The Asian Age

Delhi came to be ‘ born’ 87 years ago

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New Delhi, Feb 13: New Delhi, the modern capital of India with the Raisina Hill complex as its architectu­ral centrepiec­e, took over 20 years to build, and was inaugurate­d on this day in 1931 by Viceroy Lord Irwin.

The new imperial city was born on December 12, 1911, during a grand ceremonial ‘ Durbar’ here when British monarch King George V had announced the shifting of the capital from Calcutta to Delhi.

“The meaning of imperial Delhi reached both its fullest expression as well as its fullest contradict­ion in February 1931, when the new capital was opened to the world in an inaugurati­on that lasted a week,” D. Johnson and Richard Watson say in the book ‘ New Delhi: The Last Imperial City’.

The ceremony was held at the Raisina Hill, with the Viceroy’s House ( now Rashtrapat­i Bhavan), and North Block and South Block witnessing opulent functions to mark the occasion.

“From the city’s earliest beginning in 1911, the capital was meant to be much more than a place to do work of the imperial government. It was destined to be a crowning achievemen­t in colonial architectu­re and colonial town planning, a capital worthy of the British Empire,” the book says.

Designed by architect Sir Edwin Lutyens and Sir Herbert Baker, the city was, incidental­ly christened ‘ New Delhi’ on December 31, 1926.

On the day of the inaugurati­on, four iconic Dominion Columns, each made of red sandstone and topped by replica of a ship, were unveiled by Lord Irwin amid fanfare of trumpets followed by the playing of the ( British) national anthem, according to the book ‘ Glittering Decades: New Delhi in Love and War’.

“The four columns are the tokens of something wider than anything which the past cities of Delhi represent,” says the book, quoting from the Viceroy’s speech.

 ?? — ASIAN AGE ?? Devotees offer prayers at a temple in New Delhi on Tuesday on the occasion of Mahashivra­tri.
— ASIAN AGE Devotees offer prayers at a temple in New Delhi on Tuesday on the occasion of Mahashivra­tri.
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