HI Friends,
Today we will know something about our Capital Delhi.
Before that i would like have 2 minutes of your time.Guy's all of us has great
patriotism towards our India.But just think how many of us know complete
details about our States,Cities and our Country.We say we are proud to be an
Indian when we see any thing special anythin good,Fine but what do we know in &
out about our India,Atleast do we know about the city where we are leaving form
the birth the answer is "NO".There is no criticising it is the Fact because
many of us don't know what is their behind our own House but we will be more
curiosity to know about other Countries and thier practices in one way that is
good to know but before knowing or talking about other countries we should know
about ourself,our country,our culture ..etc.
Im taking a small initiative to give the awareness of our country.I think each
and evry individual whoevere is an Indian will read this and also try to share
about the things which u know and spread the awareness.....
The Economic History of
the City of Delhi,
Old and New
The city of Delhi has been historically one of the most important cities of
India. Currently it is the third largest im terms of population, exceeded only
by Mumbai (Bombay) and Calcutta. The national capital of New Delhi is part of
metropolitan complex of Delhi.
Delhi is in the Ganges River Basin on the banks of the tributary Jumna River.
Historically Delhi was located on the west bank of the Jumna because there was
a tradition in the region that cities should be on the right bank of the
direction of the flow and that the left bank should be left wild. The growth of
the city spread urban development along both banks, although the major areas of
the city are still on the west bank.
Delhi is near the rise of the Himalayas at an altitude of just under 1000 feet.
The altitude and latitude is enough to give Delhi some chilly episodes in the
winter. What is officially spring by the calendar, March 21st to June 21st is
the effecively the summer of Delhi, the season of highest temperatures. The
average maximum temperature in this season is about 100° F but during June the
average daily temperature rises to 110° F. There are frequent thunderstorms in
April and May.
The monsoon reaches Delhi at the end of June and continues to the end of
September, the calendar summer. Generally humidity in Delhi is low except
during July and August of the monsoon season. The average annual rainfall in
Delhi is 26 inches.
The two months after the monsoon ends in September, the months of October and
November, are quite pleasant. The winter is consider to be the period from the
end of November to mid-February. In the coldest month, January, the average
daily low temperature is 45° F. This leaves mid-February to mid-March as a very
brief springtime transition.
>From very ancient times there has been a major city in the locale of Delhi.
>The British moved the capital of the Raj from Calcutta to Delhi where the new
>city of New Delhi was builtjust south of the old city. The relative positions
>of the two cities are shown below.
The municipality of the City of Delhi occupies about 360 square miles,
including the historical old city, while the City of New Delhi occupies 169
square miles. Since the new city is much less densely populated than the old
city the predominance of the old city in terms of population is very great.
In the new city much of the land is devoted to parks and broad streets. The
streets are straight and unobstructed. In the old city the streets are narrow,
twisting and irregular. This has a defensive value. The armies of invaders of
the old city would be constricted to a narrow front where a relatively smaller
number of defenders could stop their progress and allow other defenders to
attack the invading force from the rooftops. And the invaders might not
necessarily be foreign invaders. They could be one ethnic group intent upon
wreaking havoc upon the neighborhood of another ethnic group.
At the time of Partition in August of 1947 Delhi experienced what must have
been one of the most traumatic episode any city could go through. Before
Partition metropolitan Delhi had a population of about seven hundred thousand.
In the course of one month its population exploded to one and half million as
result of the refugees that poured in from what became Pakistan.
(To be continued.)
The Physical Character of the Delhi Region
The Delhi's of the past and present lie in the Doab, the two-river region of
the Ganges and the Yamuna Rivers. Delhi is located on the west bank of the
Yamuna but its proximity to the Ganges is important. Delhi is affectively at a
juncture of the Ganges River Valley and the Indus River Valley where the Deccan
Plateau and Thar Desert come their closest to the Himalaya Mountains and thus
create the corridor where Delhi is located. In this respect it is like Chicago
which is located at the connection point between the Missouri-Mississippi River
System and the Great Lakes System.
