A female acquaintance told me recently how it had been her great desire to get married in the Taj Mahal. She had to go through many trials and tribulations to get her wish to materialize, including a last minute hitch when they were told the ceremony had to be Islamic, and they had to dash across Dehli to get a Muslim cleric willing to do the needful. I know the bureaucracy in that part of the world, and it must have been agony. My full sympathies to her (or should I empathize with her?).But it was finally done.
For one reason or another, the Taj Mahal has been brought to the fore in my consciousness in recent days.
I am sure this must happen to many people when something that they had pushed really to the back of their mind for years is brought to "life" by unrelated events or people.
Construction on the Taj Mahal started in 1632, and it was completed in 1653.
It was built by the Mughal Emperor of India who called himself Shah Jahan (King of the World). The Mughal Empire was at its peak at the time, stretching from Afghanistan to Burma (Myanmar). One of the richest and most important Empires in the world of the time.The Mughals were Muslims, but very liberal and encouraged the arts. But they were also very cruel, and it was not a very good idea to cross them, or one of the punishments was that you would get thrown off the ramparts of the castle, and then elephants would be made to trample over you! Not very pleasant. Though I wouldn't mind doing that to some people that I know. But that's another story.
The Taj Mahal is beleived to be a monument to Love. Actually, the Emperor Shah Jahan's favourite queen and third wife lies buried there. She died in 1631 while giving birth to a daughter, their 14th child. The emperor was grief stricken, so he had the Taj Mahal built in her memory!
It is a great irony of fate, that the Emperor was deposed by his own real son, Aurangzeb, and thrown into prison. It is said that as he shuffled about in chains in Agra Fort in his imprisonment, he would squint against the sun to get a view of the Taj Mahal through the small windows of his confines! He died in prison at the age of 74.