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Delhi
is the capital of India, and it's also the travel hub of northern
India. It's an excellent base for visiting Agra and the Taj Mahal,
and the Rajasthani colour of Jaipur is less than five hours away.
If you're heading north to the Himalaya or east to the ghats of
Varanasi, you'll probably pass through Delhi. So you might as well
grit your teeth, hold your breath and dive on in.
Destination
Facts
Area:
3,287,590 sq km (1,229m737 sq mi)
Population: 14.3 million
Country: India
People: 72% Indo-Aryan, 25%
Dravidian, 3% other
Main language: Hindi
Time Zone: MT/UTC plus five
hours 30 minutes
Telephone Area Code:11
When
to go
One
of Delhi's drawbacks is that for more than half the year the climate
is lousy. For about five months - from November until the end of
March - it is very good, with daytime temperatures between 21 and
30°C (70-86°F). By the end of April it's hot, while May
and June are intolerable. In July it gets cooler but the humidity
really hits, with all-day rain through August and September. The
hugely colourful Republic Day march is held in January, while the
exuberant Hindu festival of Holi takes place in February or March.
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History
Popular
Hindu mythology purports that Delhi was the site of the fabled city
of Indraprastha, which featured in the Mahabharata over 3000
years ago, but historical evidence suggests that the area has been
settled for around 2500 years. Since the 12th century, Delhi has
seen the rise and fall of seven major powers. The Chauhans took
control in the 12th century and made Delhi the most important Hindu
centre in northern India. When Qutab-ud-din Aibak occupied the city
in 1193, he ushered in six and a half centuries of Muslim rule.
The Delhi Sultanate lasted from 1206 to 1526, despite its inconsistent
rule, and was followed by the mighty Moghuls from 1526 to 1857.
The basis of what is today 'Old' Delhi, including the Red Fort and
the Jama Masjid, was built during the reign of the Moghul emperor
Shah Jahan (1628-1658).
In
1803, the British captured Delhi and installed a British administrator.
Delhi was not the capital of India at the time, but it was an important
commercial centre and had a population of 150,000 by the start of
the 20th century. When the British decided to make Delhi the capital
in 1911, they built New Delhi in a grandiose imperial style, as
if the sun would never set on the British Raj.
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Only
16 years after the city was inaugurated as the nation's capital,
Delhi was torched during the trauma of Partition. In a matter of
weeks it was transformed from a Muslim-dominated city of less than
a million inhabitants to a largely Hindu city of almost two million.
Today, very few city residents can lay claim to being 'real' Delhi-wallahs,
and most of the population of New Delhi comprises Hindu Punjabi
families originally from Lahore.
Since
Independence, Delhi has prospered as the capital of India. In the
past decade, its population has increased by 50%, largely due to
rapid economic expansion and increased job opportunities. The downside
of this boom is increased overcrowding, traffic congestion, housing
shortages and pollution.
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Events
Holi,
in February or March, is one of the most exuberant Hindu festivals.
To mark the end of winter, people chuck large quantities of coloured
water and powder at one another - tourists are not excluded. In
March or April, Hindus celebrate the birth of Rama by reading the
Ramayana at temples throughout the city. In April or May,
Sikhs have a similar celebration, Baisakhi where the holy
book, the Granth Sahib is read, followed by feasting and
dancing.
If
you're in Delhi in July, don't miss the International Mango Festival,
when Talkatora Stadium hosts hundreds of varieties of the heavenly
fruit. August and September are happy festival months - during Ganesh
Chaturthi the elephant-headed god gets heaps of attention, while
on Janmashtami Krishna's birth is celebrated with plenty
of mischief-making. Ram Lila, India's most popular festival,
runs over 10 days in September or October - the Ramayana
is reenacted and huge images of the demon Ravana are burnt. In late
October, Hindu households light oil lamps to guide the god Rama
home from exile, during the festival of Diwali, which is
also known as the festival of sweets.
Delhi's
Muslims clebrate the usual Muslim festivals. During Ramadan,
the most important, Muslims fast from dawn to dusk to commemorate
the revelation of the Qu'ran to Mohammed. When Ramadan ends, Muslims
celebrate Id-ul-Fitr by eating a great deal and praying at
the Jama Masjid.
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Activities
If
you've got a dollar in your pocket, a Hermes scarf in your suitcase
and you like mixing it with the city's elite, Delhi has sporting
facilities to spare, including gyms, tennis courts and billiards
tables. There's also a beautiful golf course at the Delhi
Golf Club, but once again you'll need to be cashed up. Most of the
major hotels have swimming pools, or if you've had your hepatitis
injections you could take a dip in the public pool in the Talkatora
Gardens.
Delhi
isn't renowned for its water bodies, but if you're prepared to risk
feeling silly you can hire a dinghy for a paddle in the pools
along Rajpath, or you can take a pedal boat out on the Purana
Qila moat. If that's not extreme enough for you, try the rock
climbing on the artificial wall on Benito Juarez Marg, or the
real thing at Lado Sarai adventure park.
