This presents photographs (listed below in two collections) that show the Vedic influence found in such buildings as the Taj Mahal, Red Fort, and other structures in India. It also presents photos of drawings and art that have been discovered from other parts of the world, such as Arabia, Egypt, Greece and Italy, that show a definite Vedic influence. This also presents articles that explain the evidence for and against the idea that the Taj Mahal was a pre-existing structure before it was said to be built by Shah Jahan. So, no matter whether you accept all of this or not, it nonetheless makes for an extremely fascinating and interesting story. Take a look and decide for yourself what you think. The articles listed below are practically more important than the photographs that are supplied. So be sure to read them.
The point of this presentation is that we have all heard how the Taj Mahal, which is considered one of the great wonders of the world, was built as the preeminent expression of a man's love for a wife. That it was built by emperor Shah Jahan in commemoration of his wife Mumtaz. However, is this a true story? So, in our continuous effort to get to the truth, we have acquired some very important documents and information. Regardless of what anyone thinks, there is some thoughtful information that indicates that the Taj Mahal was never built by Shah Jahan. Some say the Taj Mahal pre-dates Shah Jahan by several centuries and was originally built as a Hindu or Vedic temple/palace complex, and that Shah Jahan merely acquired it from its previous owner, the Hindu King Jai Singh. This is not unlike the many other buildings that were acquired by the Muslim invaders to be used for their own purposes. The point to consider is how much more of India's history has been distorted if the background of such a grand building is so inaccurate.
RARE AERIAL VIEW OF TAJ MAHAL
An aerial view of the Taj Mahal alias Tejo Mahalaya, ancient Hindu temple complex in Agra. For the last 300 years the world has been fooled to believe that this stupendous edifice was built by the 5th generation Mogul emperor Shahjahan to commemorate one of his dead wives--Mumtaz. The two flanking buildings although identical, only the one in the rear is known as a mosque.
The Taj Mahal has seven stories. Five of them lie sealed and barred concealing rich evidence. The marble building in the centre is flanked by two symmetrical ones. The one in the foreground is the eastern one. The one in the background is being represented as a mosque because it is to the west. They should not have been identical if only one was to be a mosque. In the courtyard at the foot of the eastern building is inlaid a full scale replica of the trident pinnacle [found at the top of the dome]. The tiny tower at the left near the western building, encloses a huge octagonal multi-storied well.
Taj Mahal: Was it a Vedic Temple?
The Photographic Evidence
ADDITIONAL ONLINE ARTICLES
"The Question of the Taj Mahal" (Itihas Patrika, vol 5, pp. 98-111, 1985) by P. S. Bhat and A. L. Athavale is a profound and thoroughly researched and well balanced paper on the Taj Mahal controversy. This paper goes well with the photographs listed below. It uncovers the reasons for the rumors and assumptions of why it is said that Shah Jahan built the Taj Mahal, and presents all the inconsistencies of why that theory doesn't hold up. It also covers such things as the descriptions found in the old Agra court papers on the Taj; descriptions and measurements of the building in the old records; Aurangzeb's letter of the much needed repairs even in 1632 which is unlikely for a new building; records that reveal Shah Jahan acquired marble but was it enough for really building the Taj or merely for inlay work and decorative coverings; the observations of European travelers at the time; the actual age of the Taj; how the architecture is definitely of Indian Hindu orientation and could very well have been designed as a Shiva temple; the issue of the arch and the dome; how the invader Timurlung (1398) took back thousands of prisoner craftsmen to build his capital at Samarkhand and where the dome could have been incorporated into Islamic architecture; how it was not Shah Jahan's religious tolerance that could have been a reason for Hindu elements in the design of the Taj; how the direction of the mosque does not point toward Mecca as most mosques do; the real purpose of the minarets at the Taj; the Hindu symbolism recognized in the Taj which would not have been allowed if it was truly Muslim built; and even as late as 1910 the Encyclopaedia Britannica included the statement by Fergusson that the building was previously a palace before becoming a tomb for Shah Jahan; and more. A most interesting paper.
"An Architect Looks at the Taj Mahal Legend" by Marvin Mills, is a great review of the information available on the Taj Mahal and raises some very interesting questions that make it obvious that the Taj could not have been built the way or during the time that history presents, which makes it more like a fable than accurate history. This suggests a construction date of 1359 AD, about 300 years before Shah Jahan.
