Nothing else in New Delhi looks quite like this 1724 observatory complex, which features towering triangles and massive gears once used to map the stars.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
Once planned as the cornerstone of British imperial power, the \'Viceroy\'s House\' became the Presidential Palace and the world\'s grandest home for a head of state.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
Nothing else in New Delhi looks quite like this 1724 observatory complex, which features towering triangles and massive gears once used to map the stars.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
Big in scale, impressive in detail, and overloaded with attractions, this temple has everything you might expect from an epic Hindu temple – and some you might not.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.
A recognised treasure, both for its sombre collection of tombs to the Lodhi rulers of the 15th-century, and for the space provided for a crowded city to stretch in.