A narrow road by the side of Aurobindo Ashram (Delhi
Branch), 15-km from Delhi on the Delhi-Mehrauli Road,
now known as Sri Aurobindo Road, leads to the village of Begampur. Within
the village is the Begampuri-Masjid, one of the seven mosques reputed to
have been built by Khan-i-Jahan Junan Shah, Feroze Shah Tughluq's prime
minister. 
With a large courtyard, 94m by 88m, enclosed by arched cloisters on the
sides and a three-aisle deep prayer-hall, the rubble-built structure of
the mosque rises from a high plinth. Its corridors are pierced with gates
on the north, south and east, with rows of windows on their either side,
the last named gate functioning as the main entrance.
The façade of the prayer-hall is broken by twenty-four arched
openings, the central one being the highest and flanked by tapering
minarets in the Tughluq style The central compartment of the prayer-hall
is surmounted by a large dome, while small low domes, characteristic of
the Tughluq architecture, rise on the roof from the central aisle and from
the corridors. At the rear the location of the minhrabs in the interior is
indicated by five projections.