Category Archives: Travel

Admin steps in to restore Moti Jheel

Agra :

The district administration has initiated steps to restore the Moti Jheel that is located behind Fatehpur Sikri fort complex, following the directions from the central government.

The project is aimed at rediscovering the beauty of this Mughal lake by preventing encroachments and settlements around it. The union tourism ministry wants the water body to be restored near the Unesco heritage site (Sikri fort complex) so as to promote tourism in the area.

Speaking on this aspect, district magistrate Pankaj Kumar said, “The Moti Jheel is a massive project. So, in the meantime we plan to build a pond nearby the fort. The biggest obstacles that would make the task of reviving the Jheel quite difficult, are the settlements and farm lands, surrounding it.”

“The work for constructing the pond will start in the next 15 to 20 days. As far as the Jheel is concerned, we have two options – either we compensate the villagers and ask them to vacate the land or convince them for the same. We are looking in to the matter,” Kumar added.

Sources said kumar recently conducted an inspection of the area along with a team of revenue and irrigation department officials to identify the area, where once this lake existed. The officials were asked to demarcate the lake area with the help of old maps. They were also directed to file a report on the size and appropriate depth of the lake.

The project has been gathering dust for the last two years, but revived once again during the visit of union tourism minister Shripad Naik, who instructed the ASI and the local administration to look into the feasibility of restoring the Moti Jheel.

An ASI official said, “It is the responsibility of the administration to restore the lake. There are historical evidences about the Jheel and about its tributaries. No doubt, it will take time to acquire land before restoration work can starts.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Agra / Aditya Dev, TNN / August 25th, 2014

UP goes wild with eco-tourism packages

Lucknow :

You need not look far for your next holiday. The state government is now offering eco-tourism packages in selected sanctuaries including the Nawabganj bird sanctuary.

At the start of the tourist season in October, there will be eco-tourism packages for Sandi (Hardoi), Katarniaghat, Chuka (Pilibhit) and Samaspur (Rae Bareli). Bookings of rest houses will be made online, making the allotment process fair.

“We plan to first equip a few centres will all tourist facilities,” said forest corporation MD Iqbal Singh. The forest department’s website has information on different categories of eco-tourism packages. It also has sections for nature lovers and eco-tourism sites in the state.

Uttar Pradesh has one national park, 11 wildlife and 24 bird sanctuaries but eco-tourism has been limited to Dudhwa National Park and a few locations around it. The state has never had an eco-tourism policy.

On Tuesday, the Cabinet approved an eco-tourism policy with four guiding principles: conserving environment, developing community-based tourism, developing partnership with the private sector and creating and upgrading infrastructure facilities for tourists in wildlife sanctuaries.

The forest department has tied up with an NGO to promote ?environment education’, also a part of eco-tourism. A conservator-level officer has been appointed only for promoting eco-tourism.

“It also aims at gainful employment of local people,” said the official. Locals, mostly rural folks, will be encourages to play hosts or guides to tourists and will be paid for the services.

Potential eco-tourism sites in UP

Katarniaghat on Gerua river in Bahraich; Chuka ghat in Pilibhit on Sharda dam; Chambal ravines in Agra; Nawabganj Bird Sanctuary in Unnao; Chandraprabha Rajdari waterfalls and Deodari waterfalls in Varanasi; Sarsainawar Sarus Sanctuary in Etawah; Sandi Bird Sanctuary in Hardoi; Noida Bird Sanctuary and Kalpi river cruise in Yamuna in Jalaun

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / August 09th, 2014

US tourists top international footfall list at Taj

Agra :

At 12%, US nationals formed the largest chunk of international tourists to the Taj Mahal in 2013 followed by UK (8%) and Germany (7%), stated a June 2014 World Bank presented to the Agra district administration. The report titled ‘Destination profiling, tourism enterprises and value chain assessment’ aimed at assessing Agra’s potential to be developed as a tourism hub under a pro-poor tourism development programme.

The programme aims to provide better tourist facilities in the state so that the poor can earn a livelihood via revenue generated off tourism. The report states that every year, over 7 lakh foreigners visit the Taj – one of the Seven Wonders of the World and the focal point of tourism in Agra. But only one-third of foreign nationals who visit the 17th century mausoleum make a trip to the equally noteworthy Agra Fort and Fatherpur Sikri.

