SURPRISE ME!

Agra - The City in Pictures

MakeMyTrip Blog

Last updated: Apr 3, 2017

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Tourists from the world over visit Agra for the Taj Mahal - naturally lots of Taj souvenirs, with marble work can be found here. Apart from that there's lots of leather work, hand-woven carpets, hookah pieces and lots of other decoration items can be bought here

Eat

Agra still has a strong Mughal inluence, so the Mughlai cuisine is prevalant in the city - try the shami kababs, butter chiken, biryani at a range of restaurants in the city

See

Apart from the obvious Taj Mahal tour, don't forget to visit Fatehpur Sikri, Agra Fort, Buland Darwaza, Jama Masjid, and other historical monuments

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Some great shots of the Taj Mahal can be taken from the banks of the Yamuna - capture this at sunset, and you have a perfect image!

Safety

Being such a popular destination, there are a number of guides and rickshaw drivers who will be ready to take you to places - beware of fakes and of over-paying. Best to ask around for a few prices, before you decide on one - and bargain!

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♫♫ Sau saal pehle mujhe tumse pyaar tha, Mujhe tumse pyaar tha. Aaj bhi hai, aur kal bhi rahega…♫♫ The Mohammad Rafi classic echoes in my mind every time I visit the beautiful city of Agra. A love so potent and a longing so pure, that it will resonate in the hearts of millions for eternity. Many a lovers’ inspiration, many a historians’ delight, many a poets’ muse and many a heartbrokens’ respite. But there is more to Agra than the Taj! Agra is dotted with some of the most significant monuments in the country. A heritage walk in this Mughal Capital is like turning the pages of history textbooks back in school. Fortunately this August brings us two long weekends, one of which I am going to dedicate to the City of Love. What about you? 

agra taj mahal

“The Taj Mahal rises above the banks of the river like a solitary tear suspended on the cheek of time.” -Rabindranath Tagore


agra red fort

Agra Fort

Where Aurangzeb imprisoned his father Shah Jahan. Shah Jahan is said to have gazed lovingly at his beloved wife’s mausoleum from the fort for the eight years he was jailed.

agra fort
Photo Credit: Kiran Katta

Fatehpur Sikri

Also called the City of Victiory, the land where Babar defeated Rana Sanga in an epic battle. The fort comprises of a series of palaces, mosques and public buildings. Chini ka Rauza, Itimad-ud-daula’s Tomb (also called Baby Taj), Sikandra and Mariyam’s Tomb are other mausoleums in the city that exemplify Mughal architecture.

agra fatehpur sikri
Photo Credit: Pranav Bhasin 

Akbar’s Tomb- where one of the greatest emperors in the world lies buried

fatehpur sikri agra
Photo Credit: Swati Talwar

Jama Masjid

Adorned with exquisite inscriptions from the Holy Quran, inlaid geometric designs and beautifully coloured tiles, Jama Masjid was constructed in 1571 A.D. during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Akbar the Great.

jama masjid
Photo Credit: Pranav Bhasin

Buland Darwaza

“The world is a Bridge, pass over it, but build no houses upon it. He who hopes for a day, may hope for eternity; but the World endures but an hour. Spend it in prayer for the rest is unseen.”—A Persian inscription on Buland Darwaza.

buland darwaza
Photo Credit: Pranav Bhasin

Mehtab Bagh

A cresent-shaped, grassy floodplain across the Yamuna River, Mehtab Bagh was identified as the ideal location for viewing the Taj by Shah Jahan. Mehtab Bagh means the “Moonlit Garden”

mehtab bagh
Photo Credit: Etta Talwar Dutta 

Enamoured and entranced, aren’t you? Wonder what it would be living amidst the testimonies of love, trust, agony, battles and myriad secrets that are buried inside the magnificent walls. Your stay in Agra cannot be ordinary thus. My personal favourites in Agra are Wyndham Grand and Howard Plaza when I’m feeling rich. Since that’s rarer than common, I prefer Hotel Crystal Inn, a comfortable property only 2 km from Taj Mahal that offers stunning panoramas of the Taj and the gardens around it. And when I see this mausoleum of love and longing from the hotel’s balcony, Neruda’s verses keep coming back to me… Tonight I can write the saddest lines. I loved her, and sometimes she loved me too.  My sight searches for her as though to go to her. My heart looks for her, and she is not with me. Though this be the last pain that she makes me suffer, and these the last verses that I write for her. Love is so short, forgetting is so long…