The Qutub Minar, also spelled as Qutab Minar, or Qutb Minar, is a minaret that forms a part of the Qutab complex, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the Mehrauli area of Delhi, India. Qutub Minar is a 73-metre (239.5 feet) tall tapering tower of five storeys, with a 14.3 metres (47 feet) base diameter, reducing to 2.7 metres (9 feet) at the top of the peak. It contains a spiral staircase of 379 steps. Its design is thought to have been based on the Minaret of Jam, in western Afghanistan.
Qutab-Ud-Din-Aibak,
founder of the Delhi Sultanate,
started construction of the Qutub Minar's first storey around 1192. In 1220,
Aibak's successor and son-in-law Iltutmish completed
a further three storeys. In 1369, a lightning strike destroyed the top
storey. Firoz Shah Tughlaq replaced the damaged
storey, and added one more. Sher Shah Suri also
added an entrance to this tower while he was ruling and Humayun was in exile.
The Minar is surrounded by several historically significant
monuments of the Qutab complex, including Quwat-ul-Islam Mosque, which was built at the
same time as the Minar, and the much older Iron Pillar of Delhi.[1] The
nearby pillared Cupola known as "Smith's Folly" is a remnant of the
tower's 19th century restoration, which included an ill-advised attempt to add
a sixth storey.
.Qutab Minar was established
along with Quwwat-ul-Islam Mosque around 1192 by Qutab-ud-din Aibak, first ruler
of the Delhi Sultanate. The mosque complex is one of the earliest that
survives in the Indian subcontinent. The minaret is named after Qutab-ud-din Aibak, or Qutabuddin Bakhtiar Kaki, a Sufi saint. Its ground storey was built over the ruins of the Lal Kot, the citadel of Dhillika. Aibak's successor Iltutmish added
three more storeys. The minar's topmost storey was damaged by lightning in
1369 and was rebuilt by Firoz Shah Tughlaq, who added another storey. In 1505, an earthquake damaged
Qutub Minar; it was repaired by Sikander Lodi. On 1
September 1803, a major earthquake caused serious damage. Major Robert Smith of
the British Indian Army renovated the tower in 1828 and installed a pillared
cupola over the fifth story, thus creating a sixth. The cupola was taken down
in 1848, under instructions from The Viscount
Hardinge, then Governor General of India. It was reinstalled
at ground level to the east of Qutab Minar, where it remains. It is known as
"Smith's Folly"
The
tower's style is patterned on Afghanistan's Minaret of Jam, and
adapted to local artistic conventions by the incorporation of "looped bells
and garlands and lotus borders into the carving". Numerous
inscriptions in Parso-Arabic and Nagari characters in different sections of the
Qutab Minar reveal the history of its construction, and the later restorations
and repairs by Firoz Shah Tughluq (1351–89) and Sikandar Lodi (1489–1517).
The tower has five superposed, tapering storeys. The lowest
three comprise fluted cylindrical shafts
or columns of pale red sandstone, separated by flanges and by storeyed balconies,
carried on Muqarnas corbels. The
fourth column is of marble, and is relatively plain. The fifth is of marble and
sandstone. The flanges are a darker red sandstone throughout, and are engraved
with Quranic texts and decorative elements. The whole tower contains a spiral
staircase of 379 steps. At the foot of the tower is the Quwat ul
Islam Mosque. The minar tilts just over 65 cm from
the vertical, which is considered to be within safe limits, although experts
have stated that monitoring is needed in case rainwater seepage further weakens
the foundation.
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