Delhi tops the list of domestic visitors to the Taj with 17.9% share, followed by Madhya Pradesh, Haryana, Gujarat and Rajasthan. However, the report cautioned that the figures, based on ticket sales at the ASI monuments and check-ins at Agra hotels are approximations only. Agra’s potential for development as a pro-poor tourist hub remains unrealized as only a little over 50% of foreign tourists stay overnight, while others prefer leaving the city by evening after visiting the Taj.

In other words, out of 7.4 lakh foreign tourists who came to Agra in 2013, 4.03 lakh stayed overnight. On the other hand, only 5% domestic tourists stayed overnight. “Overnight stays can have greater impact on the local economy.

Hoteliers largely attribute this decline to opening of the Yamuna Expressway facilitating day trip from the national capital. Adverse publicity (crime) and lack of tourism options beyond major monuments are other factors for less night stay” the report said, adding that in comparison to 94-330 US dollar a foreign tourist should spend on a one-day tour in Agra, only 40-110 Us dollars are spent. The 2013 Uttarakhand deluge has also affected the number of tourists visiting Agra, it stated. Foreign tourists’ inflow to Taj Mahal decreased by over 29% in June 2013 as compared to June 2012.

This is attributable to the rising number of crimes in the country sand the 2013 Uttarakhand flashfloods. According to the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), 4.29 lakh foreigners visited Taj between June and December 2012, while only 3.29 lakh turned up during the corresponding period in 2013. The trend continues in 2014 as well with 1.55 lakh visitors in January and February, compared to 1.75 lakh in 2013 fort he same period.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Agra / Aditya Dev, TNN / July 22nd, 204

Akharas come alive on Naag Panchami

Allahabad :

While wrestlers kept the Tri-colour fluttering in Glasgow at the ongoing Commonwealth Games, their local brethrens on Friday got a chance to showcase their skills at dangals (wrestling competitions held in various akharas turned fitness centres of the city on the occasion of Naag Panchami.

Most of the akharas are decked up specially for the annual dangals held on Naag Panchami. For the rest of the year, these akharas act as fitness centres.

It is tragic change of fortune for the akharas of the Sangam City that still fondly remembers the famous wrestling match in which former world champion and legendary Gama Pehalwan defeated Rahim Sultaniwalla in an ‘akhara’ to become national champion. The match was held a century ago. Since then, much water has flowed in Ganga and even city’s landscape has undergone a sea change, robbing ‘akharas’ of sheen.

Senior wrestler Ram Dulare said that akharas get a new lease of life only in Shravan. “The traditional style of wrestling is one of the oldest discipline of sports but has now confined to an annual affair,” he added. Lamenting that local akharas had shunned Indian style of wrestling, he said “The drills include around 90% gymnasium techniques. Pure form of training involving dand baithak’ is missing as we lack mandatory equipments like Mugdals’, Gaddas’, Nals’ and Mallakhambs,” said Dulare.

As a result, the city has failed to produce even a single wrestler of repute in the last several years. In Friday’s dangals several local wrestlers won people’s applause. However, most of them lamented absence of expert trainers and equipments in akharas.

Sanu Dube, who won the dangal’ in Raghunathdas Vyayamshala said, “We don’t have the luxury of enjoying energy drink after hours of practice in akharas. Instead, we rely on tea. One cannot expect wrestlers practicing under such pitiable conditions to scale new heights.”

Shubham is a boatman and a practicising wrestler in middle-weight category. He still relies on age-old technique of Kala-jung’ and Dhaag’, while other wrestlers have turned to modern gymnastics techniques.

He was among two dozen wrestlers, including runner-up Ankur (18), Nitin (18) and Bikku Nishad (17), who won the annual traditional competition’ despite practicising in akharas (pits) that are devoid of even traditional equipment like like Mugdals (Indian Clubs), Gaddas’ (Maces), Nals’ (Stone Weights) and Mallakhambs (Wrestler Pillars).

“Energy drink and training under experts are luxury for wrestlers like us. We neither have the money to buy such expensive items nor any equipment to exercise,” said the wrestlers.

“In fact, the akharas’ (pits) have turned into gymnasium where dangals are held only in Shravan (July-August),” laments wrestler Suraj Kumar at contested at the dangal held in Loknath Akhara.

For another wrestler Kamal Singh, Shravan is the only occasion in which he and his disciples get a chance to display their expertise. For the rest of the time, the two akharas turn into a fitness centre.

