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Architecture of Mughal India (The New Cambridge History of India)

by Catherine B. Asher

ISBN-10: 0521267285
ISBN-10: 0-521-26728-5
ISBN-13: 9780521267281
ISBN-13: 978-0-521-26728-1
Hardcover
1992-09-25
Cambridge University Press


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Editorials


Product Description
This book traces the development and spread of architecture under the Mughal emperors. Professor Asher considers the entire scope of architecture built under the auspices of the imperial Mughals and their subjects. She looks in particular at the role of political and cultural ideology, the relationship between construction in the major cities and in the provinces and the continuing Mughal fascination with paradisical imagery that culminated in the construction of the Taj Mahal.

Reviews


An Invaluable Survey of Mughal Architecture!
This book provides a thorough, detailed, and thoughtful analysis of Mughal architecture; it is based on solid scholarly research, yet it is accessible not only to academics, but also to general readers. While many others who have written on this topic have limited themselves to discussions of architectural style, Catherine Asher's book considers Mughal monuments in their cultural and historical context and examines the socio-political roles of the works and their patrons. This book truly is an invaluable survey of Mughal architecture!

important reference work
Still the only thorough examination on Mughal architecture out there!

Definitive, thorough work on the topic
Beginning with a brief discussion of the pre-Mughal Islamic kingdoms, Asher moves chronologically through Mughal architecture, including works patronized by the emperors and those patronized by others but directly implicated in Mughal architecture. This is an excellent volume that masterfully straddles the tasks of presenting a survey of this architecture while exploring the most accepted scholarly interpretations of the works. Well written and with good images (Cambridge volumes only include black and white, unfortunately), this is an excellent foundational text for the study of Mughal architecture. I highly recommend it.

Very unreliable
A revisionist view of the architecture of Mughal India which R. Nath, the distinguished art-historian, has termed totally misguided (See his essay in PURATATTVA 25, 1994-5). Nath points out numerous errors of interpretation and fact.


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