Window on the Sidi Said Mosque, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. [Credit: Frederick M. Asher]
Jāmi&ayn; Masjid (Great Mosque), Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. [Credit: Frederick M. Asher]City, eastern
Gujarat state, west-central
India. It lies along the Sabarmati River about 275 miles (440 km) north of
Mumbai (Bombay). The old city lies east of the river, while newer sections lie along the west bank.
The city was founded in &AD; 1411 by the Muslim ruler of Gujarat, Sultan A&hsubdot;mad Shah, next to the older Hindu town of Asawal. Ahmedabad grew larger and wealthier for a century, but dynastic decay and anarchy eventually brought about a decline, and the city was captured in 1572 by the Mughal emperor Akbar. Its renewed eminence under the Mughals ceased with the death of Aurangzeb in 1707. Ahmedabad's further decline was arrested by the British annexation of Gujarat in 1818. The city's first cotton mills were opened in 1859–61, and Ahmedabad grew to become the sixth most populous city and the largest inland industrial centre in India. The city became the temporary capital of Gujarat state in 1960, but the state administration was moved to Gandhinagar in 1970. In 2001 the city was rocked by a massive earthquake that killed thousands of people.
Its dynastic history made Ahmedabad a meeting place of the Hindu, Muslim, and Jaina architectural traditions. A&hsubdot;mad Shah and his successors ordered the dismantling and adaptation of Hindu temples in order to build mosques. This gave many of Ahmedabad's mosques and tombs a Hindu flavour in their form and decoration. The dense “forest” of 260 richly carved columns within the Jāmi&ayn; Masjid (Great Mosque), which was completed in 1423, recalls the hall of a Hindu temple. At the mosque's entrance is the domed tomb of A&hsubdot;mad Shah (1441), and on the road leading to it is the Tin Darwaza, or triple arch (c. 1425), a triumphal gate through which the sultan was borne to worship. Among the city's many other fine Muslim buildings are the delicate mosque (c. 1505) at Rani Sipri's tomb; the Sidi Said Mosque (1510–15), with minutely pierced arch-screens; and the exuberantly rich Rani Rupmati Mosque (1515).
An interesting local feature is the division of the old city centre into pols, or self-contained blocks of houses that shelter several thousand people each. Some pols are virtually small townships, crossed by a street with gates at either end. Another attractive feature of the city is Lake Kankaria, offering promenades, boating, a hill garden, and a museum designed by the architect Le Corbusier. Ahmedabad is the home of Gujarat University (1949) and the Lalbhai Dalpatbhai Institute for Indological Research. Sabarmati, a suburb west of the river, became well known as the seat of Mohandas K. Gandhi's ashram, or religious retreat.
Ahmedabad's ancient architectural remains contrast sharply with its modern mills and factories. About half of the city's workforce depends on the cotton-milling industry, which is the largest in India. Other light industries produce pharmaceuticals, vegetable oil, flour, soap, matches, glass, tobacco, hosiery, and carpets. The city's handicrafts include brocades, lace, copper and brassware, jewelry, and woodcarving.
Ahmedabad lies at the junction of main roads leading to Mumbai and central India, the Kathiawar Peninsula, and the Rajasthan border. The city is a major junction on the Western Railway, with lines running to Mumbai, Delhi, and the Kathiawar Peninsula. The chief crops grown in the surrounding area are cotton, millet, wheat, and pulses. Pop. (2001) city, 3,520,085; urban agglom., 4,525,013.
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