| ca.1895 French photochrom FACADE OF HARIMANDIR (GOLDEN TEMPLE), AMRITSAR, PUNJAB, INDIA #221 |
Photochrom titled Amristir. Facade du Temple d'Or, approx. page size is 31 x 23.5 cm, approx. image size is 22 x 15.5 cm. From: Autour du Monde - Aquarelles - Souvenirs de Voyages, Paris, L. Boulanger, editeur.
Harimandir
also spelled Harmandir , also called Darbār Sāhib (Punjabi:
“Sacred Audience”) or Golden Temple
the chief gurdwārā, or house of worship, of the Sikhs of India and their most
important pilgrimage site; it is located in the city of Amritsar, in Punjab
state. The Harimandir was built in 1604 by Gurū Arjun, who symbolically had it
placed on a lower level so that even the humblest had to step down to enter it,
and with entrances on all four sides, signifying that it was open to worshipers
of all castes and creeds. The foundation stone was laid by Mian Mīr, a Muslim
divine of Lahore. The temple was destroyed several times by Afghan invaders and
was rebuilt in marble and copper overlaid with gold foil during the reign
(1801–39) of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. The structure thus became known as the
Golden Temple. The temple occupies a small island in the centre of the tank, or
pool, called the amrit-sar (“pool of nectar”) and is connected to land on its
west by a marble causeway running across the water of the pool.
The Harimandir building sustained some minor damage on June 6, 1984, when Indian
troops fought their way into the temple complex to crush Sikh extremists who
were using it as a fortress and refuge. The nearby building known as the Akal
Takht, which is the headquarters of the Sikh religion, was heavily damaged in
the attack, however.