Close view of carved dado panel in red sandstone in the Turkish Sultana's House, Fatehpur Sikri. Photographer: Smith, Edmund William
Scope & Content:
Genre: Architectural Photography Poor quality photograph. See E.W. Smith, 'The Moghul architecture of Fathpur-Sikri' (4 vols, Allahabad, 1894-98), vol 1, pl. 40 for a drawing of this piece.
View of the garden from the platform of Jahangir's Tomb, with corner minaret in right foreground, Shahdara, Lahore. Photographer: [?] Henry Hardy Cole.
Scope & Content:
Photograph attributed to Cole in Theodor Bloch, A list of the photographic negatives ... in the collection of The Indian Museum... (Calcutta: 1900), but probably commissioned rather than taken by him.
Interior of chamber beneath the great dome of the Jami Masjid, showing principal mihrabs and minbar, Fatehpur Sikri. Photographer: Smith, Edmund William
Scope & Content:
Genre: Architectural Photography View looking towards the wall, showing three mihrabs (prayer niches) and the minbar (pulpit). Reproduced in photogravure in E.W. Smith, 'The Moghul architecture of Fathpur-Sikri' (4 vols, Allahabad, 1894-98), vol 4, pl. 30.
View looking along the cloisters on the south side of the quadrangle of the Jami Masjid, Fatehpur Sikri. Photographer: Smith, Edmund William
Scope & Content:
Genre: Architectural Photography View along the interior of the colonnade. In Bloch's list this is inaccurately styled the 'propylon' of the mosque. Reproduced in photogravure in E.W. Smith, 'The Moghul architecture of Fathpur-Sikri' (4 vols, Allahabad, 1894-98), vol 4, pl. 9.
Mihrab on the south side of the chamber beneath the great dome of the Jami Masjid, Fatehpur Sikri. Photographer: Smith, Edmund William
Scope & Content:
Genre: Architectural Photography Reproduced in photogravure in E.W. Smith, 'The Moghul architecture of Fathpur-Sikri' (4 vols, Allahabad, 1894-98), vol 4, pl. 34.
Close view of ceiling and carved stone columns in the north verandah of the Turkish Sultana's House, Fatehpur Sikri. Photographer: Smith, Edmund William
General view of the Lal Banglah, containing the tombs of Lal Kanwar and Begam Jan, Delhi. Photographer: [?] Henry Hardy Cole.
Scope & Content:
For description, see Carr Stephen, The archaeology of the monumental remains of Delhi (Ludhiana and Calcutta: 1876), pp. 279-280: 'The origin of this building is unknown, but, about 90 years ago, the Emperor Shah Alam buried here his mother and daughter and converted the place into a burial grou...