AJNABEE.COM


Travel Home

Airways
Railway
Roadway

Travel Shop

Travel Trips
Accomodations
Hill Station
Hot Spots
Holly Places
Weekend Gateway
Discover India
Around The India

Features

 

DISCOVER INDIA

HAMPI

Rocks must be loved. They are gods, dancers, elephants, horses Waiting for deliverance. Rock Space Rock and inner space Hampi.
 
Hampi, the 14th century capital city of the Vijayanagara empire lies in the Deccan heartland, in the state of Karnataka.

The ruins spread over an area the more than 26 sq.kms. protected by the tempestuous river Tungabhadra in the north and by rocky granite ridges n the other three sides. A terrain such as this was excellent for a capital city that needed to be vigilant. It may not have been military shrewdness alone that made the god-conscious Vijayanagara kings settle for this fierce landscape and build on it one of the great imperial cities of medieval times. The area had older, legendary significance as well. It was believed to have been the site of the monkey kingdom of Kishkindha associated with the Hindu epic, the Ramayana and the presence of a large number of monkeys, still considered sacred, seems to testify to that.
 
The city is said to have been founded in 1336 by two brothers Harihara (also called Hukka) and Bukka. They were officers of the Hoysalas. Taking advantage of the declining fortunes of the Hoysalas who were attacked by the army of the Delhi Sultans, they tried to create some political order on the banks of the Tungabhadra. They were soon able to set up an independent kingdom. The Vijayanagara empire grew in strength and splendour and resisted all onslaughts till 1565 when the then Vijayanagara commander Rama Raya was defeated by a confederation of Muslim kings and the capital city was ransacked.
 
The broken kingdom came under Mughal rule in 1689 and was later annexed by the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1780.
 
The heartbreak of the 1565 defeat can still be seen in the ruins of the imperial city. Workmen seem to have fled, abandoning their tools by the side of the river.
 
There is, in fact so much to discover in Hampi that even a fortnight's viewing may not be enough. But even the traveller in a hurry must find time for a few of Hampi's monuments, if only a few. Hampi is an excursion back into time; it is also an exploration of an artist's lover for his land and the unabashed expression of such lover.
 
The historical town and fortress of Anegundi once formed the northern outpost of the Vijayanagara empire. Its ruins which now lie scattered along the north bank of the Tungabhadra River just opposite Hampi, include civil buildings, temples, may lines of fortifications and gateways that seem to be entrances to fantasy land.

Mamallapuram,Corbett,Diu,Gwalior,Jaisalmer,Jodhpur,Kanniyakumari,
Khajuraho,Alleppy-Alappupzha

Top

  

   



Copyright © : 2000 Ajanabee.com (P) Ltd.
All rights reserved