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Shahjahanabad

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Persian شاه‌جهان‌آباد (šâhjahânâbâd, literally City of the King of the World). Named after Mughal emperor Shah Jahan I (1592–1666), who had it built.

Proper noun

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Shahjahanabad

  1. (historical) Synonym of Old Delhi.
    • 1976, Seminar on Redevelopment of Shahjahanabad, Redevelopment of Shahjahanabad, the Walled City of Delhi: Resume of the Seminar: Report and Selected Papers, Town and Country Planning Organisation, Ministry of Works and Housing, Govt. of India, New Delhi, →OCLC, page 11:
      Shahjahanabad is a unique mixture of beauty and squalor, of memories of past greatness and evidence of present decay. [] The task before us is to renew the essential character of Shahjahanabad while making it a healthy and wholesome urban area for its more than four lakh inhabitants. [] At present we cannot earmark large sums of money for Shahjahanabad. [] I hope the Seminar on Shahjahanabad will look for practical solutions to the problems of the Walled City.
    • 1983 November 20, William K. Stevens, “Eight Historic Capital Cities”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 2018-02-06:
      Built by the Mogul Shah Jahan (Emperor of the World), who also built the Taj, it was called Shahjahanabad when completed in the 17th century. Today it is called the walled city or simply Old Delhi.
    • 2018 January 29, Zehra Kazmi, Saudamini Jain, “Shahjahanabad: How a planned city came undone”, in The Hindustan Times[2], archived from the original on 2024-03-03:
      This fort was to be the epicentre of Shahjahanabad, the emperor’s new capital. [] ¶ For more than 30 years, Shahjahanabad thrived, not only as the capital of the Mughal empire, but as a centre of culture, where art, poetry, music, artisanship all flourished. “Shahjahanabad was a statement of a way of life achieved after many centuries”, writes Shama Mitra Chenoy, a professor of history at Delhi University in her book, Shahjahanabad: A City of Delhi 1638-1857.