Hi friends,
Here is an interesting topic worth debating.
Deduction and evidence point to existence of human habitation in Delhi before Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan founded Shahjahanabad....
Shahjahanabad was the new city founded by Shah Jahan.
There is no doubt about it but the presence of Delhi Sultanate monuments in it
raises a question mark: Was the area known as Old Delhi already
inhabited, with a sizable population, in which the pre-Mughal rulers
decided to build some of their edifices? They couldn’t have done so in a
wilderness, with vast spaces in which wild animals roamed, leopards and
a wide variety of antelopes, besides hyenas, jackals, porcupines,
monkeys and langurs. During the reign of Iltutmish, successor of the
first Slave king Qutubuddin Aibak, Hazrat Turkman Bayabani had already
set up his khanqah or hospice where Shah Jahan’s Turkman Gate was
to come up in the 17th Century. It was near the saint’s shrine that
Iltutmish’s daughters Razia Sultana and Sazia Sultana were buried in Bulbulikhana.
Moreover, every Basant Panchmi Day a big mela amid kite-flying was held
at the shrine.
In the Tughlak period, Feroz Shah
Tughlak’s 14th Century hunting lodge came up where Bhuli Bhatyari’s (or
Bu Ali Bhatti’s) palace was built on the Ridge near present-day Karol
Bagh. Feroz Shah also built his Kotla opposite the latter-day Khooni
Darwaza (actually a Lal Darwaza of Sher Shah).
Paharganj,
one of the main bazaars of Shah Jahan’s time, was, it seems, already an
inhabited locality during Tughlak and Lodhi times. The Tughlak Baradari
and a Lodi mosque on Qutub Road, through which lies one of the
approaches to New Delhi station also proves that there were people
living there in those times. Otherwise for whose benefit were they
built? Surely not for the denizens of the wilderness.
Similarly,
in the Jama Masjid area, Bhojla Pahari, part of which was cut down to
build the grand mosque, was not the preserve of dacoits and gypsies
only. Some claim there was a Vishnu temple nearabouts. In Chandni Chowk
the Apa Gangadhar shivala might have come up during the time of the
Marathas but legend associates it with an already existing ancient
shivala, a small one, which devotees visited and which was presumably
looked after by a pujari.
Not far from it was the
Afghan fort on whose ruins the Red Fort was built, like the Agra Fort,
which too was constructed on the ruins of a Pathan citadel called
Badalgarh, originally a Rajput fort. Sher Shah’s son built Salimgarh
before Shah Jahan was born and Jahangir, whenever he passed by Delhi on
his way to Lahore and Kashmir, camped there as also on the Yamuna bank.
The Jhandewalan temple beyond Paharganj had temples predating the
Sultanate era, and one of them was built by Prithviraj Chauhan’s
daughter Bela which exists in Jhandewalan Extension. Incidentally,
Bela’s husband was killed in a battle with Sultanate forces near the
site occupied by Pusa Institute. The battle raged daylong and when word
was brought to Bela of her spouse’s death she and her maids committed
sati on the Jhandewalan mound below which is the Panchkuian Road
cremation ground. This would mean that the Chauhans, after the second
Battle of Tarain, where Prithviraj lost to Mohammed Ghori, had retreated
from Mehrauli to the Ridge area that made way for Karol Bagh centuries
later.
Interestingly enough, Firoz Tughlak’s eldest
son Fath Khan was buried in a mausoleum around which Qutub Road came up.
Known as Qadam Sharif because of the stone bearing the footprint of the
Prophet placed above Fath Khan’s grave, it used to have an annual urs
even during Firoz’s time. Why did the Sultan build it so far from the
Kotla and his other architectural creations in Mehrauli (where he
himself is buried)? Probably because his domain spread that far and
beyond to North Delhi, where his observatory was located. And naturally
his subjects were living round about. Kali or Kalan Masjid near Turkman
Gate was also built in his reign.
It is heartening to
note that the Delhi Archaeological Department, in collaboration with
Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), has begun
repairs to the Paharganj Baradari and the Lodi era mosque to make amends
for years of neglect that saw the two buildings vandalized and
encroached upon in a heavily congested neighbourhood. According to a
news report, the monuments are graded “A” and “B” and found structurally
sound though godowns that had been built in the Baradari are now being
demolished. The Baradari has five domes, overgrown with foliage because
of which there has been water seepage, resulting in cracks and serious
damage to the façade. “The Paharganj Baradari and the Lodi mosque are
part of the conservation of 50 unprotected monuments, some in Mehrauli
as also the ruins of Bhuli Bhatiyari-ka-Mahal.” So, didn’t Shah Jahan
build his new capital on an already existing habitation?
I would like to read your interesting takes on this topic.
I have already debated this topic at an event.
This article has been posted under the historical accounts section of history_geek's Blog.