|
|
|
| Capital |
Delhi |
| Population |
9,420,644 (1991) |
| Area |
1,483 sq km |
| Altitude |
216 m above sea level |
| Principal Languages |
Hindi, English, Punjabi, & Urdu
|
| Best Time to Visit |
February-April and August-November
|
| STD Code |
011 |
|
|
| THE CITY
OF DESTINY |
How does one describe Delhi?
The capital city of India? The capital of the world's
largest democracy? Actually, Delhi
is India in miniature. Delhi is 32,87,263
sq km of India's fantastic variety compressed
into 1483 sq km. Over the millennia, it has wooed
rulers, attracted plunderers, and tried historians
with so many details. Today, even as it preserves
an enviable heritage, Delhi is a
true cosmopolitan city always on the move.
To go right back into an era where
mythology and history are too closely intertwined,
it is believed that Delhi, then known
as Indraprashtha, was the scene of action of India's
great epic, the Mahabharata. Periodic archeological
excavations bring in more and more evidence to support
this contention.
Thereafter, historians say there have
been seven cities of Delhi. If you
count the smaller settlements and forts, the number
may touch fifteen. Each city has left behind so much
story and material for rumination that it requires
many a lifetime to know them all completely.
Recorded history exists from the 11th
century when Dillika, as this little town was known,
found its focal point south of where it is now. This
kingdom was known as Lal Kot. The famous ruler of
this line of Tomars was called Prithvi Raj Chauhan.
He is said to have built many temples and a huge fort
called Qila Rai Pithora.
However, their 200-year-old rule culminated
with the arrival of the first set of invaders-the
Slave Dynasty. One of the rulers of this dynasty,
Qutub-ud-din Aibak, built the tall Qutab Minar. The
Qutab Minar has five floors. It is 72.55-m high with
a base diameter of 14.40 tapering to 2.4 m at the
top.
Time moved on and by the end of the
13th century, the Khilji Dynasty was looking around
for the best piece of land on which to build their
seat of empire. Today where Delhi's
best auditorium stands, the Siri Fort as it is called,
was the site the Khiljis had chosen; it is closer
to central Delhi than Aibak's
kingdom.
Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq succeeded Alauddin
Khilji and, as vanity demanded, built a magnificent
fort at Tughlaqabad. It is perhaps the most beautiful
ruin in the country. Standing very tall, its massive
structure quite contrasting with the delicate ornate
style is still charming. The famous traveler Ibn Batuta
recorded that it used to shine bright against the
sun like a fort made of gold. There were huge silos
at the entry points and this fort had umpteen gates.
The story goes that a saint called Nizammuddin Aulia
cursed Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq that his city would never
flourish.
|
Perhaps, destiny willed it
that way too. In those days of treason, Ghiyasuddin fell
prey to his son Mohammad Bin Tughlaq's ambition.
Mohammad built his own city, Adilabad, a few yards away
from Tughlaqabad. He enclosed a large area within a wall,
creating within it the Jahanpanah forest. Then came the
foolish attempt to move the capital away from Delhi.
However, he had to shift his capital back to this city
within a few months.
|
His nephew
was Ferozshah Tughlaq. The fort built by Ferozshah-Ferozshah
Kotla, as it is known-has stood as an inspiring backdrop
to many famous bowlers and batsmen. The rest of the
structures are, however, not intact. This fifth city,
like the sixth city of the Lodi Dynasty, has few of
its monuments left. Once again, Delhi
saw a shift of capital to Agra.

However, it did not last long. This time
the famous battle of Panipat, which brought the fulcrum
back to Delhi eventually, saw Sher
Shah Suri as the ruler. Sher Shah laid the foundation
for the Grand Trunk Road and built the Old Fort. Today
the fort complex houses the zoo in addition to preserving
some of the buildings inside the fort.
The living legacy of Delhi
is Shahjahanabad. Created by the builder of Taj Mahal,
this city, with the Red Fort as the focal point and
Jama Masjid as the praying center, has a fascinating
market planned to shine under the light of the moon,
called Chandni Chowk. Shahjahan planned Chandni Chowk
so that his daughter could shop for all that she wanted.
It was divided by canals filled with water, which glistened
like silver in moonlight. The canals are now closed,
but Chandni Chowk remains Asia's largest wholesale
market. Crafts, once patronized by the Mughals continue
to flourish in the small lanes of the city, once known
as Shahjahanabad. Tradition and modernity meet at unexpected
places in Shahjahanabad. If you see a man pulling a
rickshaw or feeding pigeons, you will see just as many
talking over the cello or assembling a computer! An
experience of timelessness awaits you at Shahjahanabad.
Modern Delhi, or New
Delhi as it is called, centers around
Rashtrapati Bhawan. It is architecturally a very impressive
building standing at a height, flowing down as it were
to India Gate. This stretch called the Rajpath is where
the Republic Day parade is held. The imposing plan of
this area conceived by Lutyens does not fade in its
charm with the numerous summers or winters that go past.
Delhi remains the center
of power. Once it was a city of royal power. Then it
became the seat of colonial power. Later it was the
seat of bureaucratic power. The seat of political power
it has always been. Today it is emerging as an important
center for corporate power too.

