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Jodhpur and its Meharangarh Fort |
Sometime
in 1994 official business took me to Jodhpur. Instead of flying my wife and I
decided to go by the metre gauge train and in the process, we had to negotiate
the incredible crowds of the Sarai Rohilla Railway Station of Delhi. The
station is named after a noble of Mughal era and has nothing to do with the Rohillas
of Uttar Pradesh as the name suggests. The railway station serves railway
traffic from and to the Northern and Western India. An overnight journey took
us to the fabled city of Jodhpur.
Jodhpur
is the largest city of Rajasthan after the state capital of Jaipur.
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Receptionists of the Fort offering a musical welcome |
The city
was founded around five hundred and fifty years ago by Rao Jodha Singh, a
Rajput chief of Rathore clan, who conquered the surrounding territories to form
the state of Marwar. Later the state came within the Mughal Empire in which it
contributed significantly by providing warriors of note. The British too made
it subservient to the Crown of England. When the British were preparing to
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Gusrds of the Fort |
leave the Maharaja did not wish to join the Indian Union. However he was
persuaded to do so by the Home Minister of Independent India. It was a case of
mischief by Pakistan which wanted to enlarge its territory by offering various
benefits to the Maharaja, almost verging on bribery. Fortunately, the mischief
was nipped in the bud.
The
Meharangarh Fort dominates the city. Built on a rock about 400 ft. high the
fort was constructed by Rao Jodha. Enclosed by thick walls the access to it is
provided by seven gates. A winding narrow road leads one to the Fort where,
like numerous other Rajasthani forts, there are a number of palaces known to be
decorated by intricate carvings. The Meharangarh Fort has a
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A palace inside the Fort |
fabulous museum and
the most interesting item in its collection are the palanquins that used to be
in use for the peripatetic maharajas and maharanis.
The
view of the city sprawled below from the Fort, which is one of the largest in
the country, is unbelievably beautiful. It looks like a spread of blue as most
of the buildings are painted blue. The city is, therefore, known as “The Blue
City”. Rajasthan has three other cities which are well
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A palace wall and the city beyond |
known by their
respective colours : Jaipur is known as the Pink City, Udaipur as the White
City and Jaisalmer the Yellow or Golden City of India.
Most
interesting feature of the visit to the fort was the strains of shahnai, an
ethnic wind instrument, that became audible as we approached the Fort. Two men
with colourful turbans wrapped round their heads
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a part of another palace in the Fort |
were rendering the music to
the visitors – one was blowing into the shahnai and the other was providing the
accompaniment by playing a set of two Rajasthani percussion instruments that
looked like nagadas. The turbans of the two musicians with their ethnic musical
instruments created just about the right atmospherics for a Rajasthani fort.
There was another person in Rajasthani attire lurking
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Jaswant Thada - the Jodhpuri Taj Mahal |
around and was more
noticeable because of his substantial graying mustachio. Rajasthan is known for
its men with massive growths on their upper lips.
For
visitors there is another incredible site to see. This is Jawant Thada which is
not very old as it was commissioned around the end ot the 19th Century. Its
marble cenotaphs are remarkable. It was built by Maharaja Sardar Singh in
memory of his
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The marble crematoria |
father Maharaja Jaswant Singh II. The complex has a good-looking
garden with fountains come alive during the day. It is now used as a place of last rites for
members of Jodhpur Royalty. It is known as the marble wonder of Jodhpur or even
the Taj Mahal of Jodhpur. Some of the marble sheets used in it are so thin that
they glow
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Entrance of Jaswant Thada |
in sunshine. The sun here is
rather strong and that has given the city its second nick name, viz. the Sun
City.
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The fort and the city beyond |
Umaid
Bhawan Palace is of more recent origin and, hence, it is a lived-in palace that
also doubles up as a hotel. The visitors get an elevating feeling of sharing
the hotel with a real-life maharaja. It is an opulent 5-star hotel managed by
the Taj Group. Completed in the 1940s, Umaid Bhawan has more than 340 luxurious
rooms some of which are used by Maharaja Gaj Singh of Jodhpur, many others are
set apart for the hotel and a few house a museum. Like any other palThe Fort and the city beyondace it is
located in the midst of splendid gardens with almost regulation fountains at
play and pavilions embodying typical Rajasthani architecture. One gets a
feeling of opulence scattered all around. Perhaps this is how maharajas live
even today in independent
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My wife Bandana with Meharangarh Fort behind her |
India when there have been divested of most of their
titles, lands, wealth and power.
One
was surprised to see that for a desert town Jodhpur is pretty green. Perhaps the Indira Gandhi Canal has made some
difference by charging the underground aquifers. Although it looks arid but it
certainly does not give the impression of being a desert town. The invasive
Prosopis Juliflora also has spread greenery around. Only time will tell whether
this invasion
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The blue city sprawlled below the Fort |
by a foreign species would be beneficial for the community living
around Jodhpur.
One
must talk about the kachoris, a local fried preparation on which one could
snack – no, even survive at least for a day. It is much bigger than kachoris
found elsewhere and contains a lot of ghee. We had one each one evening and
were done for the day.
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