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Standing at the center of the Quwwatul Mosque the
Iron Pillar is one of Delhi's
most curious structures. Dating back to 4th century
A.D., the pillar bears an inscription which states that it was
erected as a flagstaff in honour of the Hindu god, Vishnu, and in
the memory of the Gupta King Chandragupta II (375-413). How the
pillar moved to its present location remains a mystery. The pillar
also highlights ancient India's achievements in metallurgy. The
pillar is made of 98 per cent wrought iron and has stood 1,600 years
without rusting or decomposing.

The Iron Pillar from Delhi
7.3 m tall, with one meter below the ground; the diameter is 48
centimeters at the foot, tapering to 29 cm at the top, just below
the base of the wonderfully crafted capital; it weighs approximately
6.5 tones, and was manufactured by forged welding.
Enigma of the Iron Pillar
B.N. Goswamy
The sight is so familiar: each time you are in the vicinity of the Qutab
Minar in Delhi, you find groups of tourists gathered around a tall, sleekly
tapering iron pillar in that complex, one person from the group standing with
his or her back firmly against it, and trying to make the fingers of the two
hands touch while holding the pillar in embrace. Very few succeed but, almost
always, there is a feeling of merriment around, since terms are set within the
group and each person is 'tested', as it were, for fidelity or truthfulness or
loyalty, even longevity, it could be anything. When a person fails to make the
contact between the fingers of the two hands wrapped around the pillar, squeals
of delight go up. This has gone on for years, certainly ever since tourist
guides came into being.


The Iron Pillar at Delhi seen through an arch.

The Iron Pillar dates from Gupta King,
who ruled from 375 - 413 AD
Barely anyone from these thronging groups of tourists, however, cares to find
out the history of this pillar, or knows that it has been something of a riddle
for people—historians, archaeologists, palaeographers, metallurgists, etc—for
close to a century and a half. The pillar is now located in Delhi, although one
knows almost for certain that it was moved to that place from somewhere in
Madhya Pradesh about a thousand years ago. But, somehow, in my own mind, it has
come to be associated also with Shimla. For that is where I have been hearing of
it mostly of late.
When I was there last year, at the Indian Institute of Advanced
Study(IIAS), a series of lectures on the Iron Pillar were being
delivered by a visiting scholar, a well-known metallurgist, Prof R.
Balasubramaniam of the IIT, Kanpur. This year again, when I was in
Shimla, the pillar came up, for the institute had brought out a
finely detailed publication based on that series of lectures, under
the title, "The Delhi Iron Pillar: New Insights." Like last year,
however, a debate about the points made in the book ensued again,
for there were, and are, scholars at the institute who hold other
opinions on the points raised in the book. Each serious study that
appears—and Professor Balasubramaniam's is certainly one—adds to the
scholarship on this theme, and extends the field further. But
nothing, it seems, is finally settled.

