Jaipur,
the Pink City, has been the capital of erstwhile Jaipur
state since its inception in 1727 AD, It was founded by Sawai Jai Singh
II, a great ruler as well as renowned mathematician and astrologer.
Vidhyadhar Bhattacharya, designed Jaipur as per the Hindu treatise,
Shilp Shastra. In 1876 Jaipur dressed itself in pink to welcome Prince
Albert, consort of queen Victoria, and earned the epitaph Pink
City'. The excellent handicrafts of Jaipur are exquisite gold jewellery
enameled or inlaid with precious stones, blue pottery, carving on wood,
stone & ivory, block print & tie & dye textiles, handmade
paper etc.
After independence, Jaipur became the administrative
and commercial capital of what was known as Rajputana, a suitable
conclusion to the dreams of its founder Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II, a
man famed for his talents as a politician, mathematician, and
astronomer. At age 13 he ascended the throne of the Kachchwaha Rajputs,
a clan that had enjoyed tremendous prosperity and power as a result of
their canny alliance, dating back to Humayun's reign, with the Mughal
emperors. It was in fact the emperor Aurangzeb, a fanatically pious
Muslim, who -- despite the fact that Jai Singh was a Hindu prince --
named him Sawai, meaning "one and a quarter," for his
larger-than-life intellect and wit. Having proved his prowess as a
military tactician for Aurangzeb, growing the emperor's royal coffers
substantially, Jai Singh felt it safe to move his capital from the
claustrophobic hills surrounding Amber to a dry lake in the valley
below.
Places to see
- Hawa
Mahal
Located to one side, but a part of the City Palace
complex, Hawa Mahal is best viewed from the street outside. If is
were not for the bustling bazaar all around, it would have been easy
to mistake it for a film set, so exquisitely is it proportioned, and
so incongruous is its delicacy. Hawa Mahal consists of five tiers of
corridors on the inside, with pierced screen windows that overlook
the street below. It is believed the women of the royal zenana would
sit concealed behind these screens to see life in the city beyond
the walls of the palace.
- City
Palace
As may be expected, the City Palace complex lies at
the heart of the city. Getting in is simpler than it once was.
Though the erstwhile maharaja and his family and close friends use
the triple-arched Tripolia Gate to enter their section of the
palace, most visitors are ushered in through Atish Pol which is
located close to the royal stables, cross from here to Chandni Chowk
or Moonlit Square and then on to Gainda ki Deorhi. At the heart of
the complex is seven-tiered Chandra Mahal where the erstwhile royal
family is still in residence, though only a small part of the
apartments are occupied. 
- Jantar Mantar
A stone observatory, part of the city
palace complex, Jantar Mantar is one of several other astronomical
observatories created by Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh 2nd (other are in
Delhi, Banaras, Ujjain). These concrete masonry instruments were
used to measure everything from altitude to time, and map the
movement of the planets and the stars. Jai Singh 2nd had a passion
for astronomy and used astronomical inventions from different of
these observatories, the largest of which in is Jaipur.
- Ram Niwas Bagh
A lush spacious garden with a zoo, an
aviary, a greenhouse, a herbarium, a museum and popular sports
ground. It was built by Sawai Ram Singh 2nd in 1868 A.D. as a famine
relief project. The Albert hall, fine example of Indo Sarcenic style
of architecture designed by Sir Swinton Jecob, was opened later with
an exquisite collection of sculptures, paintings, decorative wares,
natural history specimen, an Egyptian mummy & celebrated Persian
carpet. Recently, the Rabindra Manch with an auditorium, a modern
art gallery and an open air theatre, has been added to promote
cultural events.
- Laxmi Narayan Temple ( Birla Mandir )
A
new temple, also known as Birla Temple, built entirely of marble,
this is a showcase of the continuing skill of the mason and the
sculptor.It is very famous for its architure, Lots of pilgrimage
visit this place from different parts of India & Abroad.
- BM Birla Planetarium
The planetarium offers unique
audio-visual education and entertainment with its modern
computerized projection system. For school groups concessions are
available. Closed on last Wednesday of every month.
- Maharaja Sawai Man Singh II Museum
Located within the
city palace complex and nestled amidst old buildings, temples and
the palace quarters, this museum was founded in 1959 by Maharaja
Swai Man Singh II.
Festivals in Jaipur
- Gangaur Festival
The Gangaur festival is the most
important local festival of
Rajasthan and is observed throughout the state with great fervour
and devotion by womenfolk who worship Gauri, the consort of lord
Shiva. Gan is a synonym for Shiva and Gauri which stands for Gauri
or Parvati who symbolizes saubhagya (Marital Bliss). Gauri is the
embodiment of perfection and conjugal love which is why the
unmarried women worship her for being blessed with good husbands,
while married women do so for welfare, health and long life of their
spouses and a happy married life.
- Elephant Festival, Jaipur
The elephant festival gets
underway in the month of Phalgun (March) on the eve of Holi, the
festival of colours. The festival begins with a procession of
elephants, camels, horses and folk dancers.
ShoppingJaipur offers one-of-a-kind shopping
experience with its rich treasure of bewitching jewellery, beautiful
gems, semi precious stones, Kundan and Minakari work (enamel work on
gold). Beautiful cotton fabrics including Sanganeri prints, tie-and-die
and fine kaoa 'Doria' saris are the best buys for women. The exotic blue
pottery, enamel ware and brass ware, make excellent souvenirs and gift
items. The city is also famous for woollen carpets and cotton rugs.
How
to Reach
- Air
Jaipur has its own airport, and is well connected
to all other tourist and business centres.
- Rail
An excellent connection to Delhi by Shatabdi
Express and the Pink City Express. Other connections to Jaipur are
from Bikaner, Jodhpur, Udaipur, Ahemadabad, Secunderabad and
Lucknow.
- Road
A network of reasonably comfortable tourist
buses, run by road corporations of Rajasthan, Haryana and others.