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Located at the city of Agra in the State of
Uttar Pradesh, the Taj Mahal is one of the most beautiful masterpieces
of architecture in the world. Agra, situated about 200 km south of New
Delhi, was the Capital of the Mughals (Moguls), the Muslim Emperors who
ruled Northern India between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries. The
Mughals were the descendents of two of the most skilled warriors in
history: the Turks and the Mongols. The Mughal dynasty reached its
highest strength and fame during the reign of their early Emperors,
Akbar, Jehangir, and Shah Jehan.
It was Shah Jehan who ordered the building of
the Taj, in honor of his wife, Arjumand Banu who later became known as
Mumtaz Mahal, the Distinguished of the Palace. Mumtaz and Shah Jehan
were married in 1612 and, over the next 18 years, had 14 children
together. The Empress used to accompany her husband in his military
campaigns, and it was in 1630, in Burhanpur, that she gave birth to her
last child, for she died in childbirth. So great was the Emperor love to
his wife that he ordered the building of the most beautiful mausoleum
on Earth for her.
Although it is not known for sure who planned the Taj, the name of an Indian architect
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of Persian descent, Although it is not known for
sure who planned the Taj, the name of an Indian architect of Persian
descent, Ustad Ahmad Lahori, has been cited in many sources. As soon as
construction began in 1630, masons, craftsmen, sculptors, and
calligraphers were summoned from Persia, the Ottoman Empire, and Europe
to work on the masterpiece. The site was chosen near the Capital, Agra
on the southwest bank of the River Yamuna. The architectural complex is
comprised of five main elements: the Darwaza or main gateway, the
Bageecha or garden, the Masjid or mosque, the Naqqar Khana or rest
house, and the Rauza or the Taj Mahal mausoleum. The actual Tomb is
situated inside the Taj.
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The
Pyramids of Egypt, built at Giza during the 4th Dynasty (circa
2680-c.2544 BC) are the oldest of the seven wonders and the only ones
remaining intact today.
Thegreat pyramids of Egypt still stand. They
were built between 2650 and 2500 BC. Exceptfor parts of the Mausoleum
and of the temple of Artemis, they are the only one ofthe seven ancient
wonders still standing.
Of the seven wonders of the ancientworld, only the
pyramids of Egypt have survived in a form that resembles their
originalcondition. The largest of the three, known as the Great Pyramid
of Khufu, was made
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of
approximately 2.3 million blocks of stone each weighing an average of
2.5 tons.Located in Giza on the west bank of the Nile River, near Cairo,
the pyramids remainone of the engineering marvels of all time.
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The
Mausoleum of Halicarnassus (circa 353 BC) was a monumental marble
tomb,decorated by the leading sculptor of the age, for King Mausolus of
Caria in AsiaMinor; only fragments remain.
The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, also in Asia Minor,derived its name from King Mausolus of Caria.
After his death in the middle ofthe 4th
century BC, his queen, Artemisia,
employed Greek architects to constructa
superb monument over his remains. It was a great rectangular pile of
masonry, surmountedby an Ionic colonnade supporting a rooflike pyramid.
At the apex stood a four-horsechariot in which were statues of the king
and queen. So famous was this structurethat the word mausoleum came to
be applied to any monumental tomb.
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Some relics ofthe original Mausoleum are preserved in the British Museum.
Only crumbling fragmentsremain of the
Mausoleum at Halicarnassus on the coast of Asia Minor. It was raisedto
the memory of King Mausolus of Caria by his devoted Queen, Artemisia.
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The 12-m
(40-ft) Statue of Zeus (mid-5th century BC) by the Greek
sculptorPhidias was the central feature of the Temple of Zeus at
Olympia, Greece.
Thestatue of Olympian Zeus was erected at
Olympia, in the Peloponnesus of Greece, bythe great sculptor Phidias in
the 5th century BC. It was a towering structureof ivory and gold, 40
feet high, majestic and beautiful.