Dangal was also held in Loknath Vyayamshala but there was no provision to declare winners. However, the topmost winners were feted.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Allahabad / by Vinod Khanal, TNN / August 02nd, 2014

Brace for London-like outing in Lucknow

Lucknow :

From Tuesday onwards, you can enjoy evenings in the idyllic settings of Janeshwar Mishra Park in Gomtinagar extension. The sprawling park, claimed to be Asia’s largest garden, will be thrown open to the public on August 5.

Initially, only one-third (96 acres) area of 376-acre park will be opened. The park, named after late socialist and Samajwadi Party leader Janeshwar Mishra, is being developed at a cost of Rs 168 crore. Chief minister Akhilesh Yadav will inaugurate it on Mishra’s birth anniversary on Tuesday.

The grand project will have beautiful landscapes, two huge ponds spread over 38 acres, golf course, horse riding trail, lakes, sports centre, gymnasium, cycle track, jogging track, theme gardens, children’s play area, lawns etc.

In the beginning, public will have access only to a pond spread over 11 acres and the green belt around it. The entire project has to be completed by May 2015.

Among the major attractions would be the boats resembling gondolas, which have been brought from a Noida-based mall for a trial run. “We have purchased two boats which will ferry visitors across the water body,” said an official. Around 2,500 trees have also been bought from Meerut and Saharanpur for the park. Ponds will be recharged through rainwater harvesting and the entire park will be fully solar powered.

LDA has deployed a huge team of executive and junior engineers to complete the work before deadline. Many new townships are also coming up around the site. Officials claim rates of these properties, especially LDA’s Riverview Phase II apartments, would escalate once the entire park would be ready.

“Just wait for six more months, these flats will sell like hot cakes as it will become the most prime locality (in the city) considering the large green space, public recreation facilities, golf course etc,” said an official associated with Janeshwar Mishra Park.

Janeshwar Mishra

Janeshwar Mishra, also known as Chhote Lohia, was a famous socialist leader. He represented Allahabad three times in the Lok Sabha and was elected to Rajya Sabha in 1996, 2000 and 2006. Mishra was first elected to the Lok Sabha from Phulpur in 1969-70 after defeating KD Malviya, then petroleum minister in Indira Gandhi’s Cabinet. He served as Union minister in the governments of Morarji Desai, Chaudhary Charan Singh, VP Singh, Chandrashekhar, HD Deve Gowda and IK Gujral. Mishra held key portfolios like petroleum, water resources chemicals and fertilisers, energy, shipping and transport, communication and railways. He joined the Samajwadi Party in 1990s.

LDA struggles to meet deadline

As the deadline approaches, LDA is struggling to meet the expectations of chief minister who wants the park to be modelled on the lines of famous Hyde park of London.

The grand inauguration will be held at the park’s entrance plaza but about 30% of construction work is still pending. Workers are still fixing the tiles and polishing marbles. The main pond at the entrance, which will have fountains, is under-construction.

Trees that were planted a few days back have started drying. Officials say these plants are special as they dry up on plantation and before growing into a green tree. The entire land had to be ploughed in a hurry before sowing grasses. This has led to loosening of soil particles and formation of sludge due to rains.

The last minute preparations have also led to the function being planned in absence of the statue of Janeshwar Mishra. Officials said the 25 feet statue is being sculpted by a renowned Australian sculptor. But it won’t arrive in time for inauguration, confirmed LDA.

Earlier, officials had claimed that gondolas would be imported from China or Japan or Venice, but instead LDA has bought boats resembling gondolas from Noida.

Interesting bits

Inauguration to be held without the statue of Janeshwar Mishra

Park to be developed on the lines of Hyde Park of London

Once park gets ready in 2015, rates of properties around the site to shoot up

Boats resembling gondolas to be run on trail basis

Hurried ploughing has loosened soil and led to sludge in the park

Civil work at entrance plaza still on, fountains missing

Entire focus on constructing walking, jogging and cycling track

In next phase, construction of sports facilities like cricket, badminton and lawn-tennis etc., will be done

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / August 04th, 2014

Inauguration of Janeshwar Mishra Park: Kathak ballet to mark celebrations

Lucknow :

A Kathak ballet in Sanskrit will be staged during the inauguration of Janeshwar Mishra Park on Tuesday.Chief of Sanskrit Sansthan, Shankar Suhail, said a Delhi-based kathak dance group headed by Neelakshi Rai will present the story of Amrapali, a courtesan in ancient India.