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Attractions
Red
Fort
The
red sandstone walls of the massive Red Fort (Lal Qila) rise 33m
(108ft) above the clamour of 'Old' Delhi as a reminder of the magnificent
power and pomp of the Moghul emperors. The walls, built in 1638,
may have been designed to keep out invaders, but today they mainly
keep out the noise and confusion of the city, making the fort and
its gardens and pavilions a peaceful haven from the surrounding
chaos. The fort's main gate, the Lahore Gate, is one of the emotional
and symbolic focal points of the modern Indian nation and attracts
a major crowd each Independence Day.
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The
vaulted arcade of Chatta Chowk, an impressive covered
bazaar now dedicated to selling tourist junk, leads into the
huge fort compound. Inside is a veritable treasure trove of
buildings, including the Drum House, the Hall of Public
Audiences, the white marble Hall of Private Audiences,
the Pearl Mosque, Royal Baths and Palace of Colour.
An evening sound and light show re-creates events in India's
history connected with the fort. It's well worth seeing the
show, but make sure you bring that modern self-defence system
- mosquito repellent. |
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Jama
Masjid
| The
great mosque of 'Old' Delhi is the largest in India, with a
courtyard capable of holding 25,000 devotees. It was built in
1644 and ended up being the final architectural extravagance
of Shah Jahan, the Moghul emperor who also built the Taj Mahal
and the Red Fort. The highly decorative mosque has three great
gateways, four towers and two 40m (135ft) high minarets constructed
of strips of red sandstone and white marble. Travelers arriving
bare-legged can hire robes at the northern gate. This may be
the only time you get to dress like a local without feeling
like a prat, so make the most of the hallowed atmosphere. |
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Chandni
Chowk
The
main street of 'Old' Delhi is a magnificent bazaar and as fine a
monument to congestion, colour and chaos as you'll find in India
today. In Shah Jahan's day, it was endowed with fine mansions, had
a tree-lined canal flowing down its centre and was renowned throughout
Asia; today it's jampacked with artisans, traders and auto-rickshaws
and comprises a fantastic cocktail of stench, movement, uproar and
fumes. There's a Jain temple at the street's eastern end, near the
Red Fort; at the western end is the Fatehpuri Mosque, built
by one of Shah Jahan's wives in 1650.
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New
Delhi
New
Delhi is a monument to British Imperial ambitions solidly set in
a city so fluid and chaotic that it took less than 20 years for
the entire planned municipality to be historically obsolete. Under
the leadership of architect Edward Lutyens, New Delhi was to encapsulate
the spirit of British sovereignty in marble, stone and grandeur.
The scale of the city and its wide ceremonial avenues echoed Moghul
architecture, but the buildings are classical in design and play
only the merest lip service to Indian styles. The result is indeed
spacious and palatial and, compared to many planned cities of the
20th century, still remarkably useable despite its large unshaded
areas. The major landmarks include: Rashtrapati Bhavan (once
the Viceroy's House, but now the official residence of the President
of India); Parliament House; the north and south Secretariat
buildings; the 40m (135ft) stone war memorial known as India
Gate and the broad Rajpath, which is flanked with ornamental
ponds and is tailor-made for parades. Connaught Place is the day-to-day
hub of New Delhi, a good place to shop, and the scene of some fantastic
traffic accidents.
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Humayun's
Tomb
This
grand tomb is the best-preserved example of early Moghul architecture
in Delhi and one of the most beautiful buildings in the city. Built
in the mid-16th century by Haji Begum, wife of Humayun, the second
Moghul emperor, it displays elements of Moghul design that were
eventually refined and incorporated into the Taj Mahal in Agra.
It comprises a squat building with high arched entrances topped
by a bulbous dome and surrounded by formal gardens. The gardens
also contain the red-and-white sandstone and black-and-yellow marble
tomb of Humayun's wife and, somewhat surprisingly, the tomb of Humayun's
barber.
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Qutab
Minar
Qutab
Minar is a soaring, 73m high tower of victory, built in 1193 by
Qutab-ud-din immediately after the defeat of Delhi's last Hindu
kingdom. It symbolises Islamic rule of the city. The tower has five
distinct storeys, each marked by a projecting balcony, and it tapers,
like something out of a fairy tale, from a 15m (50ft) diameter at
the base to just 2.5m (8ft) at the top. The first three storeys
are made of red sandstone, the fourth and fifth storeys of marble
and sandstone. The stairs inside the tower coil so steeply that
they're enough to make the hardiest climber dizzy and claustrophobic,
and it was no surprise when a stampede during a school trip in 1979
resulted in a number of deaths. The inside of the tower has since
been closed to visitors.
At
the foot of the tower is the Quwwat-ul-Islam Mosque, the
first mosque to be built in India. An inscription over its eastern
gate provocatively informs that it was built with material obtained
from demolishing '27 idolatrous (read Hindu) temples'. A 7m (23ft)
high iron pillar stands in the courtyard of the mosque and it's
said that if you can encircle it with your hands whilst standing
with your back to it, your wish will be fulfilled.
