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Tomb inside Tajmahal
Tomb of Shahjahan & Mumtaz mahal
Inside the Taj Mahal,
the tomb of Mumtaz Mahal stands at the center of an octagonal hall, while the
slightly larger tomb of Shah Jahan, who died in 1666, is off to one side. Both
are elaborately carved and inlaid with semiprecious stones, illuminated by
sunlight filtering through an elaborately carved marble screen that is also
studded with jewels.
The tomb was provided with sumptuous fittings and furnishings, including rich
Persian carpets, gold lamps and candlesticks. It is reliably reported and
documented that two great silver doors to the entrance were looted and melted
down by Suraj Mal in 1764, and a sheet of pearls that covered the sarcophagus
was carried off by Amir Husein Ali Khan in 1720.
The south face of the tomb is the main entrance to the interior: a high, echoing
octagonal chamber flushed with pallid light reflected by yellowing marble
surfaces. A marble screen, cut so finely that it seems almost translucent, and
decorated with precious stones, scatters dappled light over the cenotaph of
Mumtaz Mahal in the centre of the tomb, and that of Shah Jahan next to it.
Inlaid stones on the marble tombs are the finest in Agra; attendants gladly
illuminate the decorations with torches. The 99 names of Allah adorn the top of
Mumtaz's tomb, and set into Shah Jahan's is a pen box, the hallmark of a male
ruler. These cenotaphs, in accordance with Moghul tradition, are only
representations of the real coffins, which lie in the same positions in an
unadorned and humid crypt below that's heavy with the scent of heady incense and
rose petals.
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