We arrived in Delhi last night but by the time we
negotiated our way through immigration and customs, exchanged a little currency
and took a taxi to our hotel, there was little to be seen beyond the blank of
smog. Our hotel is superb, one of the best in Delhi.
We woke early as our body clocks are still
adjusting. After a wonderful breakfast
of western and Indian foods, we set off for our first day in Delhi. Our first stop was at the bank adjacent to
the hotel. The ATM was dry (so are all
the others in Delhi) and we could not deposit our old currency into our foreign
bank account.
We took a tuk tuk to the Red Fort and entered by the
Lahore Gate and through the Chatta Chowk or covered bazaar. The first major building was the Naubar Khana
or Drum House where musicians welcomed dignitaries as the Red Fort was the home
of the moguls including the one who built the Taj Mahal.
We saw the Indian War Memorial Museum, reception halls
and royal apartments, towers, mosques, palaces and gardens.
Gail at the Naubar Khana or The Drum Hall
Gail at the main Audience Hall
Rob at the Red Fort Walls. The moat was once the main river bed.
We headed down the Chandni Chowk that houses a huge spice
market, markets for clothes and household goods. We planned to spend time at the Jama Masjia,
the great mosque built by Shah Jehan but not long after we arrived, the call to
prayer went out so we continued to Humayun’s tomb built in 1565. This was a huge complex of tombs with the
main one being the forerunner of the Taj Mahal at Agra.
The walls of the Jama Masjia mosue.
After a short stop at a market, we went on to the Lodi
Gardens, a green oasis in the urban jungle.
This was the oldest architectural site we have seen today and it
included tombs, mosques and extensive areas of gardens. The garden was named after the Lodi dynasty
who reigned from 1451 to 1526.
The Bada Gumbad A gateway to the gardens and tombs.
Today has been an excellent to the history of India and
we will revisit several of the places again tomorrow.
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