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Safdarjung's tomb

Tomb of Safdarjung
Safdar Jang’s Tomb, Delhi .jpg
Tomb of Safdarjung
Tomb of Safdarjung is located in Delhi
Tomb of Safdarjung
Location within Delhi
General information
Type Tomb
Architectural style Mughal
Location New Delhi, India
Coordinates 28°35′21″N 77°12′38″E / 28.589266°N 77.210506°E / 28.589266; 77.210506Coordinates: 28°35′21″N 77°12′38″E / 28.589266°N 77.210506°E / 28.589266; 77.210506
Completed 1754

Safdarjung's Tomb is a sandstone and marble mausoleum in New Delhi, India. It was built in 1754 in the late Mughal Empire style for the statesman Safdarjung. The monument has an ambiance of spaciousness and an imposing presence with its domed and arched red brown and white coloured structures. Safdarjung was made prime minister of the Mughal Empire (Wazir ul-Mamlak-i-Hindustan) when Ahmad Shah Bahadur ascended the throne in 1748.

The tomb is located near the Safdarjung Airport at the T junction of Lodhi Road and Aurobindo Marg (road) in New Delhi.

The structure was constructed in 1754 in the late Mughal Empire style Safdarjung.

Mirza Muqim Abul Mansur Khan, who was popularly known as Safadarjung, who ruled over Avadh was an independent ruler of Avadh as viceroy of Muhammad Shah.He was very rich and most powerful. With the death of Emperor Muhammad Shah of Mughal Empire, he moved to Delhi. When Mohammed Shah Ahmed Shah ascended the throne of the Mughal Empire in Delhi in 1748, Safdarjung was made the Chief Minister (Vizier) of the empire with the title of Wazir ul-Mamalk-i-Hindustan and at that time the empire was on decline as their rule extended only to North India.

As Vizier he had taken all powers under his control as the king was only a puppet, a figurehead, who was into enjoying life with wine, opium and women. But he overestimated and over exercised his powers with the result that the Emperor’s family called their Hindu Maratha confederacy to help them get rid of their Vizier. A civil strife ensued and eventually in 1753 Safdarjung was driven out of Delhi. He died soon thereafter in 1754. After his death his son Nawab Shujaud Daula pleaded with the Mughal Emperor to permit him to erect a tomb for his father in Delhi. He then built the tomb, which was designed by an Abyssininan architect.


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