Char Kaman (literally meaning "four gates") are four historical Arch in Hyderabad, India. Originally demarcating an open Town square, they face the four cardinal directions.
The arches demarcated a Town square, called the Jilu Khana, which was surrounded by the royal palaces and the Charminar. Every morning, the noblemen along with their retinue would pass through the square, where the retinue would be left behind, while the noblemen would proceed for an audience with the sultan. In the center of the square is the Gulzar Houz, an octagonal cistern, served to provide drinking water to the waiting attendants, as well as soldiers who would stand guard along the gates of the royal residence. The arches were completed in 1592.
Some scholars, including M. A. Nayeem, draw parallels between the piazza formed by the arches and the Naqsh-e Jahan Square in Isfahan, since Mir Mu'min was Iranian himself. However, the construction of the square in Isfahan began in 1598, by which time the Char Kaman complex had been completed and was already in use. The complex may be of Timurid Empire inspiration, conceptually resembling the Registan in Samarkand.
The practice of building elaborate portals facing the cardinal directions is reminiscent of a Hindu architectural tradition popular in the Deccan, with the most famous example being the Kakatiya Kala Thoranam. The grand gateway of the Atala Mosque is also considered to be the forerunner of elaborate Indo-Islamic gateways including the Char Kaman and the nearby Charminar.
According to historian Ghulam Yazdani, another motivation behind their construction might have been the fact that the flagbearers of the royal processions, mounted upon elephants, might have had to dismount or lower their banners when passing through smaller gateways. The arches are large enough to allow an elephant, with a canopy upon its back, to pass through.
The southern arch, directly facing the Charminar, is called the Charminar Kaman.
The northern arch is called the Machli Kaman (literally "fish gateway") since a large fish made up of bamboo and paper would be suspended in the center of the arch on every lunar new year, as a symbol of prosperity.
The eastern arch is called the Kali Kaman. (literally "black gate") It was originally called the Naqqar Khana. Drummers and musicians were accommodated in an elevated chamber atop this arch.
The western gateway, originally called Kaman Sher-i-'Ali, formed the eastern entrance to the royal palaces. In order to ward off any Black magic used against the royals, Mir Mu'min had erected a stone pillar by this gate, with Quranic verses and charms inscribed upon it. Due to this pillar, this gate was also known as the Kaman Sihr-i-Batil, which has now been corrupted to Kaman Sher-i-Batil. The complex of royal palaces, which extended up to the Musi river, was destroyed following the Siege of Golconda.
In 1858, the monument was rehabilitated by the fifth Nizam of Hyderabad, Afzal-ud-Daulah. Charkaman is notified as a heritage structure by INTACH
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