THE LEGEND

There is a love
story related to the founding of the city of Hyderabad. As a young
prince, Muhammad Quli fell passionately in love with a maiden from
Chichlam village across the river Musi. He would even venture to
cross the river in spate to keep his tryst with his beloved. Ibrahim
Qutb Shah, his father, built a bridge on the river so that the crown
prince did not endanger his life. When he ascended the throne,
Muhammad Quli built a grand structure, the Charminar, at the site of
the village. The city was called Bhagnagar to appease his beloved,
Bhagmati. Later on it was called Hyderabad. Bhagnagar means city of
good fortune. Farkhunda Buniyad, the Persian chronogrammatic name of
the city yields the same meaning.
HISTORICAL FACTS
Hyderabad was
modeled after Isfaan in Iran and built under the supervision of the
prime minister Mir Momin, a poet, architect and an aesthete-like his
master. He tried to create a replica of Paradise itself to suit
Muhammad Quli’s status as the greatest of the Qutb Shahi rulers. The
city was completed in 1592. It has a grid plan of two broad
intersecting streets with the Charminar as a kind of triumphal arch
at the center. The French traveler, Tavernier in 1652, compared
Hyderabad to Orleans ‘well built and opened out’ and in 1672, Abbe
Carr was much impressed by the city as the center of all trade in
the East.
THE NIZAMS OF HYDERABAD
Aurangzeb died in
1707, seven years after the death of the last Qutb Shahi ruler, Abul
Hasan Tana Shah in prison in 1700. The Mughal governor of Hyderabad,
Mir Kamruddin Khan, titled Nizam-ul-Mulk, declared independence and
started the Asaf Jahi dynasty. The waning Mughal power found itself
helpless against forces of disintegration. But the Nizams were
fabulously rich and stories of their hordes of gold, diamonds and
pearls spread far and wide. Mir Osman Ali Khan, the last Nizam
before Hyderabad merged into the Union of India, was among the
world’s wealthiest individuals. Prior to their treaty with the
British, the Nizams had good relations with the French. Monsieur
Raymond, a French adventurer and commander of the Nizam’s troops,
earned great respect of the people. A 23-feet-high granite obelisk
inscribed JR stands on a hill in Saururnagar in memory of this
trusted lieutenant of the Nizams, who couldn’t stand the growth
British influence.
SITES TO VISIT

The Charminar - Charminar, the
hub of the city, has four wide roads radiating in the four cardinal
directions. The four minarets command the landscape for miles. The
structure is square, each side measuring 100 feet, with a central
pointed high arch at the center. The whole edifice contains numerous
small decorative arches arranged both vertically and horizontally.
The prominently projected cornice on the first floor upholds a
series of six arches and capitals on each façade, rising to the
double-story gallery of the minarets. The projected canopy,
ornamental brackets and decoration in stucco plaster add graceful
elegance to the structure. On the upper courtyard, a screen of
arches topped by a row of square jall or water screens lends a
fragile charm to the sturdy appearance of Charminar. This courtyard
was used as a school and for prayers at the mosque. The minarets,
their domed finials rising from their lotus-leaves cushion, rise to
180 feet from the ground. An interesting 17th-century description of
the monument comes from Thevenot: “That which is called the four
towers, is a square building, of which each face is ten fathom broad
and about seven high. It is opened on the four sides by four
arches…”.
The Galleries Of Charminar -
There are two galleries in it, one over another, and all over a
terrace that serves for a roof, bordered with a stone balcony. At
each corner of the building there is a tower about ten fathom high,
and each tower has four galleries with little arches on the outside.
It is vaulted underneath and appears like a dome. There is a large
table raised seven or eight feet from the ground with steps to go up
to it. All the galleries of that building serve to make the water
mount up, that so being afterwards conveyed to the kings palace, it
might reach the highest apartments. Nothing in the town seems so
lovely as the outside of that building; nevertheless it is
surrounded with ugly shops made of wood and covered with straw,
where they sell fruit which spoils the prospect of it. The thriving
market still lies around the Charminar attracting people and
merchandise of every description. In its heyday, the Charminar
market had some 14,000 shops, a unique conglomeration of a grand
oriental bazaar. The whole market around the Charminar is crowded
with shops which sell glass bangles in rainbow colors. Red, blue,
green, yellow, orange, mauve and pink-or whatever shade of fancy.
The Arches Of Charminar - Near
the Charminar stand four magnificent arches called Char Kaman, which
served as the gateway to the Zilu Khana (ante chamber) of the royal
palace and are named Machli Kaman, Kali Kaman, Sher Gil Ki Kaman and
Char Minar ki Kaman. The Char-su-ka-hauz, a cistern with a fountain
in the center of the arches is now called Gulzar Hauz. The royal
residential palaces stood around the Charminar. Of the Qutb Shahi
royal palaces in Hyderabad nothing of importance has survived; not
even the Qutb Mandir, the pleasure of which admitted only Muhammad
Quli and his female companions. The gardens have simply vanished.