The True Story of the Taj Mahal. This article by P. N. Oak (from Pune, India) provides an overview of his research and lists his 109 proofs of how the Taj Mahal was a pre-existing Hindu temple palace, built not by Shah Jahan but originally at least 500 years earlier in 1155 AD by Raja Paramardi Dev as a Vedic temple. Mr. P. N. Oak is another who has done much research into this topic, and such a study is hardly complete without considering his findings. The evidence he presents here is a most interesting read, whether you agree with it all or not, or care for some of the anger in his sentiment. Mr. Oak has presented his own conclusions in his books, most notably Taj Mahal--The True Story (ISBN: 0-9611614-4-2).
The Letter of Aurangzeb ordering repairs on the old Taj Mahal in the year just before it is said to have been completed.
The Badshahnama is the history written by the Emperor's own chronicler. This page shows how Aurangzeb had acquired the Taj from the previous owner, Jai Singh, grandson of Raja Mansingh, after selecting this site for the burial of Queen Mumtaz.
Taj Mahal -- Time to Tell the Truth, an analysis by Dr. V. S. Godbole that shows how the Taj Mahal was not built by ShahJahan but was the Palace of Raja Mansingh.
The Distorted History of the Taj Mahal, by Dr. Dr Radhasyam Brahmachari shows how pervasive the false history of the Taj Mahal is and how it developed, but how it should be corrected.
The website http://veda.wikidot.com/taj-mahal has a most comprehensive and historical overview of interesting information about the origins of the Taj Mahal, which you should read thoroughly to get a good understanding of the truth of the Taj Mahal.
THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF TAJ MAHAL INTERIOR
Collection One
The following photographs are divided according to content and accessed through the links. Click on the photo number for access:
Taj Mahal Photo #1 | Aerial view of the Taj Mahal |
Taj Mahal Photo #2 | The interior water well |
Taj Mahal Photo #3 | Frontal view of the Taj Mahal and dome |
Taj Mahal Photo #4 | Close up of the dome with pinnacle |
Taj Mahal Photo #5 | Close up of the pinnacle |
Taj Mahal Photo #6 | Inlaid pinnacle pattern in courtyard |
Taj Mahal Photo #7 | Red lotus at apex of the entrance |
Taj Mahal Photo #8 | Rear view of the Taj & 22 apartments |
Taj Mahal Photo #9 | View of sealed doors & windows in back |
Taj Mahal Photo #10 | Typical Vedic style corridors |
Taj Mahal Photo #11 | The Music House--a contradiction |
Taj Mahal Photo #12 | A locked room on upper floor |
Taj Mahal Photo #13 | A marble apartment on ground floor |
Taj Mahal Photo #14 | The OM in the flowers on the walls |
Taj Mahal Photo #15 | Staircase that leads to the lower levels |
Taj Mahal Photo #16 | 300 foot long corridor inside apartments |
Taj Mahal Photo #17 | One of the 22 rooms in the secret lower level |
Taj Mahal Photo #18 | Interior of one of the 22 secret rooms |
Taj Mahal Photo #19 | Interior of another of the locked rooms |
Taj Mahal Photo #20 | Vedic design on ceiling of a locked room |
Taj Mahal Photo #21 | Huge ventilator sealed shut with bricks |
Taj Mahal Photo #22 | Secret walled door that leads to other rooms |
Taj Mahal Photo #23 | Secret bricked door that hides more evidence |
Taj Mahal Photo #24 | Palace in Barhanpur where Mumtaz died |
Taj Mahal Photo #25 | Pavilion where Mumtaz is said to be buried |
Collection Two
This is an additional collection that provides a closer look at the secrets of the Taj Mahal as supplied by V. S. Godbole from England. You can look at the ones that interest you the most as described below, or go through them like a slide show by using the "Next" links on each page.
