Chauburji
(Urdu: چو برجی) (Chau meaning four, burji meaning tower) is one of the most
famous monuments among the structures and buildings of the Mughal era in the
city of Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan.
In the historic city of Lahore, on the road that led southwards to Multan, the Chauburji gateway remains of an extensive garden known to have existed in Mughal times. The establishment of this garden is attributed to Mughal Princess Zeb-un-Nisa, 1646 AD, which appears in one of the inscriptions on the gateway. The gateway consists of four towers and contains much of the brilliant tile work with which the entire entrance was once covered.
Chauburji
represents a strong blend of Mughal architecture with ancient Muslim style of
building. Its distinguishing features are the minarets which expand from the
top, not present anywhere in the sub-continent. Some, however, believe that
there were cupolas upon these minarets which collapsed with the passage of
time. Arches are of the so-called 'Tudor' style, adapted to Islamic
architecture, particularly in Mughal mausoleums and mosques. The red brickwork
is typical of the Muslim buildings of the sub-continent; the doorways and
windows running through the interior corridors are examples of the living style
that characterized the Mughal buildings. However, the main purpose of building
Chauburji appears to be strictly monumental. The decrepit building, which has
not lost its elegance, stands alone surrounded by hoardings and bustling
traffic on the busy Multan Road.
Lost
Garden of Zeb-un-Nisa
Originally it was gateway to the Garden of Zeb-un-Nisa or
Zebinda Begum, the accomplished daughter of Aurangzeb.
This garden is believed to have been extended from Nawankot in the south to the
main city of Lahore towards north. However, no traces of such an expansive
garden are now available. A fragmentary inscription on the eastern archway
records that the garden was built in AH. 1056 i.e. 1646 AD.
Although most of the inscriptions have been lost, on the
upper-most part of the construction Ayat-ul-Kursi can be seen in Arabic script
in blue and worked in porcelain. Others include two couplets written in Persian
above the arch:
“This garden, in the pattern of the garden of Paradise, has been
founded (missing line)... The garden has been bestowed on Mian Bai. By the
bounty of Zebinda Begum, the Lady of the Age."
It is thus understood that it was commissioned by
Sahib-e-Zebinda (one endowed with elegance), Begum-e- Dauran (Lady of Ages) and
was bestowed upon Mian Bai Fakhrunnisa (Pride of Women), the favourite female
attendant of the princess.
Renovation
During a severe earthquake in 1843, the
north-western minaret collapsed and cracks appeared in the central arch. This
has however been restored as much as was reasonably possible and the gateway
now looks quite as it might have been during the time of its Mughal patroness.
The restoration was carried out by the Department of Archeology in the late in
1960's.
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