Photographer’s Note
Charminar is always on the top of the mind of any tourist visiting Hyderabad. To say that Charminar is a major landmark in the city is to state the obvious, to repeat a cliché. The great monument is a synonym for Hyderabad and the pivot around which the glory and history of the city have developed. To imagine this 400-year-old city without Charminar is to imagine New York without the Statue of Liberty or Moscow without the Kremlin. Built by Mohammed Quli Qutub Shah in 1591, shortly after he had shifted his capital from Golkonda to what now is known as Hyderabad, this beautiful colossus in granite, lime, mortar and, some say, pulverized marble, was at one time the heart of the city. This great tribute to aesthetics looks sturdy and solid from a distance but as one moves closer, it emerges as an elegant and romantic edifice proclaiming its architectural eminence in all its detail and dignity. Apart from being the core of the city’s cultural milieu, it has become a brand name.
Charminar is a squarish structure with four towers in the four corners of the square, each of whose sides is 20 metres in length. Every side opens into a plaza through giant arches, which overlook four major thoroughfares and dwarf other features of the building except the minarets. Each arch is 11 metres wide and rises 20 metres to the pinnacle from the plinth. The minarets soar skywards by 24 metres from the roof of Charminar. Each minaret has four storeys, each looking like a delicately carved ring around the minaret. Some Anglophiles call Charminar the Arc de Triomphe of the East. From the ground to the apex, the minarets cover a length of 48.7 metres.
According to Mir Moazzam Husain, a long time official of the UNESCO and a keen student of this historic city, “these minarets may even symbolise the first four khalifs of Islam, but I cannot vouch for this interpretation with any degree of certainty.” At the western end of the roof of Charminar is a beautiful mosque; the oldest in Hyderabad, and the rest of the roof was used as a court in Qutub Shahi times. Atop the great monument are 45 prayer spaces for the devout where they can offer worship in an atmosphere unspoilt by the bustle of the city. East of this space is a spacious verandah with small and large arches in the middle. The first floor has beautiful balconies from where one has a fantastic view of the historic city and its later accretions.
Critiques | Translate
lousat
(15302) 2009-04-15 2:35
Hi Sreja,what a fantastic point of view! This pic is a great spectacle,a piece of photographic art! Impressives details and beautifuls colors,your choice of time of exposure was perfect too! My great compliments and thanks to show us this indian beauty! Have a nice day,Luciano
lsprasath
(68) 2009-04-15 6:16
Hello Sreya, Charminar is looking so majestic in this POV. Nice shot with clear details of the architecture. Nice soft lighting. Contrasting blue sky is a added beauty.
PS: I've exactly other side view of the Charminar for my post today.
edouard_lauer
(1063) 2009-04-15 9:23
Hi Sreya,
a good POV for making the subject (charminar) looking higher and more majesteous. The light of the sun gives a warm tone to the overall composition.
Congratulations,
Edi
holmertz
(9586) 2009-04-16 8:36
Hello Sreya,
Some day I will dig up my slides from my trip to India in 1987, when Hyderabad was one of the places I visited. I am sure there must be something from the Charminar in that box, but I am equally sure there is nothing making it look anywhere as elegant as you managed through this fine POV. Congratulations and thanks for sharing.
Gert
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Sreya Dutta (envisage)
(191) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2009-04-12
- Categories: Daily Life, Architecture, Artwork
- Camera: canon powershot A610
- Exposure: f/4, 1/400 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version, Workshop
- Date Submitted: 2009-04-15 2:32
Discussions
- To holmertz: Thanks (1)
by envisage, last updated 04-16 09:27 - To lousat: Thanks (1)
by envisage, last updated 04-15 02:41








