summarise the contributions of mughal s in kashmir architecture
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The Mughal period had a great influence on the development of Kashmiri culture and tradition. ... Later in the time of sixteenth to seventeenth hundreds of years, Mughals not just built up the particular wooden design of Kashmir; they likewise attempted to restore the stone building workmanship in that area.
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Mughal architecture is the type of Indo-Islamic architecture developed by the Mughals in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries throughout the ever-changing extent of their empire in the Indian subcontinent.
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- Emperor Akbar visited Kashmir three times in a row and his affection for it grew, and now the summer destination for successive Emperors became Kashmir: "Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan & Aurengzab". IJahangir spent a "14 of summers" in the Kashmir at a time when lilacs blossomed & wild iris In the spring and returned to the heartland of India at a time when saffron flowers had bloomed in autumn . He died almost in the presence of his beloved and favourite land in "Bahram-Galah", a small village near Poonch.
- The prominent Kashmir Mughal Gardens owe their magnificence mainly to Emperor Jahangir & his son Shah Jahan. Jahangir was to have the site carefully chosen and manoeuvred to fulfil the demands of the conventional paradise gardens. Although the Mughals never deviated from the original model or idea of gardens, in Kashmir their key task was to maximise the site chosen and the abundance of water supplies to their fullest ability.
- The preferred locations were often at the foot of a mountain, whenever a stream or source of water occurred. The outcome was ultimately the architecture of a terraced garden. The Mughal's technical abilities and aesthetics were indignant about the difficulties presented by mountainous areas and helped allow full use of the dominant natural ecosystem and accessible water supplies and achieved an unmatched high perfection
- The "Mughal Gardens" are Islamically designed gardens of the Mughals. Persian gardens had influenced this style. The Bagh-e-Babur gardens in Kabul, Mehtab Bagh gardens in Taj Mahal, Humayun tomb gardens, Khusro Bagh at Prayagraj, Lahore Shalimar gardens, Haryana's Pinjore gardens are some of the best known examples of the Mughal gardens. The ensemble of six Jammu and Kashmir Mughal Gardens has been listed on the UNESCO World Heritage list in India..
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