He added that it will be a delight for the audience because very few ballets in Sanskrit have been staged. On Wednesday, Shivram Sharma and his troupe from Varanasi will stage Sanskrit play, Dootvaakyam. “Dr Sharma is known to pick people from diverse walks of life and teach them Sanskrit language. The students pass their test only when they are able to act in a Sanskrit play,” said Suhail. Vandana Mishra of Faizabad will present a kajri recital on Wednesday evening.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / August 04th, 2014

Taj city plan to get HOHO

Agra :

The city will have its own air-conditioned Hop On Hop Off (HOHO) bus service akin to Delhi very soon. With an aim to popularize city’s monuments apart from the Taj Mahal and the Agra Fort, the UP tourism department plans to connect all such places of interest through this bus service.

A discussion in this regard was held during a high-level meeting in Lucknow on Monday and the Agra regional office was asked to prepare a proposal in this regard. The next meeting of the tourism department is scheduled to be held in Agra on July 20.

Regional tourist officer Dinesh Kumar said there were “several other monuments worth a visit”. He said that the proposed bus service would aim to prevent tourists from leaving the city after visiting the Taj and the Agra Fort. “Easy access to such monuments will tempt tourists to stay in the city for a longer time,” he said.

Mehtab Bagh, Sikandara and Itimad-ud-Daulah are some of the sites the HOHO bus service is likely to make a stop, he added

In Delhi, under the HOHO bus service, tours are conducted in specially designed buses which ply along a route, wherein tourists can board or alight at any of the pick-up or drop points. The route covers all major tourist destinations in Delhi, while monuments’ tickets and guides have been made available to the tourists on the bus itself.

In another decision, the UP tourism department will construct two of the three proposed parking lots in the vicinity of the Taj Mahal, while the other one will be built by the Agra Development Authority.

Directions were also issued to complete the ongoing land-scraping work at Shah Jahan garden, located in front of the Taj, by July-end. Moreover, officials were asked to build an interpretation centre at Fatehpur Sikri in accordance with the Mughal architecture.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Agra / by Aditya Dev, TNN / July 08th, 2014

India’s ‘fastest train’ completes first trial

Agra :

Indian Railways successfully conducted the first trial run of the country’s fastest train on the New Delhi-Agra route on Thursday, with the train covering a distance of 200 kms in 100 minutes against the stipulated time of 90 minutes. While during the journey its average speed was 125-130 kmph, it touched a maximum speed of 160 kmph.

At present, the Bhopal Shatabdi Express is India’s fastest train with a top speed of 150 kmph.

Equipped with an electric locomotive of 5,400HP, the semi-high speed train was flagged off from platform number 6 of the New Delhi railway station at 11:15am. The train reached Agra Cantt railway station at 12:55pm on platform number 5. The train was halted at Mathura for 10 minutes for a functionality check.

Commissioner (railway safety) PK Vajpayee, divisional railway manager (DRM) of Delhi Anurag Sachan, DRM, Agra, Vijay Sehgal and other senior officials involved with the project were on board.

Addressing the media, Vajpayee said the trial run was successful and that the train service is likely to start in November this year.

Sehgal added that there are 16 speed restriction areas and curves on the Delhi-Agra route which were upgraded to improve the speed. The upgradation was for trial and further maintenance and budget will be declared in the upcoming railway budget.

It is estimated that a cost of Rs 15 crore would be incurred to make the track ready for the train. The railways placed temporary barricades in parts of the stretch to prevent obstruction and ensure speed. Later, permanent fencing will be done in the entire 200-km route.

The New Delhi-Agra train will reduce travel time between the two cities from 120 minutes to 90 minutes, and will come as a boon for tourists from Delhi looking to visit the Taj Mahal.

