imprisoned by his son,
Aurangzeb, in the fort, a punishment which might not seem so
harsh, considering the luxury of the fort. It is rumored that
Shah Jahan died in Muasamman Burj, a tower with a marble balcony
with an excellent view of the Taj Mahal.
This was also a site of one of the battles during the Indian
rebellion of 1857, which caused the end of the British East
India Company's rule in India, and led to a century of direct
rule of India by Britain.

Layout
The Agra Fort has won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in the
year 2004 and India Post has issued a Stamp to commemorate this
prestigious award on 28.11.2004.
The fort has a semi-circular plan, its chord lying parallel to
the river. Its walls are seventy feet high. Double ramparts have
massive circular bastions are regular intervals as also
battlements, embrasures, machicolations and string courses. Four
gates were provided on its four sides, one Khizri gate" opening
on to the river.
Two of the gates are called the 'Delhi Gate' and the 'Lahore
Gate' (sometimes called Amar Singh Gate).
The Delhi Gate is considered the grandest of the gates and leads
into an inner gate called the Hathi Pol (Elephant Gate). Due to
the fact that the Indian military (the Parachute Brigade in
particular) is still using the northern portion of the Agra
Fort, the Delhi Gate cannot be used by the public. Tourists
enter via the Lahore Gate. Lahore Gate is named so because it
faces Lahore, now in Pakistan.
The site is very important in terms of architectural history.
Abul Fazal recorded that five hundred buildings in the beautiful
designs of Bengal and Gujarat were built in the fort. Some of
them were demolished to make way for his white marble palaces.
Most of the others were destroyed by the British between 1803
and 1862 for raising barracks. Hardly thirty Mughal buildings
have survived on the south-eastern side, facing the river. Of
these, the Delhi Gate and Akbar Gate and one palace - "Bengali
Mahal" - are representative Akbari buildings.
The Delhi gate faces the city. A draw-bridge and a crooked
entrance make it impregnable. Two life sized stone elephants
with their riders were placed on its inner gate which was called
"Hathi Pol". The Delhi gate was monumentally built as the king's
formal gate.
Akbar Gate was renamed "Amar Singh Gate" by the British. The
gate is similar in design to the Delhi gate. Both are built of
red sandstone.
The Bengali Mahal is also built of red sandstone and is now
split into "Akbari Mahal" and "Jehagiri Mahal".
Some of the most historically interesting mixing of Hindu and
Islamic architecture reside there. In fact, some of the
decorations are Islamic and yet feature dragons, elephants and
birds, instead of the patterns and calligraphy, very much
unheard of. |