Skip to main content

SdA 3-156 — Vue du parc bagh-e shahi

Vue du parc bagh-e shahi à Jalalabad, probablement prise depuis les arcades au nord du palais en direction nord-nord-est. On y découvre, à gauche, et coupé par la prise, un bassin d’eau rond, des allées linéales bordées d’arbres et, de réverbères. Au premier plan, des espaliers en bois et un mat de drapeau vide. A l’arrière-plan, surplombant le mur massif à arcades aveugles, les montagnes arides de la région de Jalalabad. A droite, caché derrière les arbres, un bâtiment à un étage, étables ou bureaux.
PARC ROYAL — DJELAL-ABAD
  • Souvenir d'Afghanistan SdA 1-27 et SdA 2-30 : identique.
  • Mujal-e kabul 2/10, No. 22 (1311/1932), f.p. 937 : planche coloriée SdA 1-27, coupée de la collection et collée dans le journal, «az menazer jalalabad».
  • Gray, J. (1895) : At the court of the Amir, p. 17 : «It is a large white building, standing in the midst of well laid out gardens, in which are many varieties of Eastern and European fruit-trees and flowers. The Palace was semi-European in its internal decoration. […] There was a large central hall with a domed roof, and smaller rooms at the side. […]»
  • Sultan Mahomed Khan (1900) : The life of Abdur Rahman, Amir of Afghanistan, Vol. 2, p. 104 : «All my residential palaces are built on sites that command a beautiful view, and in a bright, breezy place. They are surrounded by gardens and flowers, and they are built in such a style that it is possible in the same building to have warm rooms for winter use, and open verandahs with large windows for the summer. The rooms are so arranged that the spring blossoms may be watched as they break from the trees, and the gorgeous yellow hues of the autumn, and the dazzling falls of the winter snow and the moonlight nights are enjoyed by all the inmates of my palaces who take the trouble to sit at theses windows.»
  • Imperial Gazetteer of India (1908) : Afghanistan and Nepal, p. 68 : «Two hundred yards from the west gate of the city is a palace belonging to the Amir, but now rarely occupied by him. It is a striking building, constructed about 1892, in a garden 200 yards square, surrounded by high walls. The palace measures about 135 by 144 feet, has large underground rooms for use in the hot season, and a wide veranda all round, from which a charming view is obtained of the valley and adjacent hills.»
  • Thornton, E. et A. (1910) : Leaves from an Afghan scrapbook, p. 98 : «[…] A spacious garden surrounds this palace, and has a central irrigation canal. Two small ponds about 4 to 5 feet deep are stocked with goldfish, which afford amusement for the page-boys. There are walks made through orange-groves, where in springtime the air becomes heavily laden with scent.»
  • Parr, D.J. (1975) : Architecture in Afghanistan, 1880-1929, pp. 107-109 et Fig. 76-84 : description du palais bagh-e shahi.
  • McChesney, R.D. (Ed., 2013) : The history of Afghanistan: Fayz Muhammad Katib Hazarah’s “Siraj al-tawarikh”, Vol. 3-1, p. 90 : «Also this year [1883], at the order of His Majesty, an enclosing wall was constructed around the Bagh-i Shahi in Jalalabad and over the course of some two to five years, through the expenditure of a large amount of money, the surrounding wall with rooms along the western side, a sublime royal palace, a domed entry gate, and rooms outside the gate were constructed, as will be related in due course – God willing. In 1305/1887-88, after laying out fragrant terraces, avenues, fountains, two large cistern-reservoirs on the east and west sides of the private royal palace, introducing a large canal, and planting orange, cypress and other trees, a marble inscription was mounted high on the entrance to the palace which stood facing the entry gate to the park on its southern side. […]» ; p. 221 : «During the previous events [March 1886], Brigadier ‘Abd al-Subhan Khan, an Indian engineer working for the government of Afghanistan, was assigned by His Majesty to Jalalabad to build a felicity-surrounding palace inside the Bagh-i Shahi of Jalalabad and to construct inner and outer chambers for it. Over the course of three years he completed the work, […]» ; p. 405 : «Also at this time, on the eighteenth of Rabi’ al-Sani/3 January 1888, His Majesty left [for Jalalabad …] Since the construction of the private quarters of the Bagh-i Shahi had not yet reached the requisite state of completion and was as yet unsuitable for the status and dignity of His Majesty, he stopped at the estate of (the late) Wazir Muhammad Akbar Khan, today known as the Bagh-i Kawkab, […]»
Image No.
SdA 3-156
Collection
Souvenir d’Afghanistan 1925-1927
Series
SdA 3/5 (double face, 1927) 153 à 181 : Jalalabad, etc.
Format
image : 134/200 mmplanche : 148/218 mmcouverture bleue ou verte
Quality
excellente ; noir et blanc
Place, date
Jalalabad, 1910
Descriptors
  • 0801. Jalalabad
  • 1.57 Pictures of Landscapes, Cities
  • 3.829 Parks / Gardens
  • 4.365 Abdur Rahman Khan (1880-1901)
  • 4.366 Emir Habibullah (1901-1919)
  • Latitude / Longitude34.436900 / 70.456800
    Google Earth34°26’12'' N / 70°27’24'' E / 570 m

    You know more about this picture?

    Write to us!