Page:History of Indian and Eastern Architecture Vol 2.djvu/388

 334 INDIAN SARACENIC ARCHITECTURE. BOOK VII. of Shah Ramadan (Woodcut No. 443), which is equally erected wholly in wood, and though very much smaller than the Jami' Mosque of Shah Ramadan, Srlnagar. (From a Photograph.) Masjid, is interesting, in the first place, because its roof is probably very similar to that which once covered the temple at M^rtand (Woodcut No. 146), and the crowning ornament is evidently a reminiscence of a Buddhist Hti, very much altered,