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**WET - OMF - Applet - Michaela's Taj Mahal, Take A Good Look At That Moon:o))

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~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 11:24:45 AM8/11/02
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In 1612, Arjumand Banu Begam, better known by her other name , Mumtaz Mahal was married to Shah Jehan (then Prince Khurram), the fifth mughal emperor. This marriage, although the emperor's second, was a real love-match, and Mumtaz was her husband's inseparable companion on all his journeys and military expeditions. She was his comrade, his counsellor, and inspired him to acts of charity and benevolence towards the weak and the needy. She bore him fourteen children, and died in childbed in 1630 (only three years after his accession to the throne) in Burhanpur in the Deccan where she had accompanied him on a military campaign. Overpowered by grief, Shah Jehan was determined to perpetuate her memory for immortality and decided to build his beloved wife the finest sepulchre ever - a monument of eternal love. It was Shah Jehan's everlasting love for Mumtaz that led to the genesis of the Taj Mahal. The sad circumstances which attended the early death of the empress who had endeared herself to the people inspired all his subjects to join in the emperor's pious intentions. After twenty-two laborious years, and the combined effort of over twenty thousand workmen and master craftsmen, the complex was finally completed in 1648 on the banks on the river Yamuna in Agra, the capital of mughal monarchs.

The origin of the name the "Taj Mahal" is not clear. Court histories from Shah Jehan's reign only call it the rauza (tomb) of Mumtaz Mahal. It is generally believed that "Taj Mahal" (usually translated as either "Crown Palace" or "Crown of the Palace") is an abbreviated version of her name, Mumtaz Mahal (Exalted One of the Palace).

A green carpet of garden runs from the main gateway to the foot of the Taj. In essence, it is a Persian garden, a form born and nursed to maturity in the desert flat of Persia. Such gardens were introduced to India by Baber, the first mughal emperor, who also brought with him the Persian infatuation with flowers and fruit, birds and leaves, symmetry and delicacy. Unlike other Oriental gardens - especially those of the Japanese, who learned to accentuate existing resources rather than formalise them - the Persian garden was artificially contrived, unbashedly man-made, based on geometric arrangements of nature without any attempt at a "natural" look. Like Persian gardeners, landscape artists at the Taj attempted to translate the perfection of heaven into terrestrial terms by following certain formulas. In Islam, four is the holiest of all numbers - most arrangements of the Taj are based on that number or its multiples - and the gardens were thus laid out in the quadrate plan. Two marble canals studded with fountains and lined with cypress trees (symbolising death) cross in the centre of the garden dividing it into four equal squares. The mausoleum, instead of occupying the central point (like most mughal mausoleums), stands majestically at the north end just above the river. Each of the four quarters of the garden have again been sub-divided into sixteen flower beds by stone-paved raised pathways. At the centre of the garden, halfway between the tomb and the gateway, stands a raised marble lotus-tank with a cusped and trefoiled border. The tank has been arranged to perfectly reflect the Taj in its waters. A clear, unobstructed view of the mausoleum is available from any spot in the garden. Fountains and solemn rows of cypress trees only adorn the north-south water canal, lest the attention of the viewer would be diverted to the sides. This shows how carefully the aesthetic effect of the water devices and the garden were calculated. The deep green cypress trees with their slender rising shapes and curving topmost crests are mirrored in the water while between their dark reflections shines the beauty of the immortal Taj.

An ingenious method was devised to ensure uniform and undiminished water pressure in the fountains, irrespective of the distance and the outflow of water. The fountain pipes were not connected directly with the copper pipes feeding them as this would have resulted in a gradual decrease in the volume and pressure of the water. Instead, a copper pot has been provided under each fountain pipe - which was thus connected to with the water supply only through the pot. Water first fills the pot and then only rises simultaneously in the fountains. The fountains are thus controlled by pressure in the pots and not pressure in the main pipe. As the pressure in the pots is uniformly distributed all the time, it ensures equal supply of water at the same rate in all the fountains. It is really creditable that the planner spared no efforts - belonging to art, architecture and engineering - to create a perfect production without the slightest weakness, architectural or aesthetic.The main supply of the water was however obtained through earthenware pipes. One such main was discovered under the bed of the western canal. The pipe is 9" in diameter and has been embedded in masonry at a depth of 5 feet below the level of the paved walk. Evidently, the mughal water expert was a master of his art and successfully worked out the levels in relation to the volume of water to ensure its unobstructed supply for centuries. He anticipated no repair work and therefore made no provision for it; hence the extraordinary depth at which the pipe was sunk. The garden is irrigated by the overflowing of canals. The north-south canal has inlets of water through fountains. The east-west received its water through an interconnection with the north-south canal. Thus the quarters near the canals received an adequate supply of water and could be used for growing flower-plants which would not obscure the general view, while the distant quarters got a smaller supply of water and were suitable only for tall trees .

