Visit this eye-catching red-stone structure to experience New Delhi\'s rich Muslim culture and savor an architectural landscape that is as grand as it is detailed.
The first Muslim kings built a towering minaret, here on the site of an ancient temple where Hindu and Islamic ruins are now irrevocably mixed and merged.
Once planned as the cornerstone of British imperial power, the \'Viceroy\'s House\' became the Presidential Palace and the world\'s grandest home for a head of state.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
The first Muslim kings built a towering minaret, here on the site of an ancient temple where Hindu and Islamic ruins are now irrevocably mixed and merged.
Once planned as the cornerstone of British imperial power, the \'Viceroy\'s House\' became the Presidential Palace and the world\'s grandest home for a head of state.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
Bright, busy and full of religious and cultural highlights, this temple complex is where the International Society for Krishna Consciousness calls home.
Once planned as the cornerstone of British imperial power, the \'Viceroy\'s House\' became the Presidential Palace and the world\'s grandest home for a head of state.
Nothing else in New Delhi looks quite like this 1724 observatory complex, which features towering triangles and massive gears once used to map the stars.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
The first Muslim kings built a towering minaret, here on the site of an ancient temple where Hindu and Islamic ruins are now irrevocably mixed and merged.
Once planned as the cornerstone of British imperial power, the \'Viceroy\'s House\' became the Presidential Palace and the world\'s grandest home for a head of state.
Nothing else in New Delhi looks quite like this 1724 observatory complex, which features towering triangles and massive gears once used to map the stars.