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RAJASTHAN
:: CHITTORGARH
CITY GUIDE |
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Chittorgarh
General Information |
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Area |
10,856
sq. km. |
| Altitude |
408
meters |
| Temperature |
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Summer |
43.80C-23.80C |
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Winter |
28.370C-11.60C |
| Clothing |
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Summer |
Light
Tropical |
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Winter |
Light
Woolen |
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Languages |
Hindi,
Rajasthani, English |
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Chittorgarh
History |
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Chittorgarh is one of the most
fiercely contested seats of power in India.About
72 miles (115 km) east of Udaipur, stands Chittor.
With its formidable fortifications,Bappa Rawal,
the legendary founder of the Sisodia dynasty, received
Chittor in the middle of the eighth century, as
part of the last Solanki princess's dowry. It crowns
a seven-mile- long hill, covering 700 acres (280
hectares), with its fortifications, temples, towers
and palaces.From the eighth to the 16th century,
Bappa Rawal's descendants ruled over an important
kingdom called Mewar stretching from Gujarat to
Ajmer. But during these eight centuries the seemingly
impregnable Chittor was surrounded, overrun, and
sacked three times.
Sacks of Chittor: In 1303 Allauddin khilji, Sultan
of Delhi, intrigued by tales of the matchless beauty
of Padmini, Rani of Chittor, of her wit and charm,
decided to verify this himself. His armies surrounded
Chittor, and the sultan sent a message to Rana Rattan
Singh, Padmini's husband, to say that he would spare
the city if he could meet its famous queen. The
compromise finally reached was that the sultan could
look upon Padmini's reflection if he came unarmed
into the fort. Accordingly, the sultan went up the
hill and glimpsed a reflection of the beautiful
Padmini standing by a lotus pool. He thanked his
host who courteously escorted Allauddin down to
the outer gate-where the sultan's men waited in
ambush to take the rana hostage.
There was consternation in Chittor until Padmini
devised a plan. A messenger informed the sultan
that the rani would come to him. Dozens of curtained
palanquins set off down the hill, each carried by
six humble bearers. Once inside the Sultan's camp,
four well-armed Rajput warriors leaped out of each
palanquin and each lowly palanquin bearer drew a
sword.In the ensuing battle, Rana Rattan Singh was
rescued-but 7,000 Rajput warriors died. The sultan
now attacked Chittor with renewed vigor. Having
lost 7,000 of its best warriors, Chittor could not
hold out. Surrender was unthinkable. The rani and
her entire entourage of women, the wives of generals
and soldiers, sent their children into hiding with
loyal retainers. They then dressed their wedding
fine , slid their farewells, and singing ancient
hymns, boldly entered the mahal and performed jauhar.
The men, watching with expressionless faces, then
donned saffron robes, smeared the holy ashes of
their women on their foreheads, flung open the gates
of the fort and thundered down the hill into the
enemy ranks, to fight to the death.The second sack
or shake (sacrifice) of Chittor, by which Rajputs
still swear when pledging their word, occurred in
1535, when Sultan Bahadur Shan Of Gujarat attacked
the fort.
Rana Kumbha: Rana Kumbha (1433-68) was a versatile
man a brilliant, poet and musician. He built mewar
upto a position of assailable military strength
building a chain of thirty forts that girdled the
kingdom But, perhaps more important was a patron
of the arts to rival Lorenzo de Medici, and he made
Chittorgarh a dazzling cultural center whose fame
spread right across Hindustan.
Rana Sanga: Rana Sanga (reigned 1509-27) was a warrior
and a man of great chivalry and honor reign was
marked by a series of continual battles, in course
of which he is said to have lost one arm and had
been crippled in one leg and received eighty-four
wounds on his body. The last of his battles was
again Mughal invader, Babur, in 1527. Deserted by
one ofgenerals, Rana Sanga was wounded in the battle
and shortly after.
Maharana Pratap: Over the next half-century, most
other Rajput rulers allowed themselves to be wooed
the Mughals; Mewar alone held out. In 1567 Emperor
Akbar decided to teach it a lesson: he attacked
Chittorgarh razed it to the ground. Five years later
Maharana Pratap (reigned 1572-97) came to rule Mewar
- a king without a capital. He continued to defy
Akbar, and in 1576, confronted the imperial armies
at Haldighati.The battle ended in a stalemate and
Maharana Pratap and his followers withdrew to the
craggy hills of Mewar, from where they continued
to harrass the Mughals through guerilla warfare
for the next twenty years. Maharana Pratap made
his descendants vow that they would not sleep on
beds, nor live in palaces, nor eat off metal utensils,
until Chittorgarh had been regained.In fact, right
into the 20th century the maharanas of Mewar continued
to place a leaf platter under their regular utensils
and a reed mat under their beds in symbolic continuance
of this vow.