There is a ridge, the Delhi Ridge, that runs to the west of New Delhi and there
was a hill, Raisina Hill that rose 15 meters where New Delhi now stands. The
top 40 percent of Raisina Hill was leveled off to provide a low plateau for
government building of the new capital of India.
New Delhi can be considered the tenth capital city located in the region. The
previous capitals, most of which were called Delhi, were:
* City #1:Indraprastha, built by a Pandava king about 1400 BCE. (see
map below for location.) This city is mentioned in the Mahabharata.
* City #2:Dilhu: Built by Raja Dilhu in the first century BCE and named
for him. In the 12th century Dilhu became the capital of a Cauhan king but this
king was defeated in that same century by a Muslim invader. The invader made
Delhi his capital. One of this invader's successors built the second Delhi (the
third capital city of the region) in the thirteenth century.
* City #3:Siri: Built by Ala'-ud-Din Khalji around 1300.
* City #4:Tughlakabad (The City of Tughluq): This city was built by
Ghiyas-ud-Din Tughluq in the 1320's. It had to be abandoned because of
insufficient water at the site. The court moved back to City #3.
* City #5:Jahanapanah: The son of Tughluq, Mohammad ibn Tughluq,
extended City #3 to the northeast and built fortifications around it. It was
called Jahanapan.
* City #6:Firuzabad (The City of Firuz): City #5 was abandoned when
Firuz Shah Tughluq came to power. In 1354 he moved his capital to a site near
where City #1 had been located. Around 1400 Timerlane's forces sacked this
capital and the king of the city at that time moved his capital to Agra. In
1526, the Mughal leader Babur made Delhi (City #6) his capital.
* City #7:Din Panah: The son of Babur, Humayun, built a new capital and
called it Din Panah.
* City #8:Sher Shahi: Humayun was overthrown by Sher Shah in 1540. Sher
Shah built a new capital. The Mughal emperor Akbar moved his capital away from
Delhi and his successor, Jahangir, then moved his capital to Agra.
* City #9:Shahjahanabad (The City of Shah Jahan, Old Delhi): The Mughal
emperor Shah Jahan, the grandson of Akbar, started building his new capital,
what is now called Old Delhi, in 1638. He surrounded the city with a wall and
put in four gates; Ajmeri Gate, Delhi Gate, Kashmiri Gate and Turkman Gate.
* City #10:New Delhi: In 1911 the British Government decided to move
the capital of British India from Calcutta to Delhi and build a new city to
house the government. It took until about 1931 to complete the building.
The legend is that:
Whoever builds a new Delhi loses it.
________________________________
The city of Delhi has inspired great love and fine writing. The novelist Ahmed
Ali in his Twight in Delhi describes the city (Old Delhi) as follows:
Night envelops the city covering it like a blanket. In the dim starlight roofs
and houses and by-lanes lie asleep, wrapped in restless slumber, breathing
heavily as the heat becomes oppressive or shoots through the body like pain. In
the courtyards, on the roofs, in the by-lanes, on the roads, men sleep on bare
beds, half naked, tired after the sore day's labour. A few still walk on the
otherwise deserted roads, hand in hand, talking; and some have jasmine garlands
in their hands. The smell from the flowers escapes, scents a few yards of air
around them and dies smothered by the heat. Dogs go about sniffing the gutters
in search of offal; and cats slink out of narrow by-lanes, from under the
planks jutting out of shops, and lick the earthen cups out of which men had
drunk milk and thrown away.
Heat exudes from the walks and the earth; and the gutters give out a damp stink
which comes in greater gusts where they meet a sewer to eject their dirty water
into an underground canal. [...]
But the city of Delhi, built hundreds of years ago, fought for, died for,
coveted and desired, built, destroyed and rebuilt, for five and six and seven
times, mourned and sung, raped and conquered, yet whole and alive, lies
indifferent in the arms of sleep.
Ur's
M.K.
"making impossible possible".
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