Taj Photo # 1 | Typical view of the beautiful Taj Mahal |
Taj Photo # 2 | View of Taj Mahal from West looking East |
Taj Photo # 3 | Entrance Gate on the West side |
Taj Photo # 4 | Road between Western Gate to Eastern Gate is around 1000 ft with several rooms on either side. |
Taj Photo # 5 | Note the veranda. The architecture is typical Rajput design. |
Taj Photo # 6 | View of the entrance through the South Gate |
Taj Photo # 7 | South gate entrance as painted by Thomas Daniell in 1789 |
Taj Photo # 8 | In a detail on the gate, we can see what would be called Ganesh |
Taj Photo # 9 | Details of the South Gate with Vedic design. |
Taj Photo # 10 | Wall decorations as seen here are typical Rajput design on South Gate |
Taj Photo # 11 | The graffiti, i.e. Koranic inscriptions later added by Shahjahan |
Taj Photo # 12 | The Trident designed within the lotus, both typically Vedic designs. |
Taj Photo # 13 | Veranda on the West side of Entrance Gate, probably for public assemblies. |
Taj Photo # 14 | Examples of the Dhotra flowers in the marble work |
Taj Photo # 15 | Now you can see the "3" figure of the OM design within the carved marble flower |
Taj Photo # 16 | Here is an example of the conch shell design in the central petals in the flowers |
Taj Photo # 17 | More conch shell decorations in marble carving |
Taj Photo # 18 | Carved marble doors and decorations on the exterior of the Taj Mahal |
Taj Photo # 19 | You can see blocked doorways and windows where there are several rooms in the 19 foot high plinth. |
Taj Photo # 20 | Decoration on the side of blocked up doorway |
Taj Photo # 21 | A view of the outside of the central Cenotaph Chamber |
Taj Photo # 22 | The interior of one of the rooms around the cenotaph chamber. |
Taj Photo # 23 | The Cenotaph chamber with marble screen |
Taj Photo # 24 | The Cenotaphs, or the supposed graves of Shahjahan and Mumtaz |
Taj Photo # 25 | Top of octagonal marble screen with beautiful inlay jewelled work that surrounds the cenotaphs |
Taj Photo # 26 | Basic blueprint of the Taj Mahal that shows stairways to upper and lower floors. |
Taj Photo # 27 | Here you can see the upper floor above the cenotaph. Each room has a balcony. |
Taj Photo # 28 | The Vedic style design on the under-side of the dome over the central cenotaph chamber. |
Taj Photo # 29 | Cobras in pairs at top of wall, another typical Vedic design. |
Taj Photo # 30 | Typical Minaret on the Taj Mahal. |
Taj Photo # 31 | The design on the underside of a staging on the Minaret. |
Taj Photo # 32 | The Baoli Burj water well, going down seven stories to water level. |
Taj Photo # 33 | The so-called Mosque at one end from the Taj |
Taj Photo # 34 | The so-called Mosque at one end from the Taj with evidence it was converted later into a mausoleum |
Taj Photo # 35 | Replica of pinnacle design of the top of the main dome in the garden |
Taj Photo # 36 | Survey plan of Taj Mahal by Col Hodgson, 1825. |
Taj Photo # 37 | An early photo of Taj from the riverside clearly showing 2 hidden basements |
Taj Photo # 38 | Photo of Taj Mahal from Yamuna riverside showing rooms with grills in the marble plinth |
Taj Photo # 39 | Blue print of the Taj Mahal showing cross-section of Central Edifice in a book by J Fergusson in 1855 |
Taj Photo # 40 | The blue print plan of the Taj Mahal showing stairways that go down to the 22 basement rooms. |
Taj Photo # 41 | Typical view of the 2 basement floors along the Yamuna River. |
Taj Photo # 42 | Here you can see, not far from the plinth of the Taj, the steps to go down to the 22 rooms |
Taj Photo # 43 |
Decorations on outside of upper basement floor with a ventilation grill built in for the apartment.
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Taj Photo # 44 | Ventilation grill in the design of the outside of the apartments |
Taj Photo # 45 | Entrance to lower basement floor that is now bricked up. |
Taj Photo # 46 | The timber door where Prof. Marvin Mills took the sample that proved the Taj predates Shajahan |
Taj Photo # 47 | Close up of the the steps that go down to the 22 apartments |
Taj Photo # 48 | Another of the secret stairways in the Taj Mahal. |
Taj Photo # 49 | After we climb down the steps we see a doorway to the passage on right of the hidden rooms. |
Taj Photo # 50 | Typical roof painted design in the 22 rooms. |
Taj Photo # 51 | Here is a typical tower (Burj) that is in familiar Rajput style, not Islamic in any way. |
Taj Photo # 52 | Stone rings for anchoring boats for river transportation amongst the residents in the Taj. |
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