The mosques have been however spared.
The Mecca Masjid - Near the
Charminar stands the Mecca Masjid, begun by Muhammad Qutb Shah in
1617 and completed by Quranzeb in 1693. It is a grand edifice with a
huge courtyard which can accommodate nearly ten thousand men at
prayer. Tavernier has provided a graphic description of the mammoth
boulders cut to size and carted for use in the building of the
mosque. The minarets look rather stunted in comparison with the
grandeur of the whole massive structure. But it looks more Mughal
then Qutb Shahi in its perfect granite finish and vast courtyard. A
particular stone brick in the mihrab is believed to have been
brought from Mecca.
Other Mosques - The other two
mosques—-the Jami Masjid and the
Toli Masjid—are small and modest
structures. Muhammad Quli Shah built the Jami Masjid in 1592, after
founding Hyderabad. Musa Khan, a supervisor of works at the Mecca
Masjid, levied a damri for every rupee spent on the building of the
Mecca Masjid. With these collections he built the Toli Masjid, near
the Purana Pul. Two buildings, the Badshahi
Ashur Khana and Darul Shifa—built
in 1594—are much dilapidated and in need of large scale repair.
Other Sites Of Interest - The
Nizams did not build any great mosques or palaces. The last Nizam
built the Falakuma palace which
housed the most expensive art objects, tapestries and carpets, in
addition to the largest single-man collection of diamonds. Here the
Nizam had received their Majesties, the late King George V and King
Edward VIII of England. The Chowmukha
palace, built after the Shah palace of Teheran, is closed
to visitors. The Regency Mansion,
built in 1803 by James Kirkpatrick, married a Hyderabadi girl and
built for her Rang Mahal, a suite of rooms in the native style.
Of much interest to
visitors is the Husain Sagar Lake,
a large artificial lake lying between Hyderabad and Secunderaad. It
was built by Ibrahim Qutb Shah around 1550, in gratitude to Husain
Shah Wali, who had cured him of a disease. A tourist spot affording
lovely views of the city is the Naubat Pahad, a hilltop crowned by
the Birla temple. In old days royal firmans (announcements) were
read to the people to the beat of drums. The Bagh-I-Aam stretches
below this hillock where stands the State Legislative Assembly
building. Among the newer additions to Hyderabad’s grand buildings
are the Osmani University, the high court and the Osmania General
Hospital.
The city straddles
the Musi river which, in 1908, had caused much destruction by
flooding the city. Under the supervision of India’s greatest
engineer Sir M.Vishweshvarayya, two large reservoirs, Osman Sagar
and Himayat Sagar were constructed to save the city from devastation
by floods in the future. If there is some time left, a visit to the
Nehru Zoological Park is recommended for a short lion safari and
observing the wild beasts moving about freely in their expansive
compounds. The crocodile hatchery is very informative for the young
and the curious. One of the most visited places in the city is the
Salar Jung museum.
SITES NEARBY
Golconda has been known as
famous center for diamonds, and the diamond mines boast of some of
the most renowned diamonds in the world. The Kohinoor originally
belonged to Golconda as did the Darya-I-Noor, the Orloff, the Pitt,
and the great table of the Nizam.
Warangal is situated 157 km
north-east of Hyderabad. It is famous for its thousand pillar
temple-a specimen of the Chalukya architecture. The fort was built
by the Kakatiyas, who ruled between 12th and 14th centuries.
Nagarjunakonda, lying south-east
of Hyderabad, has had been under strong Buddhist influence. The
Satvahanas built a grand stupa at Amravati, embellished with most
sumptuous sculptures. Later on, the Ikshvakus dominated the region
around ad 235 their capital was Vijaipuri, a university town. With
the decline of lkshvakus, Vijaipuri fell into neglect. The Reddy
kings in the 14th century fortified the commanding hill of
Nagarjunakonda, perpetuating the memory and teachings of Buddhist
teacher Nagarjuna. Before work on the Nagarjunasagar Dam project
began, archaeologists performed the miraculous task of transporting
stone the excavated ruins of Vijaipuri to the top of Nagajunakonda
hill and setting them up in their exact position. Remains of
sculpture, monasteries, amphitheatre, and streets found a new safer
home permanently relieved of the fear of inundation. A huge statue
of Buddha dominates the crest of Nagarjunakonda. It is the old
forgotten Vijaipuri of the lkshvakus which has been resurrected on
the hill.