
Travel Pictures of Agra, India
Travel to Agra's Taj Mahal to see one the the wonders of the world. I've travelled there several times and it was breathtaking each time. There's a lot else to explore in Argra as well: The Red Fort, Idmadutdaulah, Sikandra, Fatehpur Sikri. The sights are quite a distance apart, so you'll need some sort of motorized transport to take you from place to place. One good option may be to rent a taxi for a day.
Try visiting the Taj more than once at different times including sunrise or sunset. The difference in light can create completely different atmospheres. The building has gone through it's share of abuse: in the words of A. Waldman of the NY Times (16.5.2004) "The British, along with the Jats, a caste of northern India, looted the Taj of the lavish carpets, jewels, silver doors and tapestries that once bedecked it. Lord William Bentinck, the first governor-general of India, even planned to dismantle the Taj and sell off the marble. And by the mid-19th century, according to D. N. Dube and Shalini Saran in 'Taj Mahal', a small, readable guide published by Roli Books International in 1985, the Taj had become a colonial 'pleasure resort', with Englishmen and women dancing on the terrace, and the mosque and its jawab rented out to honeymooners. Lord Curzon, who did more than any Englishman to preserve the Taj and other monuments, noted that picnickers often came armed with hammer and chisel, the better to extract fragments of agate and carnelian from the flowers. He repaired the buildings, restored the gardens, although with a British touch, and got the canals working again."

One of the
most stunning buildings on the planet, the Taj Mahal.

A gigantic dream in white marble, aesthetically perfect from afar
and in detail, close up

Visitors on the main
platform of the Taj. In the distance you can see the entrance gate

The classic Taj picture. No
cameras are allowed beyond this point

On the Taj
platform

The left side of the Taj
under the setting sun. Look at all the inlays (the decorations are
semi-precious stone inlays in the marble, not paintings!)

Another
classic Taj view

One of the minarets of the
Taj. They lean slightly outwards, so as not to damage the main building in
case of an earthquake collapse

View across
the river from the back of the Taj Mahal. You can see some remnants of the
Black Taj, which mogul emperor Shah Jehan is said to have been wanting to
build for himself before he was imprisoned by his son, Aurangzeb

One of the side gates of the
Taj Mahal at sunset

The back of the Taj at
sunset

Perfection of
design in simplicity: Arches at Sikandra

The entrance
gate to Sikandra, Mughal emperor Akbar's beautiful tomb

Beehives cling like leaches
to the roof of one of the side gates of Sikandra

A hallway in
Sikandra

Looking out from the main
chamber of Akbar's tomb in Sikandra

Monkeys at
Sikandra

The Red Fort in Agra

Family pose
at the Red Fort

View from the Red Fort. The
slight pointed elevation in the misty horizon is the silhouette of the Taj
Mahal

One of the
minarets of the Idmadutdaulah tomb. It was the first tomb built with marble, paving
the way for the Taj. It's scale, design and attention to detail cannot be compared
to the Taj, however

View looking out from inside
Idmadutdaulah

The tomb of Salim Chisti in
Fetehpur Sikri, an
exceptionally beautiful structure with wonderful marble screens

At Fatehpur Sikri. The
artificial town was abandoned due to lack of water

Diwan-i-khas:
A wonderful four-pathed passageway with space for a throne in the centre
carved out of stone at Fatehpur Sikri

A doorway at Fatehpur Sikri
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