Khas Mahal, Agra
Famous place visit in Agra-
Khas Mahal, Agra-
At a separation of 4.5 km from Agra Cantonment Railway Station and 2.5 km from
Taj Mahal, Khas Mahal, additionally called Aramgah-I-Mualla (rest place of the honorable) or Aramgah-I-Muqaddas, is arranged inside the Agra Fort.
Khas Mahal is the most lovely working in the fortification and was worked by Shah Jahan amid 1631-1640 AD. The building includes open Terraces and a corridor, flanked by a structure on either side filling in as allotments. The structure is raised on an adequately lifted stage cleared with marble. It is the imperial royal residence of the Emperor. The castle incorporates drapery dividers, exquisite tanks, wellsprings and a cascade encompassed by living condos with courts and verandahs.
The insides of the castle are embellished with gold work, wall painting depictions, decorative structures, and botanical plans. The structures of the Khas Mahal were built utilizing red sandstone and covered with white shell mortar. They contained delightful brilliant work and fresco sketches.
The Khas Mahal has intensely embellished roofs and anteroom in the dividers around. They once contained pictures of Mughal rulers. Press rings obviously on the roofs were the place light fixtures once hung. Before Khas Mahal is the
Anguri Bagh or the Grape Garden, worked in 1637 AD by Shah Jahan.
Anguri Bagh is isolated into four sections to give the acclaimed Char Bagh look. There is a water tank with a wellspring in the middle. The garden was intended to be a private territory of unwinding for the illustrious women. Hammams or majestic bathhouses enhanced with dazzling divider works of art in imperial blue and gold were situated to its upper east.
The anticipating tower toward the east of the Khas Mahal is known as the Octagonal Tower (Musamman Burj) which is another excellent landmark at the Agra Fort. It is an octagonal pinnacle which is open at five sides and makes a phenomenal overhang for a perspective of the riverside and the
Taj Mahal. It was initially made of red sandstone and utilized by sovereigns Akbar and Jahangir. Shah Jahan got it changed to white marble. Shah Jahan was removed by his child Aurangzeb in 1658. From that point, he put over the most recent eight years of his life under house capture at Musamman Burj, helped by his girl Jahanara Begum.