Ustad Ahmad Lahori (
c.1580–1649)[1] also known as Ahmad Ma'mar Lahori was the chief
Mughal architect and engineer during the reign of
emperorShah Jahan. He was responsible for the construction of several Mughal monuments, including the
Taj Mahal in
Agra and the
Red fort in
Delhi; both of which are
World Heritage sites.[2] He also designed the
Jama Mosque in Delhi.[3]
Considered greatest of the
Mughal architects,[1] Ahmad Lahori came from an illustrious family of
architects and
civil engineers. He was a skilled engineer who, owing to his architectural abilities, received the title of Nadir-ul-Asar (wonder of the age) from Shah Jahan.[4] His architecture is a combination of
Indo-Islamic and
Persian architectural styles, and thus a major example of
Indo-Persian culture. The architecture of Taj Mahal is widely praised around the world, enabling it to be listed among the
Wonders of the World.[5]
Life
The
nisba "Lahori" indicates that he came from
Lahore,
Punjab, in the
Mughal Empire. He has been described as a
Punjabi Muslim[6][7] or an
Indian of Persian heritage.[8] Even after his family's migration to Delhi, his family is still referred to by the epithet "Lahori".[9] In Muslim India, Lahori was used as a synonym for Punjabi by historic writers, such as
Amir Khusro who uses it to refer to the spoken language of the people of Punjab, and the Mughal Emperor
Jahangir who writes, "In fact they are pure Lahauris and speak the same language."[10][11]
Shah Jahan's court histories emphasize his personal involvement in the construction and it is true that, more than any other Mughal emperor, he showed the greatest interest in building new magnificent buildings, holding daily meetings with his architects and supervisors. The court chronicler,
Abdul Hamid Lahori, writes that Shah Jahan would make "appropriate alterations to whatever the skillful architects had designed after considerable thought and would ask the architects competent questions."[12]
In writings by Lahori's son, Lutfullah Muhandis, two architects are mentioned by name; Ustad Ahmad Lahori[13][14] and Mir Abd-ul Karim.[15] Ustad Ahmad Lahori had laid the foundations of the
Red Fort at Delhi (built between 1638 and 1648). Mir Abd-ul Karim had been the favourite architect of the previous emperor
Jahangir and is mentioned as a supervisor, together with Makramat Khan,[15] for the construction of the Taj Mahal.[16][17]
Lahori had three sons:
Ataullah (or Ata Allah Rashidi),
Lutfullah (or Lutf Allah Muhandis) and Nurullah (or Nur Allah), who were also involved in architecture besides other fields such as mathematics.[18][19]
Career
Ahmad Lahori was learned in the arts of
geometry,
arithmetic and
astronomy. According to his son Lutf Allah Muhandis, he was familiar with the
Euclid's Elements and
Ptolemy's Almagest.[4] In 1631, Shah Jahan appointed him on the project of construction of
Taj Mahal. The construction project employed some 20,000 artisans under the guidance of a board of architects led by Ahmad Lahori. The complex took 12 years for completion.[3] Afterwards, he was relocated to Delhi where emperor ordered him for construction of the new imperial city, Shahjahanabad in 1639.[3] The building of the city, including the
Red fort, was complete by 1648. In 1648, Ahmad Lahori started working on the project of the imperial mosque in Delhi, now known as
Jama Masjid, Delhi. He died in 1649, before the foundations of mosque were laid.[3] The mosque was later completed by the architect Ustad Khalil.
^"The Sikh Courier". The Sikh Courier International. 9–12. Sikh Cultural Society of Great Britain: 16. 1977 – via
The University of Virginia. Nadir-ul-Asar Ahmad Mimar Lahori Shahjehani was also a Punjabi who designed the Taj Mahal of Agra.
^Chanchal Dadlani (2016). "Innovation, Appropriation, and Representation: Mughal Architectural Ornament in the Eighteenth Century". In Gülru Necipoglu; Alina Payne (eds.).
Histories of Ornament: From Global to Local. Princeton University Press. p. 183.
ISBN9780691167282.
Asher, Catherine Ella Blanshard (1992) [2003]. The New Cambridge History of India, Vol I:4 - Architecture of Mughal India (Hardback) (First published 1992, reprinted 2001, 2003 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 368.
ISBN0-521-26728-5.