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History Of Kumbhalgarh | Rana Kumbha | Kumbha Palace | Badal Mahal |
Shiva Temple | Pitalia Dev Temple | Home | Golesh Jain Mandir |
Hotels at Kumbhalgarh | Maharana Pratap |
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52 Chatries Jain
Temple Kumbhalgarh
A priest is still employed
by the present Maharana to care for the shrines of his ancestors. And twice
a day the Pandit's family makes the stiff uphill climb to the castle to
light the sacred lamps before vermilion-daubed images of Hanuman, Chamunda,
and Ekling. There is an octagonal room in which Rana Pratap was born, apart
from, the hall in which his grandson Prince Karan entertained the future
Mughal Emperor Shahjahan, the beacon tower from which a flame summoned
Mewar's chieftains to war. The austere chambers, the vast reservoirs kept
full by elephant relays, the simple garden court for the royal ladies,
the easily defendable narrow staircases all declared that this was primarily
a warrior's hideout, not a palace for princely pomp and show.
Ghanerao
Parshuram temple
Horse lovers and adventure seekers can enjoy the thrill of riding and camping in the Reserve Forest around Kumbhalgarh. Each group is accompanied by experienced sawars. Horses, tents, food and fodder are provided by the Aohdin on prior notice at a very reasonable cost compared to a hacking holiday in Europe or America. A hazardous, barely jeepable track takes you to the 586 square kilometer Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary. The main attraction here would be panther, sloth bear, wild boar, four-horned antelope or crocodiles, "scientifically bred" in the lake. The Crocodile Farm has a guesthouse belonging to the Forest Department and overnight stays are possible. Good forest cover, jungle berries, fruits and nuts, water grasses, algae, and fish provide sustenance for thousands of flamingoes, sarus cranes, spoonbills, painted storks, cormorants, purple heron, egrets, duck, and rosy pelican in winter. One also finds plenty of chakor partridge, crow pheasants, jungle warblers, golden orioles, gray jungle fowl, and the usual peacocks; parrots, pigeons, and doves. |
Under the rule of the king Rana Kumbha, the kingdom of Mewar stretched right from Ranthambore to Gwalior. The kingdom also included vast tracts of Madhya Pradesh as well as Rajasthan. About 84 fortresses have been defending Mewar from its enemies. Out of the 84, Rana Kumbha, himself, has designed about 32 of them. Of all the fortresses, which have been designed by Rana Kumbha, Kumbhalgarh has been the most impressive, famous and the massive one with a wall of the length 36Km. The fort lies at about 90Kms away from Udaipur towards its Northwest. It is situated at about 1914m above the sea level and is the most important fort after Chittorgarh. |
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History Of Kumbhalgarh | Rana Kumbha | Kumbha Palace | Badal Mahal |
Shiva Temple | Pitalia Dev Temple | Home | Golesh Jain Mandir |
Hotels at Kumbhalgarh | Maharana Pratap |
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History Of Kumbhalgarh - Rana Kumbha - Kumbha Palace - Badal Mahal - Shiva Temple - Pitalia Dev Temple - 52 Chatries Jain Temple - Golesh Jain Mandir - Hotels at Kumbhalgarh - Maharana Pratap |