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Delhi's history goes much further back in time than the 13th century.
in 1955, excavations at the Purana Qila revealed that the site was inhabited 3000
years ago. Ware pottery known as Painted Gray Ware and dated to 1000 BC confirmed
this as being yet another site associated with the epic Mahabharata. The excavations
also cut through houses and streets of the Sultanate, Rajput, post-Gupta, Gupta,
Saka-Kushan and Sunga periods, reaching down to the Mauryan era (300 BC), thus
revealing almost continuous habitaion. The association of Emperor Ashoka (273-36
BC) with Delhi has come to light with the discovery of a Minor Rock Edict in the
locality known as Srinivaspuri.
A clearer picture of the city emerges
from the end of the 10th century, when the Tomar Rajputs established themselves
in the in the Aravalli hills south of Delhi. The isolated, rocky outcrop facilitated
the defence of the royal resort which the Rajputs called Dhilli or Dhillika. The
core of the first of the seven cities was created by Anangpal Tomar who is said
to have built Lal Kot, which is the first known regular defence work in Delhi.
The Chauhan Rajputs later captured Delhi from the Tomars . Prithviraj III, also
known as Rai Pithora, extended Lal Kot, adding massive ramparts and gates, and
made Qila Rai Pithora the first city of Delhi.
Today, only the ramparts
are visible near the Qutub Minar , though the city is known to have had several
Hindu and Jain temples. Prithviraj was ruling Delhi when Muhammad of Ghur invaded
India, and died fighting the invader at the Second Battle of Tarain in 1192. Ghur
returned, but left as his viceroy, his slave Qutbuddin Aibak.
in 1206,
Qutbuddin crowned himself as the Sultan of the Slave or Mamluk dynasty, and became
the first Muslim ruler of Delhi. Qutbuddin, had however, commenced his architectural
career even before he chose to become the sultan. The mosque was essential to
the Islamic emphasis on congregational prayer, while the burial of the dead, as
opposed to cremation, introduced the tomb to India.
The earliest of these
Islamic structures are to be seen in the Qutub complex and the incorporation of
many Hindu elements is due to the ready availability of building material and
the use of local craftsmen. Qutbuddin raised the Quwwat-ul-Islam (might of Islam)
mosque, which is the earliest extant mosque in India. Within its spacious courtyard
he retained the 4th century Iron Pillar, probably the standard of an ancient Vishnu
temple. The pillar has puzzled scientists, as its iron has not rusted in all these
centuries.
in 1199, Qutbuddin raised the Qutub Minar either as a victory
tower or as a minaret to the adjacent mosque. From a base of 14.32 mtrs it tapers
to 2.75 mtrs at a height of 72.5 mtrs. It is still the highest stone tower in
India, one of the finest tower Islamic structures ever raised and Delhi's recognized
landmark. It was completed by the Sultan's successor and son-in-low, Iltutmish.
The tomb of Iltutmish, which he himself built in 1235, is nearby. Its interiors
are profusely decorated with calligraphy, thought the dome has collapsed.
The
Khalji rulers displaced the Slave dynasty in 1290, and when Alauddin Khali ordered
renovations of the mosque in 1311, he also raised the impressive Alai Darwaza,
the southern entrance to the mosque. It is the first example of a building employing
wholly Islamic principles of construction, including the true arch. in 1303, Alauddin,
established the second city of Delhi, called Siri, of which nothing remains but
the embattlements. He also had dug a vast reservoir, Hauz Khas, to sypply water
to his city.
Contemporary historians describe the Delhi of that time as
being the "envy of Baghdad, the rival of Cairo and the equal of Constantinople".
(for the sake of convenience, tourists visiting the Qutb complex could also see
the Tomb of AdhamKhan and Zafar Mahal in Mehrauli, and the Tomb of Jamai-Kamali
behind the Qutb Minar. These, however, belong to a later date.) The Khalhjis were
replaced by the Tughlaq dynasty in 1321. of its eleven rulers, only the first
three were interested in architecture and each of them established a new city.