Tarique Sani.net


Last comments - Nagpur City
DSCN5545_fk.jpgTelangkhedi Lake Fountain
Filesize : 82KB
Dimensions : 800x600
Date added : December 26, 2004

Avinash MurkuteDecember 26, 2004Excellent Photo, Great, Simply Great.....Keep it u...
DSCN5066_fk.jpgAmruta Jagum
Filesize : 183KB
Dimensions : 1024x768
Date added : November 24, 2004

tariquesaniDecember 16, 2004All pictures on this site are under a Creative Com...
DSCN5066_fk.jpgAmruta Jagum
Filesize : 183KB
Dimensions : 1024x768
Date added : November 24, 2004

AnnabelleDecember 16, 2004May I use this image for my business plan?
DSCN4202_fk.jpgTelankhedi lake walkway
Filesize : 178KB
Dimensions : 1024x768
Date added : September 27, 2004

anonDecember 12, 2004hi,just wanted to say that your pictures are beaut...
dscn0742_fk.jpgCafe Cofee Day at VCA
Filesize : 232KB
Dimensions : 600x800
Date added : January 27, 2004

Prashant BhargavaSeptember 24, 2004Beautiful pictures from Nagpur. My birth place I m...
dscn0753_fk.jpgZero Mile Stone of India
Filesize : 293KB
Dimensions : 800x600
Date added : January 27, 2004

R.G. ChavanSeptember 11, 2004Excellent.want more photos of Nagpur city
dscn0783_fk.jpgBig Bazaar Nagpur
Filesize : 217KB
Dimensions : 800x600
Date added : January 27, 2004

ChaitanyaAugust 31, 2004Great pics, and I would like to see Ambazhari and ...
dscn0759_fk.jpgOne of the Oldest Post Boxes in Nagpur
Filesize : 299KB
Dimensions : 600x800
Date added : January 27, 2004

Krishna KumarAugust 30, 2004Pictures are simply beautiful
dscn0765_fk.jpgIt is a jungle out here
Filesize : 375KB
Dimensions : 800x600
Date added : January 27, 2004

yogitaJuly 8, 2004wonderful job, inspiring, unique collection
dscn0758_fk.jpgGeneral Post Office Building
Filesize : 216KB
Dimensions : 800x600
Date added : January 27, 2004

AnonMarch 21, 2004I will give this picture a 5 Star rating. Excelle...
   
280 files on 10 page(s) 10

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

Syndicate this page with RSS 2.0

Get Firefox, Site enhanced for Firefox! Validate my XHTML! Validate my CSS! Validate my RSS feed That's my Vanity Badge - Use to link Geotarget