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Off
the Beatern Track
Raj
Ghat
Raj
Ghat, not far from the banks of the Yamuna River, has a simple black
marble memorial to Mahatma Gandhi marking the spot where he was
cremated following his assassination in 1948. A commemorative ceremony
takes place every Friday. Two museums dedicated to Gandhi are nearby.
Jawaharlal Nehru was cremated just to the north at Shanti Vana (Forest
of Peace). The area is now a beautiful park with labelled trees
planted by a mixed bag of notables, including Elizabeth II, Dwight
Eisenhower and Ho Chi Minh. The rarely-visited but quite beautiful
Zinat-ul Masjid (Most Beautiful of Mosques) towers over Raj
Ghat.
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Spice
Market
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Khari
Baoli, the street that runs from the Fatehpuri Mosque to the
western edge of the old city, is Delhi's bustling wholesale
spice market. It's well worth a wander simply to take in the
sights and smells because things have changed little here for
centuries. Huge sacks of herbs and spices are still brought
to the wholesalers on long, narrow barrows pushed by labourers
and there are eye-catching displays of everything from lentils
and rice to giant jars of chutneys, pickles, nuts and tea. |
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Coronation
Durbar Site
Incurable
Raj fans looking for a nostalgia fix should head to the Coronation
Durbar site, marked by a lone obelisk in a desolate field located
in open country north of 'Old' Delhi. It was on this site that,
in 1877 and 1903, the durbars were enacted and, in 1911, King George
V was declared Emperor of India. Close by there's a walled garden
complete with a rogues' gallery of marble statues of former Imperial
dignitaries, languishing like disgraced schoolboys out of the public
eye. Pride of place goes to a 15m (50ft) high statue of George V
that rises ghost-like above the acacia trees. It was placed here
after being removed from the canopy midway along Rajpath soon after
Independence. Most of Delhi's residents are blissfully unaware of
the existence or significance of this place.
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Shalimar
Bagh
| The
Shalimar Garden, which lies on the fringes of the city about
10km (33ft) north-west of 'Old' Delhi, is one of the most important
Moghul gardens in the city. This was once the first-night staging
post for the Moghuls on their way to Kashmir and Lahore. Aurangzeb
was crowned emperor here in 1658. The beautiful central pavilion,
the Shish Mahal, was built by Shah Jahan. Although it
is in a fairly advanced state of decay, some of the original
painted flower decoration has survived and the place has lots
of atmosphere. |
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Getting
There & Away
Delhi
is India's major gateway for international flights and is a good
place to pick up cheap airline tickets. There are domestic flights
from Delhi to all major Indian destinations. The main bus station
is the Interstate Bus Terminal at Kashmiri Gate, north of the 'Old'
Delhi Railway Station. Popular bus routes head into Rajasthan via
Jaipur, and to the hill stations of Himachal Pradesh. Delhi is an
important rail centre and New Delhi Railway Station is an easy place
to make bookings. Useful long-distance trains head east across the
Ganges Plain to Calcutta via Varanasi, and south to Mumbai (Bombay)
via Agra.
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Getting
Around
Delhi's
bus system is for thrillseekers, anthropologists and those with
time on their hands. Buses are generally hopelessly crowded and
driven by maniacs. Avoid them altogether during rush hours; otherwise,
try boarding or leaving at the beginning or end of a route because
there's more chance of a seat and less chance of being trampled
to death. There are some seats reserved for women on the left-hand
side of the bus.
There
are plenty of metered yellow-and-black taxis, but invariably the
meters are out of date, not working or the drivers will simply refuse
to use them. Negotiate a fare before you set out. Auto-rickshaws
are generally faster than taxis on short trips and cost half the
price. Negotiate a fare before you board and make sure your will
is in order. Six-seater motorcycle rickshaws run fixed routes at
fixed prices and are good value during rush hours. Cycle rickshaws
are banned from New Delhi itself, but can be handy for travelling
around 'Old' Delhi. Cycling is an excellent way of getting around,
especially in New Delhi, where the roads are wide, in good condition
and, by Indian standards, uncrowded. At the large traffic roundabouts
just take a deep breath and plunge in.
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Recommended
Reading
Delhi
Through the Ages edited by RE Frykenburg, is an interesting
bunch of essays about Delhi's history.
One
of the best accounts of the Mutiny (or Uprising, if you prefer)
is Christopher Hibbert's The
Great Mutiny, a good read illustrated with contemporary photographs.
Kushwant
Singh is one of India's most controversial authors. Find out why
by reading the novel Delhi, a rollicking, phallic-obsessed
wander through 600 years of the city's history.
May
You Be the Mother of One Hundred Sons by Elisabeth Bumiller
is an interesting look at the position of women in Indian society,
based on interviews with women from all walks of life.
If
you're serious about understanding Delhi's historic sites, have
a look at Delhi, Its Monuments & History by Dr Percival
Spear, a British historian.
Mansions
at Dusk is a glossy coffee-table guide to the remaining havelis,
or mansions, of Delhi.
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there's more!
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