Eklakhi Mausoleum Explained

Eklakhi Mausoleum
Other Name:An ASI Listed Monument
Type:Mausoleum
Coordinates:25.1388°N 88.1543°W
Etymology: used in its construction
Location:Pandua, West Bengal, India
Governing Body:Archaeological Survey of India (N-WB-100)

Eklakhi Mausoleum is a mausoleum located at Pandua in Malda district, West Bengal, India. It was built around 1425. It houses three tombs, possibly belonging to Sultan Jalaluddin Muhammad Shah, his wife, and son Shamsuddin Ahmad Shah, but the identification is disputed. The structure represents a village hut with a sloping roof and serves as a prototype for the various other buildings constructed during the Bengal Sultanate.

History

The mausoleum was built in the early 15th century . It houses three tombs. One tomb is believed to be that of Sultan Jalaluddin Muhammad Shah, the other two of his wife and son Shamsuddin Ahmad Shah. The orientation and the identification of these tombs is disputed. Jalaluddin was a son of Raja Ganesha and had later converted to Islam. He was one of the first native Muslim king of Bengal. Although during his reign Sonargaon was the de jure capital of the sultanate, Jalauddin Muhammad Shah frequently ruled from Pandua and eventually believed to have died there, making him the last Sultan of Bengal to rule from Pandua.

According to tradition, the construction of the mausoleum cost one lakh rupees . The mausoleum received its name "Eklakhi" from this amount. The mausoleum is an ASI listed monument.[1]

Architecture

The mausoleum is the earliest surviving square-shaped building with a single dome in Bengal. The brick structure has thick walls and an octagon-shaped interior, which together minimize the size of squinches required.[1] The mausoleum has a smoothly curved cornice, terracotta ornamentation on the walls, and engaged towers at the corners. The cornice supports the hemispherical dome on square squinches.[2]

The mausoleum is 75feet wide and 25feet in height. The diameter of the dome is 46feet. A doorway is present at each of its facades. Each doorway has a pointed arch. The interior chamber measures 47feet and has no window.[3]

Historian Perween Hasan writes that the architecture may have been inspired by the brick temples in pre-Islamic Bengal. As Jalaluddin was the first native Muslim king of Bengal, he may have built the mausoleum in typical Bengali style, highlighting his roots. The mausoleum's structure represents a thatched hut with a sloping roof forming eaves.[4] It is the earliest example of the distinctive Bengali architecture which was popularised during the period of the Bengal Sultanate and later.

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eklakhi Mausoleum . ASI Kolkata . 23 March 2019.
  2. Book: Ziyauddin Desai . Z. A. Desai . Indo-Islamic architecture . 1970 . Publications Division Ministry of Information & Broadcasting . 9788123024066 .
  3. Book: Percy Brown . Percy Brown (art historian) . Indian Architecture (The Islamic Period) . 2013 . Read Books . 9781447494829 .
  4. Book: Catherine B. Asher . Architecture of Mughal India . 1992 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521267281 . 9.