Categories: culture, heritage, photo essay

Images: Delhi of Yesteryears

Delhi’s history is something that has drawn me into the city strongly, thanks to William Ddalrymple’s City of Djinns. Someday I hope to visit all those places he talks about and describes so well that I could feel the Delhi of the past unfolding as I read the book. A few images here, of what remains of Delhi’s past today.

Qutub Minar – one of the most imposing structures of Delhi is also one of the oldest surviving. Also see a photo essay on Qutub Minar

Qutub Minar

Qutub Minar

Nizamuddin Daraga – hidden behind a network of narrow lanes near Humayun’s Tomb, it is not easy to find out where the Darga is. A small hard-to-notice sign put up by ASI doesn’t help much either. When my rickshaw driver stopped at the main road near Darga, I looked around for the shrine, not finding any. It is easy to get lost many times during the short 5-minute walk from the main road to the Darga.

Nizamuddin Darga

The library at Purana Kila is where Humayun died, falling down from a staircase. “The press release said it is an accident,” my friend who took me there told me, “but they say he was heavily under the influence of dope.” I had shot many more pictures from the leafy environs of the Kila, but unfortunately seem to have lost them somewhere.

Purana Qila

Maharaja Ugrasen’s Baoli is right in the heart of the city, in Connaught Place but is not known to many. Surprisingly, though it is maintained by the ASI, it is not published in their list of monuments in Delhi. The Baoli is a very quiet place and is grand in size and depth.

Maharaja ugrasen ki baoli

Maharaja ugrasen ki baoli

The red fort is one well known monument the whole nation is familiar with. We have seen the images of its front gates many times on national television. Though it looks grand from the outside, the insides are hardly anything to talk about. Most of the structures inside are in poor shape and there are unsightly buildings built in the post Mughal period by the British and the Indian Army.

Red fort

Red fort

Delhi’s historical places are too many in number, and I know I haven’t even scratched the surface of Delhi here. To put into perspective, ASI’s website mentions of at least 174 monuments that they maintain in Delhi. There would be many more outside their dominion. Some day, I hope spend months in Delhi, exploring and understanding the past of Delhi through its monuments and bringing out more of city’s glory in images.

More about Delhi on paintedstork.com

* Photo Essay on Qutub Minar
* Walking trail – Old Delhi

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