The project was announced by the railway board chairman, Arunendra Kumar, in March. The detailed project report (DPR) for the semi-high speed train on Delhi-Agra route was prepared by the high-speed rail corporation. Railway authorities are also planning to launch similar trains from Delhi to Kanpur, and Delhi to Chandigarh as Shatabdi trains.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Agra / by Ishita Mishra, TNN / July 03rd, 2014

Nawabi Lucknow

LucknowUP06jul2014

Though English singing sensation Cliff Richards was born in Lucknow, the city is not famous for western compositions, but for highly refined versions of Indian performing arts. A classical music form like thumri and dance like Kathak were pioneered by the Muslim Nawabs upcountry. They built the city in 1775 as the capital of Awadh, their inde­pendent sovereignty. And that was esta­blished at a crucial time — when the command of the mighty Mughal Empire in nearby Delhi was waning, while British East India Company was transforming their interest from trade to territory.

The Nawabs flaunted a great passion for art, music and literature, which attracted the best of North India’s talent to Lucknow and that over time permeated through the growing city, giving it a distinctive culture that was both artistic and edifying. Lucknow became another name for courteous urbanity and conjured up an image of a society where adabs and tehzeebs were a way of life.

Today, like any other Indian metropolis, it is an avant-garde settlement of 3 million, but during my recent visit, it didn’t take me much time to sense the breathing of the golden legacies of the past era, despite modernity cloaking the city.

I was able to note an impeccable blend of the ancient with the contemporary, finding quaint markets gracefully coexisting with glitzy shopping malls, tall apartments rising next to stunning ancient monuments, newer cars on the road giving way to horse driven carts and old-fashioned eateries constantly throwing challenge to the kitchens of five star hotels.

The touches of this past lifestyle blazed strikingly, the moment I stepped into the atmospheric Chowk area, where during the Nawabi heyday, traders, artisans, weavers, engravers, painters, singers and nautch girls grew and flourished. A “must visit” destination for all tourists, the quarter is overburdened with liveliness and buoyancy. Winding through its narrow galis, flanked on both sides with dusty two storied houses, business establishments and countless shops, some dating back over 200 years, selling a range of merchandise from old fashioned furnishings, antique utensils, hand laced carpets, aromatic spices, to saris, ghagra’s and kurtas exquisitely embroidered with chikankari, artwork that adorned Nawabi apparel and exotic “atars” gifted to their begums, was an exhilarating experience of savouring antiquity. The classic example of ‘pahele aap’, the legendary etiquette of the city, came up several times from passing pedestrians, when going through some very narrow alleyways, where it’s difficult for two people to cross at the same time.

The experience of meandering through time continued when I visited the magnificent Qaser Bagh Palace, where the dynasty’s last Nawab, Wajed Ali Shah, a prolific poet, singer and dancer, lived till deposed by the British, when Awadh was annexed to the Company’s Empire in 1856. The silent beauty shrouding the ruined Indo- Persian styled edifice promptly shifted my mind to another time zone. Looking at the ornate balconies, I could envision that to be the place where the Nawab leisurely sat and composed verses, such as the famous ‘Babul Mora Naiha Chooto Jaay’ while the city’s magical silhouette slowly sunk into sunset. Wandering around, I thought I heard the rhythms of a tabla matched with the tunes of sarengi, and imagined that coming from a mehefill inside, the Nawab dancing and singing with his luscious courtesans, in a large hall ado­rned with gold framed mirrors, portraits of ancestors and opulent chandeliers hanging from the festooned ceiling. Walking through the surrounding grounds, once treaded on by the emperor and his friends, I didn’t see anyone flying kites or watching rooster fights, but I was told that two of the Nawab’s most favourite pastimes still evoke passionate involvement among the locals.

The opulent vestiges of the Qaser Bagh Palace  bore testament to the extravagant lifestyle  of the Lucknow Nawabs, for which they were notorious. The other building I saw that was equally appealing in style and sumptuousness was the Chatter Manzil, the name being derived from its chatter (umb­rella) shaped gild dome crowing the structure.

The highlight of any visit to Lucknow is surely cherishing  its architectural transcendence and, like me, if you arrive by train, the first taste will come the moment you step down at the Charbagh Railway station — a 1914 built imposing edifice, structured with domes and minarets and looks like a grand palace from outside. It aptly measures up in quality with the city’s other monuments, mostly built by the Nawabs that dominate the expansive physical environment spreading out on both sides of the River Gomti.

For me, the two Imambaras — Bara and Chota, came out as the most distinctive. They are religious monuments, meaning houses of the imams, as per the Shiaite school of Islam to which the Nawabs belonged.

