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Last additions - Nagpur City
DSCN5545_fk.jpgTelangkhedi Lake Fountain
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Date added : December 26, 2004

December 26, 2004
DSCN4162_fk.jpgSunset at Telangkhedi lake
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Date added : October 1, 2004

October 1, 2004
DSCN4176_fk.jpgSunset at Telangkhedi Lake
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Date added : September 30, 2004

September 30, 2004
DSCN4197_fk.jpgTelangkhedi Lake walkway
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Date added : September 28, 2004

September 28, 2004
DSCN4202_fk.jpgTelankhedi lake walkway
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Date added : September 27, 2004

September 27, 2004
dscn1025_fk.jpgPunjabrao Krishi Mahavidyalaya (Agricultural College)
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Date added : February 11, 2004

February 11, 2004
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Date added : February 1, 2004

February 1, 2004
dscn0697_fk.jpgMachaan Open Air Restaurant
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Date added : January 28, 2004

January 28, 2004
dscn0783_fk.jpgBig Bazaar Nagpur
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0775_fk.jpgEarthen Pots
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dscn0765_fk.jpgIt is a jungle out here
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January 27, 2004
dscn0762_fk.jpgLiving on road side, a Chandelier sellers family.
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0760_fk.jpgYou light up my life
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January 27, 2004
dscn0759_fk.jpgOne of the Oldest Post Boxes in Nagpur
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0758_fk.jpgGeneral Post Office Building
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0756_fk.jpgInscription on one of the side of Zero Mile stone
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0755_fk.jpgDetail of horses at the Zero Mile stone
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January 27, 2004
dscn0753_fk.jpgZero Mile Stone of India
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0752_fk.jpgNagpur Improvement Trust Building
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0744_fk.jpgCafe Cofee Day at VCA
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Date added : January 27, 2004

January 27, 2004
dscn0742_fk.jpgCafe Cofee Day at VCA
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January 27, 2004
 
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Whatever people may say - I find my city of Nagpur beautiful and interesting. Here is the history of the city in a nutshell.

The present city was founded in the early 18th century by Bhakt Buland, a Gond prince of the kingdom of Deogad in the Chhindwara district. Seeing the advantage of civilized life in Delhi, he started to build Nagpur as his new capital. His successor Chand Sultan continued the work. On Chand Sultan's death in 1739, disputes regarding succession arose and Raghuji Bhonsle, the Maratha governor of Berar, helped to restore the elder son to the throne. As the dissentions continued, Raghuji Bhonsle again intervened in 1743, and the control of Nagpur slowly passed on from the Gonds to the Marathas. It became the capital of the Bhonsles.

With the Bhonsle dynasty came the vast class of cultivators in Vidarbha. Raghuji's successors lost some territories to the Peshwas of Pune and the Nizam of Hyderabad. In 1803, Bhonsles (along with their allies Scindias [Shinde] of Gwalior) at Assaye and Argaon (Argaum). In 1811 Pindaris attacked Nagpur. Bhonsles again lost to the British in 1817 and Nagpur came under British influence. In 1853 Raghuji III died without an heir to his kingdom. As a result, the city lapsed into British control under Lord Dalhousie's Doctrine of Lapse. { This policy was one of the reasons which led to the Indian War of Independence [Sepoys' Mutiny : as referred to by the British] in 1857}

In 1861, Nagpur became the capital of the Central Provinces. The advent of the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIP) in 1867 spurred its development as a trade centre. After Indian independence, Nagpur became the capital of Madhya Bharat state (C.P. and Berar). In 1960, the marathi majority Vidarbha region was merged with the new state of Maharashtra and Nagpur was designated the second capital of Maharashtra state, alternating with Mumbai (Bombay) as the seat of the Maharashtra state legislature.

Source: Encyclopaedia Britannica

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