Usually referred to as an Aṣoka pillar, this is a pillar in the Qutb Minar mosque

Usually referred to as an Aṣoka pillar, this is a pillar in the Qutb Minar mosque, about which the claims of anomalous technology are made

An iron pillar near Delhi (India) is sometimes quoted as an out-of-place artefact, although it is not easy to see why. Set up in its present position by King Chandragupta II Vikramaditya (c 376-415 CE), it stands a little over seven metres high with an average shaft diameter of 0.4 m and weighs about six tonnes. Most sceptics therefore give its age as around 1600 years old, as opposed to the 4,000 years claimed, for instance, by Erich von Däniken. The mystery of the pillar consists of its largely uncorroded condition, despite standing exposed to the elements for at least 1,600 years. This has more to do with the purity of iron from which the pillar was made than with any unusual technology.

The story does get a little more complicated, though, because of confusion over the name of the pillar and the precise identity of the pillar for which the claims have been made. Emperor Aṣoka Vardhana (c 273-232 BCE) is known to have erected polished pillars throughout his kingdom, topped with regal lions that watched the four corners of his realm. The lions stand on a Buddhist wheel of life. These pillars are made from stone and the example in Delhi (at Firozshah Kotla, near Delhi Gate) was put in its present position by Firuz Shah (Sultan of Delhi 1290-1296 CE); it is more properly known as a Singh Stambh (‘Lion Pillar’). The controversial ‘Aṣoka pillar’ in Delhi is not one of Emperor Aṣoka’s pillars but was transported from Meerut and installed close to where the Bara Hindu Rao Hospital now stands, near Delhi University, presumably by Chandragupta II.

A genuine Aṣoka pillar, complete with lion

A genuine Aṣoka pillar (Singh Stambh), complete with lion

It does get worse, of course. The photograph that is usually shown of the ‘Aṣoka pillar’ is not of it at all, or even of the example moved from Meerut, but is of an iron pillar in the Qutb Minar mosque near New Delhi. The mosque was built by Qutb al-Din Aibak (1150-1210) following the first Islamic conquest of Delhi by Mu‘izz-ud-Din Muhammad ibn Sam of Ghur (1162-1206) in 1193 and located in the centre of the earlier twelfth-century Hindu fort of Rai Pithora. Standing in the courtyard of the mosque is an iron pillar 7.21 m high (although fringe writers quote its height as anything between 10 and 12 m), tapering from 0.41 m in diameter at its base to 0.32 m below the capital and weighing six tonnes; it bears an inscription to the same King Chandragupta II who erected the Singh Stambh and probably also dates from c 400 CE. It is believed to have been brought in 1052 from Muttra by Anang Pal (died 1180), a leader of the Rajput Tomaras.

As with the Singh Stambh, the pillar in the Qutb Minar has remained rust-free. Chemical analysis of the pillar has shown the iron from which it is composed to be low in sulphur and manganese; this purity is also believed to account for its uncorroded condition. The best ‘mystery’ that Bad Archaeologists can generate from these pillars is “[t]he possible use of some metallurgical secret ingredient or process… yet another reminder of ancient techniques being lost or forgotten”. Thin stuff indeed!