Concepts
Civilizations/Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes
Governors
Historic Moments

Introduction

Wonders

Alhambra

Amundsen-Scott Research Station

Angkor Wat

Apadana

Big Ben

Biosphère

Bolshoi Theatre

Broadway

Casa de Contratación

Chichen Itza

Colosseum

Colossus

Cristo Redentor

Eiffel Tower

Estádio do Maracanã

Etemenanki

Forbidden City

Golden Gate Bridge

Great Bath

Great Library

Great Lighthouse

Great Zimbabwe

Hagia Sophia

Hanging Gardens

Hermitage

Huey Teocalli

Jebel Barkal

Kilwa Kisiwani

Kotoku-in

Machu Picchu

Mahabodhi Temple

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Meenakshi Temple

Mont St. Michel

Oracle

Országház

Oxford University

Panama Canal

Petra

Potala Palace

Pyramids

Ruhr Valley

St. Basil's Cathedral

Statue of Liberty

Statue of Zeus

Stonehenge

Sydney Opera House

Taj Mahal

Temple of Artemis

Terracotta Army

Torre de Belém

University of Sankore

Venetian Arsenal

Projects

Taj Mahal
Description
+1 Era Score from Historic Moment earned after this wonder is complete if that Moment is usually worth 2 or more Era Score. Must be built next to a River.
Historical Context
Mughal Emperor Shah Jahān had many wives, but Mumtāz Mahal (his third wife) was by far his favorite. After Mahal died in childbirth in 1631, Jahān immortalized his beloved with the grandest mausoleum he could imagine. The Taj Mahal’s construction required 20,000 laborers working for two decades. No mere tomb, the structure also housed a mosque and even a guesthouse—presumably for guests who preferred not to rest in a tomb.

Jahān would not have long to appreciate the labors of 20,000 laborers. A violent succession struggle amongst his sons saw him placed under house arrest shortly after the Taj Mahal’s completion. Until his death in 1666, Jahān need only look out the window to observe his creation: the four tall minarets, the giant domed building seeming to fill the sky—all built with brick-in-lime mortar, red sandstone, and marble. The temple to Jahān’s love for Mahal still stands in India.
PortraitSquare
icon_building_taj_mahal
“Did you ever build a castle in the air? Here is one, brought down to earth and fixed for the wonder of ages.”
– Bayard Taylor

Traits

Removed if game started after
Information Era
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Civic
icon_civic_humanism
Humanism
Production Cost
Base Cost: 920 Production
PortraitSquare
icon_building_taj_mahal
Description
+1 Era Score from Historic Moment earned after this wonder is complete if that Moment is usually worth 2 or more Era Score. Must be built next to a River.
Historical Context
Mughal Emperor Shah Jahān had many wives, but Mumtāz Mahal (his third wife) was by far his favorite. After Mahal died in childbirth in 1631, Jahān immortalized his beloved with the grandest mausoleum he could imagine. The Taj Mahal’s construction required 20,000 laborers working for two decades. No mere tomb, the structure also housed a mosque and even a guesthouse—presumably for guests who preferred not to rest in a tomb.

Jahān would not have long to appreciate the labors of 20,000 laborers. A violent succession struggle amongst his sons saw him placed under house arrest shortly after the Taj Mahal’s completion. Until his death in 1666, Jahān need only look out the window to observe his creation: the four tall minarets, the giant domed building seeming to fill the sky—all built with brick-in-lime mortar, red sandstone, and marble. The temple to Jahān’s love for Mahal still stands in India.
“Did you ever build a castle in the air? Here is one, brought down to earth and fixed for the wonder of ages.”
– Bayard Taylor

Traits

Removed if game started after
Information Era
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Civic
icon_civic_humanism
Humanism
Production Cost
Base Cost: 920 Production
Language
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