Gateway of India
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gateway_of_India"
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Coordinates: 18°55′19″N 73°50′05″E / 18.922, 73.8346

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Gateway of India

The Gateway of India as seen from the harbour
Gateway of India (Mumbai)
Gateway of India
Shown within Mumbai
Building
Architectural style Indo-Saracenic
Location Mumbai, India
Client British Raj
Owner Archaeological Survey of India
Coordinates 18°55′19″N 73°50′05″E / 18.922, 73.8346
Altitude 10 m (33 ft)
Construction
Started 31 March 1911
Completed 1924
Inaugurated 4 December 1924
Height 26 m (85 ft)
Cost 2.1 million rupees (1911)
Design team
Architect George Wittet

The Gateway of India (Marathi: भारताचे प्रवेशद्वार) is a monument in Mumbai (earlier Bombay), India. Located on the waterfront in South Mumbai, the Gateway is a basalt arch 26 metres (85 ft) high. In earlier times, the Gateway was the monument that visitors arriving by boat would have first seen in the city of Bombay.1

The Gateway is built from yellow basalt and reinforced concrete. While Indo-Saracenic in architectural style, elements are derived from the Muslim architectural styles of 16th century Gujarat. The central dome is 15 metres (49 ft) in diameter and is 26 metres (85 ft) above ground at its highest point. The whole harbour front was realigned in order to come in line with a planned esplanade which would sweep down to the centre of the town. The cost of the construction was Rs. 21 lakhs (210,000), borne mainly by the Government of India. For lack of funds, the approach road was never built, and so the Gateway stands at an angle to the road leading up to it.1

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History

The Writing on the Gateway of India which reads "Erected to commemorate the landing in India of their Imperial Majesties King George V and Queen Mary on the Second of December MCMXI".

The Gateway of India was built to commemorate the visit of King George V and Queen Mary to Bombay, prior to the Delhi Durbar, in December 1911. The foundation stone was laid on 31 March 1911, by the Governor of Bombay Sir George Sydenham Clarke, with the final design of George Wittet sanctioned in August 1914. Between 1915 and 1919 work proceeded on reclamations at Apollo Bundar for the land on which the gateway and the new sea wall would be built. The foundations were completed in 1920, and construction was finished in 1924. The Gateway was opened on 4 December 1924, by the Viceroy, the Earl of Reading.1

The last British troops to leave India, the First Battalion of the Somerset Light Infantry, passed through the Gateway in a ceremony on 28 February 1948.1

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Dwivedi, Sharada; Rahul Mehotra (1995). Bombay – The Cities Within. Mumbai: India Book House. ISBN 818502880X. 

External links

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