After about 10 centuriesof existence the
statue was destroyed. Our only idea of it is gained from coins ofElis,
which are thought to bear copies of the original.
The ivory and gold statueof the Olympian Zeus
was perhaps the greatest masterpiece of the sculptor Phidias. It stood
in a shrine on
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the Olympian plain until the early Middle Ages.
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The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, perhaps built by
King Nebuchadnezzar II about600 BC, were a mountainlike series of
planted terraces.
The Hanging Gardens ofBabylon have long since
disappeared. They were said to have been built by King Nebuchadnezzarin
the 6th century BC to please and console his favorite wife, Amytis.
Great terracesof masonry were built one on top of the other. On these
were planted gardens of tropicalflowers and trees and avenues of palms.
They were irrigated by water pumped fromthe Euphrates River.
Nebuchadnezzar and his queen could sit in the shade and lookdown upon
the beauties of the city. The walls of Babylon were often included
withthe Hanging Gardens among the wonders of Babylon. Built by
Nebuchadnezzar, they werefaced with glazed tile and pierced by openings
fitted with magnificent brass gates.
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Accordingto tradition, the homesickness of a
favorite wife prompted Nebuchadnezzar, king ofBabylon, to build the
famous Hanging Gardens. Nothing remains of these luxuriantterraces.
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TIs it simply a temple? How could it take its
place among other unique structures such as the Pyramid, the Hanging
Gardens, and the Colossus of Rhodes? For the people who actually visited
it, the answer was simple. It was not just a temple... It was the most
beautiful structure on earth... It was built in honor of the Greek
goddess of hunting and wild nature. That was the Temple of Artemis
(Diana) at Ephesus.
Location
The ancient city of Ephesus near the modern
town of Selcuk, about 50 km south of Izmir (Smyrna) in Turkey.
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History
Although the foundation of the temple
dates back to the seventh century BC, the structure that earned a spot
in the list of Wonders was built around 550 BC. Referred to as the great
marble temple, or temple D, it was sponsored by the Lydian king Croesus
and was designed by the Greek architect Chersiphron. It was decorated
with bronze statues sculpted by the most skilled artists of their time:
Pheidias, Polycleitus, Kresilas, and Phradmon.
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The
Pharos of Alexandria (circa 280 BC), located on an island in the
harborof Alexandria, Egypt, was a famous ancient lighthouse standing
more than 134 m (440ft) tall; it was destroyed in the 14th century.
The Pharos of Alexandria,in Egypt, was the
forerunner of modern lighthouses. The name belonged originallyto an
island lying off the coast. When Alexander the Great laid out the city
he connectedthe island of Pharos with the mainland by means of a mole,
or causeway.
On theeastern point of the island his
successors, Ptolemy I and Ptolemy II, erected a greatlighthouse made of
white marble. It was this structure, said to have been 400 feethigh,
that came to be known as the Pharos of Alexandria. For more than
1,000years the lighthouse known as Pharos of Alexandria guided
Mediterranean ships toharbor. Built for
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Ptolemy II of Egypt in about 280 BC, the lighthouse was
severelydamaged by an earthquake in AD 955 and disappeared completely by
1500.
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The
Colossus of Rhodes was a 30-m (100-ft) bronze statue of the Greek sungod
Helios, erected about 280 BC to guard the entrance to the harbor at
Rhodes; itwas destroyed about 55 years later.
The Colossus of Rhodes was a great
bronzestatue, erected in about 280 BC by the citizens of Rhodes, capital
of the Greek islandof the same name. It represented their sun-god
Helios and was said to be 105 feethigh. According to legend, it
straddled the harbor entrance, but it is more likelythat it stood to one
side. The statue was overthrown by an earthquake in 224 BC butits huge
fragments long were regarded with wonder. Nearly a thousand years
later,in AD 656, a Muslim dealer bought the fragments as old metal and
carried them awayto be melted down.
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The old engraving of the
Colossus of Rhodes is purely imaginaryand is based on the legend that
the statue stood astride the harbor entrance.
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