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How
to reach Chittorgarh ? |
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Air |
Udaipur
is the nearest airport. Daily flight form Delhi,
Mumbai, Jaipur and Lucknow are available to Udaipur.
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Rail |
Chittaurgarh
has rail links with Ahmedabad, Chittaurgarh, Udaipur,
Jaipur, Kota, Alwar and Delhi. |
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Bus |
Rajasthan
Roadways run very comfortable deluxe & air conditioned
buses from Jaipur to Chittaurgarh. It is also connected
by road to Delhi, Mount Abu, Chittaurgarh, Bundi
and Udaipur. |
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| CHITTORGARH
SIGHT SEEING |
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The Fort |
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The indomitable pride of Chittaur, the fort is
a massive structure with many gateways built by
the later Maurya rulers in 7th century A.D. Perched
on a height of 180 m. high hill, it sprawls over
700 acres. The tablets and chattris within are
impressive reminders of the Rajput heroism.The
main gates are Padal Pol, Bhairon Pol Hanuman
pol and Ram Pol. The fort has many magnificent
monuments-alll fine examples of the Rajput architecture.
The ancient ruins of the fort are worth spending
few moments in solitude.
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| Padmini
Palace |
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is built beside the lotus pool with a historical
pavilion that changed the history of Chittor.
Ala-ud-din saw the reflection of Queen Padmini
from here and so mesmerized was he, that the quest
of possessing her led to a furious battle which
saw the last of Maharana Ratan Singh (husband
of Maharani Padmini) and the epitome of beauty-Cleopatra
of Rajasthan, became an eternal legend in the
history of chittor and also of the Mewar state.
The feel still lingers on.
A thing of beauty is a joy for ever- and now they
don't say this for nothing.
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| Vijay
Stambh (Vicroty Tower) |
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The imposing 37 metre high structure with nine
storeys, covered with exquisite sculputres of
Hindu deities and depicting episodes from the
two great epics-Ramayana and Mahabharatha.
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| Kirti
Stambh (Tower of Fame) |
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The
22 metres high tower by a wealthy jain merchant
in the 12th century A.D. The tower is dedicated
to Adinathji,the first of the Jain Tirthankaras
and is decorated with figures of the Jain pantheon.
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| Rana
Kumbha Palace |
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ruined edifice of great historical and architectural
interest, being the most massive monument in the
fort of Chittaur. The palace is believed to have
underground cellars where Rani Padmini and other
women committed Jauhar.
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| Kumbha
Shyam Temple |
Built during the region of
Rana Kumbha in the Indo-Aryan style in 1448, the
temple is associated with the mystic poetess Meerabai-
an ardent Krishna deovtee. She was the wife of
Prince Bhojraj. |
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Gaumukh
Reservoir
 A
deep tank filled by a spring coming from a 'cow
mouth', situated at the edge of the cliff. It
is considered to be sacred where you can feed
the fishes. |
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| Ratan
Singh Palace |
The winter palace for the
kings, it over looks a small lake and although
run down, is an interesting places to explore.
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| Meerabai
Temple |
The
temple where Meerabai worshipped Lord Krishna is
built in north Indian style on a raised plinth with
a conical roof and beautiful inner sanctum. An open
colonnade around the sanctum has four small pavillions
in each corner. |
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| Mahasati
cenotaphs |
| beautiful chhatri or cenotaphs
built in the memory of ranas and their wives can
be seen here. |
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| Kalika
mata temple |
it is dedicated to goddess
kali and is located towards the southern side
of the fort. Originally it was built as a sun
temple by bappa rawal in the 8th century, but
was destroyed during the first sack of chittor.
Rana hamir convert it into the kali temple. |
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| Jaimal
and patta’s palace |
the relics of this palace
are witness to the heroics of rathore jaimal and
sisodia patta, the two great warriors, who laid
down their lives for the honour of chittaur. |
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OTHER
USEFUL LINKS |
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Hotels in Chittorgarh |
Tour Packages for Chittorgarh |
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