Inscription on the rust resilient Iron Pillar
from Delhi
Some physical facts about the pillar are reasonably
well-established: it is 7.3 metres tall, with one metre below the
ground; the diameter is 48 centimetres at the foot, tapering to 29
cm at the top, just below the base of the wonderfully crafted
capital; it weighs approximately 6.5 tonnes, and was manufactured by
forged welding. But, this said, nearly everything else about the
pillar is surrounded by acute controversy: For whom was it made?
Exactly when? Where did it originally stand before it was moved to
Delhi? What is the true import of the long inscription in Brahmi
characters engraved upon it? Who placed the later inscriptions on
it, and when? Who had the pillar moved to its present location, and
why? What exact processes were followed in forging it into shape at
that early a point of time, the 4th/5th century AD? Above all, from
the scientists' point of view, what is the secret, the great
mystery, behind the fact of its being virtually non-rusting? There
seems to be no end to the questions.
Take the case of the Brahmi inscription alone. Readings of this
six-line, three-stanza inscription in Sanskrit verse vary
considerably, the one most often published being that by Fleet, who
translated it in 1888. It speaks, in very poetic terms, of the
powerful, all-conquering monarch who had the pillar made: "He on
whose arm fame was inscribed by the sword, when in battle in the
Vanga countries, he kneaded (and turned) back with (his) breast the
enemies who, uniting together, came against him; … he, by the
breezes of whose prowess the southern ocean is even still perfumed."
But, this eloquent panegyric apart, when it comes to identifying the
king with clarity, and giving further details about the erection of
the pillar, the inscription suddenly leaves some questions
unanswered: obviously, not for those who lived in those early times,
but for later generations, for whom so much information was lost in
the centuries that have gone by.
Thus, the verse concludes with the words: "He who, having the
name of Chandra, carried a beauty of countenance like (the beauty
of) the full moon, having in faith fixed his mind upon (the God)
Vishnu, (had) this lofty standard of the divine Vishnu set up on the
hill (called) Vishnupada." But who exactly was king Chandra remains
a puzzle. On other grounds, historical or palaeographic, it can be
concluded that the pillar belongs to the Gupta period, but, from
among the imperial Guptas, who is it that is referred to here simply
by the name of 'Chandra': Chandragupta I, Chandragupta II, also
celebrated as Vikramaditya, or, as some firmly believe, Samudragupta?
Again, the Guptas were known to have been devotees of Lord Vishnu,
but where was this hill called 'Vishnupada' located?
Questions like these are, however, only a relatively simple
sample of the issues that centre on the great pillar. There are
others, very complex ones, that have engaged the minds of scholars.
Prof Balasubramaniam addresses them in his inquiry without once
losing sight of the sheer elegance of the pillar, especially of its
exquisitely made capital atop which a figure of Garuda, the '
Sun-bird ', who is the vahana of Vishnu, or a chakra, the discus
that is his emblem, might once have stood. There are long and
detailed chapters on the structural features of the pillar, the
methodology of its manufacture, a general inquiry into other large
iron objects in ancient India, including the iron pillars in Dhar
and Mandu in Madhya Pradesh, Mount Abu in Rajasthan, the Kodachadri
Hill in Karnataka. But, understandably, the most densely argued
chapter is on the corrosion-resistant nature of this iron pillar,
the P-content and the S-content of the low carbon mild steel of
which it is made, the process of rust protection, the colour of
whatever rust there is, spectroscopic analyses, are all themes,
something that has led to its being widely regarded as a 'miracle'
of technology, given the times in which the pillar was forged and
erected.
With all this, however, will the whole clutch of issues addressed
in the book get finally settled, one might ask? I doubt it. But then
this is the way it should be; this is how scholarship proceeds.
Corrosion, of a different kind
I was very taken up with a saying of the Buddha, cited from the
Dhammapada, which serves as an epigraph at the beginning of the
book. This is how it runs:
"As rust, sprung from iron, eats itself
away when arisen, even so his own deeds lead the transgressor to
states of woe…."
Source:
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2002/20020714/spectrum/art.htm
Mystery of Delhi's Iron Pillar unraveled
New Delhi, July 18: Experts at the Indian Institute of Technology have
resolved the mystery behind the 1,600-year-old iron pillar in Delhi, which has
never corroded despite the capital's harsh weather.
Metallurgists at Kanpur IIT have discovered that a thin layer of "misawite",
a compound of iron, oxygen and hydrogen, has protected the cast iron pillar from
rust.
The protective film took form within three years after erection of the pillar
and has been growing ever so slowly since then. After 1,600 years, the film has
grown just one-twentieth of a millimeter thick, according to R. Balasubramaniam
of the IIT.
In a report published in the journal Current Science Balasubramanian says,
the protective film was formed catalytically by the presence of high amounts of
phosphorous in the iron—as much as one per cent against less than 0.05 per cent
in today's iron.
The high phosphorous content is a result of the unique iron-making process
practiced by ancient Indians, who reduced iron ore into steel in one step by
mixing it with charcoal.
Modern blast furnaces, on the other hand, use limestone in place of charcoal
yielding molten slag and pig iron that is later converted into steel. In the
modern process most phosphorous is carried away by the slag.
The pillar—over seven metres high and weighing more than six tonnes—was
erected by Kumara Gupta of Gupta dynasty that ruled northern India in AD
320-540.
Stating that the pillar is "a living testimony to the skill of metallurgists
of ancient India", Balasubramaniam said the "kinetic scheme" that his group
developed for predicting growth of the protective film may be useful for
modeling long-term corrosion behaviour of containers for nuclear storage
applications.
Source: Press Trust of India
http://www.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=12824
LINKS
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Delhi iron pillar
www.corrosion-doctors.org/Landmarks/Pillar.htm
Delhi Iron Pillar. The iron pillar, located at the center of the ... The
Delhi Iron Pillar is a classical example of massive production of high class iron
...
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Tourists and Delhi Iron Pillar
www.corrosion-doctors.org/Landmarks/pillar-picture.htm
The Delhi iron pillar has been attracting tourists for centuries. The famous
iron pillar in Delhi belonging to the fourth-fifth century AD is a ...
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Iron Pillar
www.iitk.ac.in/infocell/Archive/dirnov1/iron_pillar.html
The Delhi iron pillar is testimony to the high level of skill achieved by ... The iron pillar at Delhi has attracted the attention of archaeologists and
...
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Tourist Sites In Delhi
www.delhigate.com/@delhi/sites1b.htm
Top - The entry to the Quwwat-ul-islam mosque and iron pillar complex Middle
- The pillar with one of the arches Bottom - One of the graves inside the ...
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Review: Delhi Iron Pillar: New Insights
www.infinityfoundation.com/mandala/t_rv/t_rv_agraw_delhi.htm
Delhi's iron pillar (DIP) in the Qutub area has attracted the attention of
...
Several new insights on the Delhi iron pillar have been presented in the ...
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Delhi, India: An ancient pillar made of iron
http://falundafa-newengland.org/MA/science/iron_pillar.htm
"At Delhi there is an ancient pillar made of iron that is not destroyed by phosphorus, sulphur, or the effects of the weather." ...
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Iron Pillar delhi, Iron Pillar India, Iron Pillar tour, Iron ...
www.tourtravelworld.com/hot_spots/delhi/iron_pillar/
Iron Pillar in delhi India with Iron Pillar pic is the main attraction of
Delhi
travel guide. This pillar stands in the courtyard of the Jama Masjid but it
...
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Interesting Trivia, Indian Handicrafts, Iron Pillar in Delhi
www.india-crafts.com/trivia/trivia/
Interesting Trivia, Indian Handicrafts, Iron Pillar in Delhi, Handicrafts
India, Indian Traditional Handicrafts, Crafts India, Crafts from India, ...
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http://community.webshots.com/photo/295181063/295189113unfOez
(photos)
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Iron Pillar
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