Invisible City: The Hidden Monuments of DelhiI asked my soul, what is Delhi? She replied: The world is the body and Delhi its soul. Mirza Ghalib may have been indulging in hyperbole when he penned these famous lines, but there is no denying that Delhi is a notch above the other great metropolises of India. What sets it apart is the multitude of historic ruins that dot the city. Every ruler down the ages wished to adorn his beloved Delhi, to leave a mark that would last and so left behind a landscape that is studded with jewels from the past. Neophyte New Delhi has been quick to discard most of them on the rubbish heap of history, choosing to validate a bare minimum with a name, an identity and a place of visibility. Where it was possible to make the law look the other way, many of these monuments were razed to the ground to make way for colonisation and development. Disregarded as no more than inconvenient piles of rocks and stones, many have been pulled down, built upon and built around. Invisible City: The Hidden Monuments of Delhi explores this other Delhi—the little-known, seldom-visited and largely unheard-of, the Delhi that has been rendered practically invisible. |
Contents
Foreword | 8 |
Bakhtiyar Kakis Dargah | 24 |
Ghiyasuddin Tughlaqs Tomb | 40 |
Hunting Lodges of Firoz Shah Tughlaq | 55 |
Begumpuri Mosque and Vijay Mandal | 71 |
In and Around Sadhna Enclave | 84 |
Makhdum Sabzwaris Dargah | 98 |
Around Green Park | 111 |
Tombs of Atgah Khan and Adham Khan | 126 |
Arab ki Sarai | 147 |
Dadabari Jain Temple | 161 |
Around Sundar Nursery | 174 |
Mutiny Memorial | 192 |
Map | 209 |
Copyright | |