|
| GEOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION |
Location
Situated in the northern part of the country, Delhi
extends latitude 28.38°N and longitude 77.12°E.
It is encircled by the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh
in the east and by Haryana in the other three sides.
Delhi is an ideal gateway to visit
the north Indian states of Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir,
Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, and Haryana. Delhi
is connected to all the major cities in the world by
regular flights.
Climate
Delhi is hot and humid in the summers,
and cold in the winters. The average temperature ranges
from 25°C to 46°C during summer and 2°C
to 5°C during winter. The cold wave from the Himalayan
region makes winters very chilly. In summers, the heat
wave is immense and adequate precaution has to be taken
before going out in the afternoons. The best season
to visit Delhi is during the spring
seasons of February to April and August to November.
It wears a festive look between February and April,
the blooming season.
|
| PLACES TO VISIT |
The
Forts of Delhi
The best way to know about the glorious heritage of
Delhi is to know its monuments, to
travel through time back into centuries of history filled
with the rise and fall of dynasties that ruled the land.
These monuments stretch from Wazirabad in the north
to the Qutab and beyond in the south of Delhi.
Between these two points, lies scattered the history
of this ancient city.
In 1639, Shahjahan decided to shift his capital to
Delhi. Within eight years, Shahjahanabad
was completed with the Red Fort-Qila-i-Mubarak
(fortunate citadel)-Delhi's
seventh fort, ready in all its magnificence to receive
Shahjahan. Though much has changed now because of large-scale
demolitions during the British occupation of the fort,
its important structures have survived, the glory faded
with age but still impressive. Passing under the grand
Gothic arch and the octagonal open space of the market
place-the Chatta Chowk, and the Naubat Khana-a double-storied
structure where court musicians played five times a
day, we see Diwan-i-Aam. Here is the fabulously crafted
baldachino-the marble canopy decorated with the most
exquisite pietra dura work. Diwan-i-Aam
witnessed scenes of unexcelled splendor when it used
to be decorated with golden curtains, gorgeous carpets,
and gold and silver railings below dazzling chandeliers.
Ministers, Rajas, and ambassadors stood in mute awe
of the Emperor in court.

Behind the Diwan-i-Aam are the Zenana quarters with
such grand palaces as the Rang
Mahal and Mumtaz Mahal.
The marble lotus, a fountain in the center of Rang Mahal,
carved out of a single slab, is a piece of sheer beauty.
In its sculptured grandeur, the lotus is matched only
by the trellis wall under the scales of justice in the
Khwab Gah. The pavilion in white marble-Diwan-i-Khas-has
lost much of its splendor. Here, under the original
silver ceiling, stood the world famous Peacock Throne
studded with the costliest gems of the Mughal Empire,
costing nearly 12,637,500 sterlings as per a contemporary
account. On the ceiling slab is inscribed the line,
'if there is a paradise on the face of the earth,
it is here, it is here, it is here'. Nadir Shah,
Ahmad Shah Abdali, Ghulam Qadir, the Marathas, and finally
the British looted and plundered the Mughal treasures
and destroyed many structures of immense beauty. Still
the Shah Burjan octagonal tower at the corner, and the
two marble pavilions, Sawan and Bhadon, named after
the Indian months of rain, have withstood forces of
destruction. The gardens-Mahtab Bagh and Hayat
Baksh-have vanished. A later-day pavilion in red
sandstone stands at the center of a dried up pool. It
was built by Bahadur Shah II. Moti Masjid, the mosque
built by Aurangzeb, is a gem of architecture despite
the sickly marble of the new domes-original copper
casing having been removed long back.
The Fort still retains some of its lost glory. It
is the only fort with some well-preserved royal structures
to give an idea of the glory of the Mughal Empire. The
Red Fort was the last fort built in Delhi
and it witnessed the vicissitudes of fortune, the splendor
and the fall of the Mughals, British rule, and finally
the dawn of Indian Independence.
At the center of the city is India
Gate, a memorial raised in honor of the Indian
soldiers who were martyred during the Afghan war. The
green, velvety lawns at India Gate, particularly, are
a popular evening and holiday rendezvous for young and
old alike. Ice-cream carts, balloon wallahs, popcorn
and peanut vendors, carts selling cold water and cold
drinks, panwallahs, men and women selling sweet-scented
jasmine gajras (garlands) to decorate a bride, wife,
daughter or girlfriend's hair, do brisk business
at the fringe of the lawns.
Rashtrapati Bhawan was
once the imperial residence of the British viceroys.
Built on the Raisina hills of Delhi
ridge, this 340-roomed structure has an imposing character
overlooking India Gate and Rajpath. It is now the official
residence of the president of India.
Birla Mandir, a Hindu
temple dedicated to Lord Vishnu situated in the central
Delhi, and Lotus Temple, a beautiful
white marble building and a place of worship for Bahai's,
are two temples worth visiting for those in search of
spiritual rejuvenation.
The Jantar Mantar, one
of the many astronomical observatories constructed by
Sawai Jai Singh of Jaipur, is situated in the center
of the city near Connaught Place.

|
| HOW TO REACH |
By
Air:
Delhi is conveniently connected to
all the major cities of the world with almost all the
major airlines operating out of here. Delhi
has two airports catering to domestic and international
flights, located 4½ km apart in Palam. The international
airport (known as Indira Gandhi International Airport)
is situated 20 km from the city center.
By Rail:
Delhi is connected to almost all the
cities in the country by super-fast and express trains.
The city has three major railway stations at New Delhi,
Old Delhi, and Nizamuddin. Luxury trains
like the Palace-on-Wheels, Fairy Queen, and Royal Orient
Express can be taken from Delhi Cantonment
railway station. Rajdhani Express trains connect Delhi
from the state capitals. Shatabdi Express trains connect
Delhi to the neighboring cities
|
[ Home ][ Profile ][ Query ][ FAQ ][ FeedBack ][ Contact us ]
This site is best viewed on resolution of 1024 x 768 pixels
|