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Eklakhi Mausoleum at Hazrat pandua,
traditionaly known as the mausoleum of jalaluddin
muhammad shah, son of raja
ganesha, is the earliest of the extant architectural monuments
of its type in Bengal. The inspiration must have been derived from the
tomb of Sultan iltutmish
(c 1236 AD), which is located behind the Quwwatul Islam Mosque in Delhi,
through the tomb of Ibrahim Bayyu in Bihar Sharif (1353 AD). It must be
remembered tomb structure was not popular in early Islam and gained popularity
only with the coming of the turks.
The earliest known such square structure is the tomb of Ismail, the Samanid
at Bukhara, the original model being perhaps the chahartaq, the
four doored Sassanian fire-temple of Iran. Tradition goes that a lakh
tankas was spent in its construction and hence the name Eklakhi.
The date remains unknown, but generally is taken as the death year of
Jalauddin (1433 AD).
The building, situated to the southwest of the grand
adina mosque,
is made of brick, and stands at a little distance to the northeast of
the qutb
shahi mosque, built in honour of the saint nur
qutb alam. Its dimensions are 24 m, by 22.7 m, the inner diameter
of the crowning hemispherical dome is 14.80 m. The dome rests on squinches
on the four corners. The exterior of the building is strengthened by four
octagonal towers at the corners, and is opened by four doorways, one each
in the middle of each side. Pointed arches with lintels crowning the doorjambs
span the doorways, a feature derived from the original Hindu temples through
Tughlaqi architecture. The jambs and the lintels are marked by carved
deities - that of the lintel of the southern entrance being the figure
of Visnu, and of the jambs those of dvarpals, a proof of their
appropriation from Hindu temple buildings. Inside the building, there
are the remains of three sarcophaguses. The western one seems to be the
tomb of the Sultan, the middle one that of his wife, and the eastern one
that of his son Sultan ahmad
shah. A peculiar feature of the inner spacious room is its
four alcoves built at the corners, often taken as cells for readers of
the Quran.
The ornamentation of the building consists of braced
string-mouldings of the corner towers, a divider moulding of the whole
external appearance, and the cornice mouldings in three tiers beside the
terracotta plaques in panels underneath - now broken - imitated from the
designs of the Adina Mosque. The interior of the dome was once ornamented
with plaster but is now dilapidated. The dome, like all other domes of
the Sultanate Bengal, is without a final, but appears to be covered with
a round rim in the form of a hormica, a Buddhist feature. The hemispherical
dome is in fact very much in the shape of the domes of the great stupas,
for example, those of Sanchi (1st century BC) and Manikyala in Punjab
(2nd century AD).
The chief contribution of this structure to Bengal architecture
is through its Bengalization. This entailed making the cornice carve downward
from the middle to the sides in imitation of the sloping roof of Bengali
huts. Once established this practice continued throughout the period of
Sultanate architecture in Bengal, not only in single domed structures,
but also in multi-domed large mosques. It also set the example of single
domed structures in Bengal, not only in Sultanate building art, but also
in Mughal architecture. Its great contributions to the development of
the Bengal style could be seen fully in the later half of the 15th and
early 16th centuries.
[ABM Husain]
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