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Thursday, June 25, 2015
Near the Mehrauli village settlement, in an
area now designated as the Mehrauli Archaeological Park, are scattered various
monuments—a legacy of centuries of architectural skill. It is of prime
historical value in the local, national, and international context. The
Mehrauli Archaeological Park covers 100 acres of green land abutting a World
Heritage Site—the Qutb Minar. It is bound by the Chattarpur Road to the east
and Qutb Complex in the north.
This area is dotted with remains from every
era of Delhi’s history—from the pre-Islamic to the late Mughal and the colonial
period. The Tomar Rajputs established Lal Kot, the first fortification in Delhi
here. The succeeding Chauhan rulers extended Lal Kot to form Qila Rai Pithora.
In the late twelfth century Qutbuddin Aibak, the founder of the Delhi
Sultanate, made this area the seat of Sultanate power. During the early
Sultanate period several structures like tombs and mosques were built here. The
trend of constructing monumental structures continued through the reign of
successive rulers. Buildings like the mosque and tomb of Maulana Jamali (a
sixteenth-century Sufi saint), Madhi Masjid, Rajon ki Baoli, and the tomb
of Quli Khan (the foster brother of Emperor Akbar) were constructed within this
area. Renovations like the extension of the Quli Khan Tomb into Thomas
Metcalfe’s (commissioner of Delhi in the 1840s and 1850s) retreat and the
conversion of the landscape through the addition of a bridge, canopies, and
guesthouses were accomplished during the colonial era. The Archaeological Park
has a varied landform with irregular rocky slopes, valleys, plains, and water
bodies. The park contains several water bodies, some of them manmade. These
include Hauz-e-Shamsi, Rajon ki Baoli, Gandhak ki Baoli, Jharna, and the
depression below the Quli Khan Tomb which earlier formed a pond. The park also
contains a variety of vegetation and landscaped gardens such as Metcalfe’s
Garden in front of Quli Khan’s Tomb. Today the park forms a buffer between the
settlement at Mehrauli village and the Qutb complex and is one of the city’s
largest green space.
For more information on some of the monuments there, please visit the MONUMENTS section..
For more information on some of the monuments there, please visit the MONUMENTS section..
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