| Documentary evidence:
European accounts
We
now present a brief summary of all the
post-Babar accounts of Ayodhya recorded by
European travellers, archaeologists and
scholars.
1)
Travel report by William Finch, the
European traveller (1608-11).
Finch,
who visited Ayodhya, confirms the
existence of the ruins of Ramkot, the
castle of Ram where Hindus believed he had
incarnated thousands of years ago.
(see Annexure 11 for the relevant extract
from William Foster, ed.: Early Travels
in India, 1583-1619, London 1921
p.176)
2)
History and Geography of India, by
Joseph Tieffenthaler, (published in French
by Bernoulli in 1785).
Tieffenthaler,
the Austrian Jesuit priest who stayed in
Awadh in 1766-71, reports that Babar
destroyed the birth-place temple of Ram
and constructed a mosque by using its
pillars. However, Hindus refused to
give up the place and in spite of the
Moghuls' efforts to prevent them, they
were coming to the place for
worship. They had constructed the
Ram Chabootra in the mosque's courtyard,
which they used to perambulate thrice,
then to prostrate on the ground.
They practised their devotion at the
chabootra and in the mosque.
Tieffenthaler testifies that they
continued celebrating Ram Navami with
great gatherings of people from all over
India. (see Annexure 12, containing
pp.253-254 of Tieffenthaler's Description
Historique et Geographique de l'Inde,
along with an English translation)
3)
Report by Montgomery Martin, British
Surveryor (1838).
He
proposes that the Masjid was built on the
ruins of the Ramkot itself, rather than of
a building constructed by Vikramaditya,
and that the pillars used in the mosque
have been taken from Ram's palace, the
figures thereon having been damaged by the
bigot (i.e. Babar). (see Annexure 13
for pp.335-336 of Martin : History,
Antiquities, Topography and Statistics of
Eastern India, vol.II)
4)
East India Company Gazetteer, by
Edward Thornton (1854).
This
mentiones that Babar's mosque is
embellished with 14 columns of elaborate
workmanship taken from the old Hindu
temple. It also mentions that the
Hindus practised pilgrimage and devotion
on the Ram Chabootra which they believed
to be Ram's cradle. (see Annexure 14
for pp.730-740 of Thornton : Gazetteer
of the Territories under the Government of
the East India Company)
5)
Encyclopaedia of India by Surgeon
General Edward Balfour (1858).
It
mentions that Ayodhya has three mosques on
the sites of three Hindu shrines : the
Janmasthan, the site where Ram was born ;
the Swargadwar Mandir, where his remains
were buried ; and the Treta ka Thakur,
famed as the scene of one of his great
sacrifices. (see Annexure 15 for
p.56 of Balfour : Encyclopaedia of India
and of Eastern and Southern Asia)
6)
Historical Sketch of Faizabad by P.
Carnegy (1870).
He
describes the Ramkot with all its bastions
and palaces and says that the columns of
Janmasthan temple made of strong
close-grained dark slate-coloured Kasauti
(or touch-stone) and carved with different
devices were used by Muslims in the
construction of Babar's mosque.
Carnegy also notes the construction of the
new Janmasthan temple on the neighbouring
plot of land in the early 18th
century. He reports that until 1855
both Hindus and Muslims worshipped alike
in the mosque-temple. (see Annexure
16 for Carnegy : Historical Sketck of
Tehsil Fyzabad, Zilla Fyzabad, with the
old capitals Ajudhia and Fyzabad,
Lucknow 1970, p.5-7, 19-21 and a
photograph taken by Carnegy)
7)
Gazetteer of the Province Oudh
(1877).
It
confirms that the Moghuls destroyed three
important Hindu temples at Ayodhya and
constructed mosques thereon. Babar
built the Babri mosque on Ram Janmabhoomi
in 1528, Aurangzeb built one on Swargadwar,
and either Aurangzeb or Shahjahan did the
same on Treta ka Thakur. All other
assertions from Carnegy's Historical
Sketch of Faizabad are confirmed in this
Gazetteer. (see Annexure 17 : Gazetteer
of the Province of Oudh, vol.I, 1877,
pp.6-7).
8)
Faizabad Settlement Report (1880).
The
report confirms that Babar built the Babri
mosque in 1528 on the site of Janmasthan
temple marking the birthplace of
Ram. On Swargadwar Mandir, Aurangzeb
constructed a mosque, and on
Treta-ka-Thakur the same was done by
either Aurangzeb or Shahjahan, according
to the well-known Mohammedan practice of
enforcing their religion on others.
The columns of the destroyed Janmasthan
temple have been used in the Babri mosque.
9)
Imperial Gazetteer of Faizabad
(1881).
It
confirms the construction of three Moghul
mosques at Ayodhya on the site of three
celebrated shrines, viz. Janmasthan,
Swargadwar and Treta-ka-Thakur. (see
Annexure 18 : Imperial Gazetteer of
India, Provincial Series. United
Provinces of Agra and Oudh, vol.II,
pp.338-9)
10)
Court verdict by Col. F.E.A.
Chamier, District Judge, Faizabad (1886).