Located in the city’s bustling old quarter, you enter the precinct through the Rumi Darwaza, a soaring gate 60 feet high that has stood imposingly for over two centuries as a silent witness to history. The stunning feature of Bara Imambara which is a maze of a large courtyard, two imposing gates and a mosque, is the 50m long and 15m high central hall, one of the largest vaulted galleries in the world, totally unsupported by pillars. An external stairway guides you to an upper floor laid out as an amazing labyrinth, known as the Bhulbhulaiya, where you are sure to lose your way in the criss-crosses of latticed corridors and stairways, unless someone is with you as a guide. The nearby Chota Imambara, a gem like structure is surrounded by a delicate golden dome and has external walls engraved with superb calligraphy. The interior is adorned with gilt-edged mirrors, ornate chandeliers, silver pulpits and colourful stucco decorations. Next to it is a clock tower, the tall brick structure of which turns into a memorable sight when brightly illuminated at night.

It is said that the Nawabs had equal fascination for poetry and food, so cuisine became and still remains a central feature of the city, serving signature dishes such as tunde kabab, kakori kabab, dum phukt mutton biriyani, nehari and halim, the recipes for which emerged from the regal kitchens. They certainly pledge to delight one’s heart through the stomach, and this worked for me when I tried some of the specialities at the plush Oudhyana Restaurant at the Taj Residency Hotel.

Elusive and enchanting, Lucknow, oozing with history and teeming with life, has all the ingredients to lure any traveller — excellent air, rail and road connections, accommodation to suit every budget, great shopping opportunities, mouth wat­ering cuisine, courteous people and above all a landscape bejewelled with some of India’s most breathtaking monuments. I fell in love with the city instantly and I am sure you will as well.

Factfile

Getting there: Lucknow is 80 km from Kanpur, 210 km from Allahabad, 305 km from Varanasi and 363 km from Agra. The Delhi-Lucknow Shatabdi Express links Lucknow to other major cities in India. Lucknow’s Amausi airport has flights to all the major cities in India. Hire an auto rickshaw or cycle rickshaw. Even horse -drawn carts are available. Please try to fix the rate before starting the journey. The main centres of activities in the city today are Gomtinagar, Hajratganj, Janpath, Aminabad, Chowk, Nakhas, Sadar and Nishatgang. Log on to www.up-tourism.com for more information.

— sandiphor@hotmail.com

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> LifeStyle> Travel / by Sandip Hor / June 22nd, 2010

Shah Jahan’s summer palace found near Taj

The Taj Mahal, built between 1632 and 1653, is regarded by many as the finest example of Mughal architecture.
The Taj Mahal, built between 1632 and 1653, is regarded by many as the finest example of Mughal architecture.

Agra :

In an interesting discovery following excavations carried out by the Archaeological Survey of India recently, remains of a summer palace, presumably a baradari, a pavilion designed to allow free flow of air – have been reportedly found at the centuries-old Mughal-era garden Mehtab Bagh located opposite the Taj Mahal.

The garden was reputedly Shah Jahan’s favourite spot which he used to visit to get a view of the Taj at night, hence it’s name (Mehtab means moonlight in Urdu).

“The remains of the baradari-like structure have been found just opposite the Taj Mahal which strengthens our belief that the Mughal emperor must have built this place to enjoy the view of the Taj sitting near the bank of river.

The place seems to have sunk beneath the surface either due to floods or because of the presence of hollow space under the structure,” said a senior ASI official.

The excavated remains of the walls at the garden complex, situated on the opposite bank of the Taj Mahal in Agra. (PTI photo)
The excavated remains of the walls at the garden complex, situated on the opposite bank of the Taj Mahal in Agra. (PTI photo)

Incidentally, Mehtab Bagh has been associated with the myth of the black Taj which is believed to have been spun by guides to fascinate foreign tourists. According to the story, Shah Jahan wanted to build another Taj in black marble across the Yamuna and connect the two by a bridge. Mehtab Bagh is pointed out by some as the possible site where the black Taj would have come up.

“There has never been any historical evidence to prove the existence of a black Taj,” said the official.

During excavation work carried out between 1997 and 1999 at Mehtab Bagh, the ASI had found remains of a huge octagonal tank furnished with 25 fountains, a small central tank and a baradari in the east of the garden. “The present work is going in the south direction of the garden in the straight alignment of the Taj Mahal which makes the discovery an interesting one,” added the official.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> India / by Adithya Dev, TNN / July 02nd, 2014