Battis Khamba (literally "tower of thirty-two pillars") is a tower located in Agra, in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
While there is no record regarding the purpose of the tower, it is presumed to have served as a lighthouse and a check-post, for collecting duties on goods transported across the Yamuna river. The area in which the tower stood was part of the jagir (grant) of the empress Nur Jahan. An account by Dutch merchant Francisco Pelsaert, who lived in Agra in the 1620s, notes that the officers of the empress imposed levies on all goods transported across the river.
It is part of a monument of national importance, listed as "Chattries on the Yamuna bank to the north of Ram Bagh, Agra", protected by the Archaeological Survey of India. , a fence has been built around the monument.
On each side of the first story (ground floor) is an arched entrance leading into the interior, which is an octagonal hall. The second story (first floor) follows the same plan as the first. The third story (second floor) consists of an octagonal room in the center, surrounded by a columned veranda. While four pillars are present on each side, one of these is common to two sides, thus making for a total of 24 pillars, leading to the name of the tower, which literally translates to "tower of thirty-two pillars", to be described as a misnomer; however, the next level has an additional eight pillars for at total of 32.
In the middle of the terrace on the third floor, there is a chhatri with more pillars and brackets to support the surviving chhajja (eave or roof). Now in a dilapidated condition, it was originally covered with Porcelain tile. A flight of steps on the southern side used to lead from the ground floor to the terrace. This has now been destroyed.
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