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Raigad Fort

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File:Small Raigad01.jpg
Front view of Raigad fort, From Paachad.

Raigad is a hill fortress situated in the Raigad District of Maharashtra, India. Chhatrapati Shivaji made the fort his capital after he constructed it between 1657 and 1670. In 1674, he was crowned King of Hindawi Swaraj in this fort, the formal name of what later developed into the Maratha Empire. The fort rises 869 metres above sea level and located on the Sahyadri range. There are around 1400-1450 steps leading to the fort, though today a rope-way exists to reach the fort.[1] Most of fort was destroyed by a major fire that spanned five days during a British siege of the fort.

History

Shivaji had seized the site, then the fortress of Rairi, from the royal house of the Mores, a junior or Cadet dynasty descended from the ancient Maurya imperial dynasty. The last More king ("Raja") was a feudatory of the Sultan of Bijapur. Shivaji renovated and expanded the Fortress of Rairi and renamed it Raigad, or the King's Fort, the name he gave it when he selected it for his capital when he was in the process of assuming the royal character. Rajgad, a hill fortress situated in Pune District of Maharashtra, India was capital of Shivaji's kingdom before it was moved to Raigad.


Structure

Ruins of the Raigad fort main palace.
File:Raigad Mena Darwaja.jpg
The Mena Darwaja

The fort ruins today consists of the queens quarters consisting of six chambers with each chamber having its own private commode with plumbing. The main palace was constructed of wood of wish only the bases of pillars remain. Ruins of three watch towers can be seen directly in front of the palace grounds and overlooks an artificial lake was created next to the fort. It also has a view of the execution point called Takmak Tok, a cliff from where the sentenced prisoners were thrown off.

Ruins of the three towers in front of the main palace
The artificial lake: Ganga-Sagar and the Takmak Tok cliff

The king's public Durbar has a replica of the original throne that faces the main doorway called the Mena Darwaja. This enclosure had been acoustically designed to aid hearing from the doorway to the throne. A statue of Chhatrapati Shivaji was erected in front of the ruins of the main market avenue that leads to the Rameshwar Mandir and his own Samadhi(tomb) and that of his dog Waghya.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "A write-up on Raigad". Retrieved 1/13/2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)