In
delivering his judgment in Civil Appeal
No. 27 of 1885, the Judge, after visiting
the Babri mosque site for personal
inspection, observed :"It is most
unfortunate that a Masjid should have been
built on land specially held sacred by the
Hindus, but as that event occurred 356
years ago, it is too late now to remedy
the grievance." (see Annexure 19 :
extract reproduced in Muslim India,
March 1986, p. 107)
11)
Archaeological Survey of India Report by
A. Fuhrer (1891).
Fuhrer
accepts that Mir Khan built the Babri
mosque on the site of the Ram Janmabhoomi
temple, using many of its columns.
He also confirmed that Aurangzeb had
constructed two other mosques in Ayodhya
on the sites of Swargadwar and
Treta-ka-Thakur temples. (see
Annexure 20 : Fuhrer : The Monumental
Antiquities and Inscriptions in the
North-West Provinces and Oudh, ASI
Report 1891, pp.296-297)
12)
Barabanki District Gazetteer by
H.R. Neville (1902).
Neville
reports that "numerous disputes have
sprung up from time to time between the
Hindu priests and the Mussalmans of
Ayodhya with regard to the ground on which
formerly stood the Janmasthan temple,
which was destroyed by Babar and replaced
by a mosque". (see Annexure 21
: Neville: Barabanki District
Gazetteer, Lucknow 1902, p.168-169)
13)
Faizabad District Gazetteer by H.R.
Neville (1905).
This
chronicle confirms that the Janmasthan
temple marking the birthplace of Ram at
Ramkot was destroyed by Babar and replaced
by a mosque using the materials and
columns of the temple. In spite of
its desecration, Hindus continued to
regard it as a holy spot. The
desecration caused numerous disputes and
clashes between the communities.
(see Annexure 22 : Neville : Fyzabad
District Gazetteer, Lucknow 1905,
pp.172-177)
14)
Babur Nama in English by Annette
Beveridge (1920).
After
analysing the inscriptions on the Babri
mosque and studying the archaeological
features, she says that Babur was
impressed with the dignity and sanctity of
the ancient Hindu shrine it displaced, and
that as an obedient follower of Mohammed,
Babar regarded the substitution of the
temple by a mosque as dutiful and
worthy. (see Annexure 23 : Beveridge
: Babur Nama in English, vol II.,
1922, appendix on "The inscriptions
on Babur's Mosque in Ajodhya (Oudh)",
p.xxvii-xxix)
15)
Archaeological Survey of India
(1934).
It
identifies all the holy sites of Ayodhya
with reference to the ancient texts,
numbered them and put up sign posts in
stone to mark the sites. The Babri
mosque was identified as the Ram
Janmabhoomi and a sign post was embedded
there saying :"Site no. 1 :
Janmabhoomi".
16)
Revised Faizabad District Gazetteer
by Smt. E.V. Joshi (1960).
This
Gazetteer records that under Babar's
orders the ancient Janmasthan temple was
destroyed and the Babri mosque was
constructed on its site. The
material of the old temple including some
of the original columns were employed in
building the mosque. (see Annexure
24 : U.P. District Gazetteers -
Faizabad, Lucknow 1960, pp. 46-47,
352-354)
17)
Encyclopaedia Brittanica (1978,
15th edition, vol.I).
This
most authentic Encyclopaedia records that
Ram's birthplace is marked by a mosque
erected by the Moghul emperor Babar in
1528 on the site of an earlier
temple. The Encyclopaedia also
provides a photograph of the present
structure, describing it as the mosque on
Rama's birthplace, Ayodhya, U.P.,
India. Earlier editions of the
Encyclopaedia also contained this
information. (see Annexure 25 : E.B.
vol.I, p.693)
18)
Ayodhya by Hans Bakker (1984).
In
his most comprehensive study, the Dutch
scholar Bakker has repeatedly and
categorically accepted that an old
Vaishnava temple was situated on the holy
spot where Ram descended on earth.
This Janmabhoomi temple was destroyed by
Babar in 1528 and replaced with the
now-existing mosque structure. 14
black-stone pillars from the temple were
utilized by Mir Baqi in the constructtion
of the mosque. Two more pillars have
been driven upside down into the ground at
the grave of the Muslim saint Musa Ashiqan,
who is said to have incited Babar to
demolish the Janmabhoomi temple. A
seventeenth specimen which is a door-jamb
with matching sculpture and similar age
(and possibly from the same temple) is
kept inside the new Janmasthan temple on
the neighbouring mound. Bakker
concludes that Ram Janmabhoomi temple was
one of the oldest Ram temples in the
country which was in existence in the 12th
century. (cfr. Bakker : Ayodhya,
Egbert Forsten, Groningen 1986, part I,
pp.43-59, 60-66, 119-153, part II,
pp.118-121, 143-149, 173-175)
19)
Ram Janmabhoomi vs. Babri Masjid by
Koenraad Elst (1990).
The
Belgian scholar Elst has centred his study
of the Ayodhya controversy on a critical
examination of the anti-Mandir
argumentations of mrs. Surinder Kaur
(The Secular Emperor Babar), Syed
Shahabuddin (articles in Muslim India
and Indian Express) and a group of
JNU historians (The Political Abuse of
History). Confronting these
argumentations with the available
evidence, as well as checking them in
terms of logic and methodology, he
concludes that the anti-Mandir thesis is
untenable. (cfr. Elst : Ram
Janmabhoomi vs. Babri Masjid, a Case Study
in Hindu-Muslim Conflict, Voice of
India, Delhi 1990) |