Recent excavations at the historic Purana Qila(March 2014) unearthed relics of different periods, making the author wonder if a deeper probe could lead to tracing of Indraprastha, the city of the Pandavas.....
The Purana Qila is more mysterious than the Red Fort for
the simple reason that it is not only older but built upon an ancient
site, presumed to be of the Mahabharata times. So whenever excavations
take place, interesting finds are sure to surface. Recently relics of
the 1st Century AD, of the Kushan period, the Gupta era and the Rajput
times have been unearthed. A 12th Century Vishnu sculpture and a seal of
Gupta times are the prized finds by the Archaeological Survey of India
(ASI). The round face of Vishnu is in accordance with the ancient
artistic conception of a noble face. This changed during the course of
the centuries, with the oval face becoming popular and then the
elongated one. In the Sultanate and Mughal times the round face was the
high mark of beauty in women. No wonder medieval paintings depict
moon-faced begums; but as perceptions changed the round face came to be
associated with obesity. Present-day models tend to have leaner faces in
keeping with the slim look.
Besides the Vishnu
sculpture, pottery of the Kushan and Gupta periods, undeciphered copper
coins, terracotta figurines, micro-beads of semi-precious stones and
glass, ear-studs and charred wheat and rice grains have also been found.
According to Vasant K. Swarankar, Superintendent Archaeologist of
Delhi, the pottery products unearthed include knife-edged rimmed bowls,
sprinklers and fragments of stamped pottery from the Gupta period. Also
discovered are structures of the Kushan and Rajput periods. It all goes
to show that the Kushans, imperial Guptas and Rajputs also occupied the
site at different times.
This is the third
excavation in the Old Fort after the ones in the 1950s and 1970s. The
area being explored is the south-eastern side of the Sher Mandal of Sher
Shah. The Afghan ruler was not intolerant towards Hindus and did not
interfere much with their religious practices, something that Emperor
Akbar inherited and which led to his more secular policies. The
Emperor’s Hindu wives also influenced his thinking but he had to be
cautious because of the powerful ulema lobby in the court. Nevertheless
the story of Akbar having got some idols transported from the fort to
the Bhairon temple close by is not improbable. He did not stay long
enough to probe the mysteries of the Purana Qila as it was to Sikandar
Lodi’s Agra that he turned to build his own fort. His attraction to that
town, associated with both Babar and Humayun, was natural.
The
Talaqi Darwaza in the Purana Qila was regarded as a forbidden gate
through which everybody could not pass. It has a panel showing a man
fighting a lion, something unusual in a monument of that period. It
however makes one wonder why the gate was regarded as forbidden, through
which only royal family members, including women of the harem and
children could pass. Paradoxically enough, Talaqi Darwaza means meeting
gate. It is conjectured by some that the gate led to the heritage of the
Pandavas and their Indraprastha. After Humayun’s ouster, Sher Shah
added his own constructions to the Dinpanah of his adversary. The
man-fighting-lion panel is said to have been his creation. Both Humayun
and Sher Shah were not iconoclasts like Mahmud of Ghazni but rulers
curious about the past. Could it be that they had found evidence of a
ruined ancient fort and were carrying out excavations of their own and
discovering the mysteries of the Mahabharata period? May be a
far-fetched conjecture!
Incidentally, to pass
through the nearby Sher Shah Gate is like passing through the portals of
time. In front is the Purana Qila and beside it the zoo. Also known as
the Lal Darwaza, it is one of the many gates built by Sher Shah during
his short reign. Like Shah Jahan, he also adorned Delhi with impressive
buildings. By the side of the Sher Shah Gate stands the Khairul Manazil
Masjid, with a prayer hall, dome and double-storied corridors. The
masjid was constructed by Maham Anga, Akbar’s wet-nurse, with the help
of her son Adham Khan and kinsman Shahabuddin Khan. So the Purana Qila,
the Sher Shah Gate and the masjid make up a spectrum of history that
echoes with the past. The excavations merge their own echo with it. If
the site of the 3000-year-old Troy can be traced, why not that of
Indraprastha? But for this the excavations (now to a depth of 1.5
metres) will probably have to be deeper than 12 metres to solve a long
suspended mystery.