Mural extraordinaire
Say the words ‘great wall’ and most people will instantly assume you are referring to China’s most famous landmark. The Great Wall of China, one of the most remarkable feats of engineering of all time, is the world’s longest defensive fortification, a bulwark against the warlike nomadic horsemen of the Mongolian plains in the north.
Surprisingly, Pakistan, too, has a ‘great wall’. This amazing structure is the tasaveer ki dewar, commonly miscalled taswirat ki dewar, in the Shahi Qila, or Fort of Lahore.
While China’s Great Wall was purpose built for protection, this Great Wall of Lahore is a marvellously decorative one, built for the visual delight of an aesthete, a patron and connoisseur of art. Commissioned in 1624 by the fourth of the Great Mughals, the emperor Jahangir, (and completed by his son Shah Jahan in 1631), this ‘picturised’ wall is unequalled for the dazzling brilliancy of its gorgeous, glazed-tile mosaic ornamentation.
The total surface area of this Mughal architectural feat is an astonishing 8,000 square yards. Nearly 1,500 feet in length and some 50 feet in height, (450 x 15 metres) this mosaic masterpiece is the largest mural in the world.
The total surface area of this Mughal architectural feat is an astonishing 8,000 square yards. Nearly 1,500 feet in length and some 50 feet in height, (450 x 15 metres) this mosaic masterpiece is the largest mural in the world.