Photo: Eric Meola

Robbie

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Aug 11, 2002, 11:52:17 AM8/11/02
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Beautiful AJ thanks for reposting this beauty.
Robbie
"~AJ~" <a...@anywhere.net> wrote in message
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~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 11:57:15 AM8/11/02
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My pleasure Robbie.;o))

AJ
"Robbie" <robbi...@nospamverizon.net> wrote in message
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Cinmiester

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Aug 11, 2002, 12:11:06 PM8/11/02
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This is very beautiful... Thanks for reposting it AJ..
Cindy


"~AJ~" <a...@anywhere.net> wrote in message
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The Taj Mahal

~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 12:36:08 PM8/11/02
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Thanks Cindy, Mamselle and Michaela, have always been my utmost
favorites.;o))

AJ
"Cinmiester" <cinmi...@ohmster.com> wrote in message
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Michaela

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Aug 11, 2002, 12:44:13 PM8/11/02
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thank you so much for posting it, Aleeta! it always has been one of my
favorite applets.
M

"~AJ~" <a...@anywhere.net> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 1:36:47 PM8/11/02
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You are welcome M, I'm glad it's one of your favorites too.;o))

AJ
"Michaela" <michael...@m-de-sign.com> wrote in message
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Michaela

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Aug 11, 2002, 3:24:52 PM8/11/02
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thank you again, Cindy
M

"Cinmiester" <cinmi...@ohmster.com> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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Michaela

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Aug 11, 2002, 3:24:36 PM8/11/02
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thanks so much, Robbie
M

"Robbie" <robbi...@nospamverizon.net> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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joni

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Aug 11, 2002, 3:27:13 PM8/11/02
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M's work is always so well thought out... I always
enjoy not just looking and listening, but the text
or poems she uses, too... this is a favorite of
many I'm guessing!!!

Thanks for sharing it, Aleeta!

joni


"~AJ~" <a...@anywhere.net> wrote in message
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The Taj Mahal

Michaela

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Aug 11, 2002, 3:58:55 PM8/11/02
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thank you
M

"joni" <joni...@nospamev1.net> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 4:50:05 PM8/11/02
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Hee,hee, she ssurely does do some mighty fine work and well it's one of my
fav's among many.;o))
Originally she had it in pink and I love pink, but I lost it I think anyway.
AJ
"joni" <joni...@nospamev1.net> wrote in message
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Richard Eagle

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Aug 11, 2002, 5:55:55 PM8/11/02
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Thanks so much, Aleeta, for reposting this
beautiful applet post of Michaela's.

Richard

~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 6:57:29 PM8/11/02
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Thanks Richard, I wish she still had the pink one and I'm still searching
for it but I'm certain I had lost it.

AJ
"Richard Eagle" <re_e...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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Sandy J

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Aug 11, 2002, 9:29:25 PM8/11/02
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I don't know how I missed this one AJ, but thanks for reposting it! It's a
superb creation of Michaela's!
Sandy

"~AJ~" <a...@anywhere.net> wrote in message
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The Taj Mahal

~AJ~

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Aug 11, 2002, 9:55:43 PM8/11/02
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Oh Sandy, this was posted long ago, that's why you missed it and that's
what's so neat about posting these.;o))

AJ
"Sandy J" <morni...@nospam.netscape.net> wrote in message
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Michaela

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Aug 12, 2002, 3:54:28 AM8/12/02
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thank you, Richard
Michaela

"Richard Eagle" <re_e...@hotmail.com> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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Michaela

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Aug 12, 2002, 3:54:37 AM8/12/02
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thank you, Sandy
M

"Sandy J" <morni...@nospam.netscape.net> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
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