From a Mughal Bagh to a Colonial Archaeological Garden to a UNESCO World Heritage Property and everything else in between: the many lives of Badshah Shahjahan’s Hayat Baksh Bagh

Q1 Arts and Humanities Landscape History Pub Date : 2021-07-03 DOI:10.1080/01433768.2021.1999017
Jyoti Pandey Sharma
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The article explores the transformation of the Indian subcontinent’s historic gardens as power changed hands from the Mughals to the British, first as the East India Company (henceforth EIC) and subsequently as the Crown, thus altering not only the political scenario but also the subcontinent’s cultural landscape. In the aftermath of the 1857 Indian uprising against colonial rule, the victorious colonial state undertook an urban remodelling programme across the subcontinent’s cities in a bid to stamp its authority. This resulted in the introduction of metropole-inspired forms of urbanity that included leisure. As a cultural import, leisure was spatialised in the subcontinent, like its British counterpart, via the public park. Colonial institutions notably the municipality and Archaeological Survey of India (henceforth ASI) laid out public parks that were referred to as municipal gardens and archaeological gardens respectively. These were either laid out as new ventures or by remodelling Mughal gardens based on metropolitan, notably English garden design ideas. The article argues that colonial interventions transformed Mughal gardens to produce a multi-layered landscape that evoked several but fragmented meanings. Further, it urges an unravelling of the layers of Mughal gardens to appreciate their complexity for charting a holistic approach for their conservation and management. One such venture is examined in detail i.e. the transformation of the seventeenth-century imperial Mughal leisure garden, Hayat Baksh Bagh, in Delhi’s Red Fort, first as a Mughal leisure garden, then as a colonial military space and archaeological garden and finally as a contemporary tourist site. The need to unravel the garden’s many culturally diverse layers is underscored for a more nuanced site interpretation to facilitate its conservation in keeping with contemporary global and national conservation discourses. 1
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从莫卧儿Bagh到殖民考古花园,再到联合国教科文组织世界遗产,以及介于两者之间的一切:Badshah Shahjahan的Hayat Baksh Bagh的许多生活
摘要本文探讨了印度次大陆历史花园的转型,权力从莫卧儿人手中转移到了英国人手中,首先是东印度公司(以下简称EIC),然后是皇冠,从而不仅改变了政治场景,也改变了次大陆的文化景观。1857年印度反抗殖民统治起义后,这个获胜的殖民国家在次大陆城市进行了一项城市改造计划,以巩固其权威。这导致了以大都市为灵感的都市形式的引入,其中包括休闲。作为一种文化输入,休闲在次大陆和英国一样,通过公共公园实现了空间化。殖民地机构,特别是印度市政和考古调查局(以下简称ASI),设置了公共公园,分别被称为市政花园和考古花园。这些要么是作为新的企业布局,要么是根据大都市,尤其是英国的花园设计理念改造莫卧儿花园。这篇文章认为,殖民干预改变了莫卧儿花园,产生了一个多层次的景观,唤起了几个但支离破碎的意义。此外,它敦促解开莫卧儿花园的层层面纱,以了解它们的复杂性,从而为它们的保护和管理制定一个整体的方法。对其中一个项目进行了详细研究,即位于德里红堡的17世纪莫卧儿帝国休闲花园Hayat Baksh Bagh的改造,首先是作为莫卧儿休闲花园,然后是殖民军事空间和考古花园,最后是作为当代旅游景点。为了对遗址进行更细致的解读,以促进其保护,符合当代全球和国家的保护论述,强调了解开花园众多文化多样性层面的必要性。1.
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来源期刊
Landscape History
Landscape History Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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