Artwork Page for Lucknow. The Great Emambara and Mosque

Details / Information for Lucknow. The Great Emambara and Mosque

Series Title: Photographs of Northern India

Lucknow. The Great Emambara and Mosque

1863–70
(British, 1834–1912)
Culture
England
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Samuel Bourne, the author of most the images in this album, was a banker in England before he moved to India to become a professional photographer.

Description

The 50 images in this album, all taken in the 1860s, move from the hill towns of the Himalayas down to cities including Lahore (now in Pakistan), Delhi, Lucknow, Agra, Benares (now Varansi), and Calcutta (now Kolkata). Architectural studies of major monuments offer valuable historical records of what sites such as the Taj Mahal and the imperial mosque of the Mughal emperors in Delhi looked like before twentieth-century restorations.
A horizontally oriented albumen print photograph depicts an expansive architectural complex in muted brown tones. In the foreground, a building features a row of small domes on the right and one larger dome on the left. Behind them, a courtyard leads toward a massive structure with many arched openings. On the far right, three large domes and two tall, slender towers rise against a pale, empty sky.

Lucknow. The Great Emambara and Mosque

1863–70

Samuel Bourne

(British, 1834–1912)
England

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