Delhi, the capital of India is the third largest city of
the world, exceeded in size by Calcutta and Mumbai. Delhi
is situated in north central India and stands on the west
bank of Yamuna river. It is bounded on the east by the state
of Uttar Pardesh and on the north, west and south by Haryana.
The eternal Yamuna has witnessed the glory and the tumultuous
history of the 3000 year old Delhi. Delhi is spread over an
area of 1483 sq. kilometers, 216 meters above sea level and
has a population of around 14 million. The amalgamation of
various cultures, traditions, religions has painted Delhi
in colour which are brought from all over India. Delhi is
a true cosmopolitan city always on the move. Delhi remains
the centre of power. Once it was a city of royal power. Then
it became the seat of colonial power. Later it was the seat
of bureaucratic power. The seat of political power it has
always been. Today it is emerging as an important centre for
corporate power too. It is a perfect introduction to the cultural
wealth, the complexities and dynamism of India. Delhi has
always been the hub of activity, art, culture and the history
of the whole country and continues to do so.
It is divided into two parts Old Delhi & New Delhi.
Old Delhi (Shahjahanabad)
'Old' Delhi, the capital of Muslim India between the mid-17th
and late 19th centuries, is full of formidable mosques, monuments
and forts. The ancient Delhi of the Mughal emperors was surrounded
by a wall and was a congested city of narrow bylanes. Though
better known as Old Delhi, this area is also called Delhi.
Old Delhi , Shah Jahan's seventeenth-century capital ( Shahjahanabad
), lies 2km or so further north.The Delhi Jn rly stn is in
Old Delhi, the inter-state bus terminus is slightly to the
north, at the Kashmiri Gate. Buses go to all over north and
west India from the Kashmiri Gate. Near the Delhi Gate lies
the Yamuna on the left and the Aruna Asaf Ali Rd on the right,
ending at Ramlila Pavilion, the juncture of Old and New Delhi.
It's a lively area of colourful bazaars, narrow streets and
barely controlled chaos. Monuments in sandstone and marble,
which stand in assorted states of repair, make Delhi a veritable
museum of Indo-Islamic architecture, seen at its best in the
frenetic streets of Old Delhi. Old Delhi looks entirely different
from the more modern New Delhi and south Delhi areas.
New Delhi
The other Delhi, the imperial city created as the capital
of India by the British. In addition to its historic interest
and role as the government centre, Delhi is a major travel
gateway. In 1911, the British asked Lutyens to give new meaning
to city development which is reflected in the architectural
designs and sophistication that buildings in Delhi like Parliament
House, Rashtrapati Bhavan, India Gate, Connaught Place and
various administrative buildings like the South and North
blocks along the breathtaking view available from Raj Path.
The capital of the Indian republic is at New Delhi, the planned
city devised by the British. The smooth roads, modern houses
and buildings and offices and departments attract tourist.
As you come out of the New Delhi rly stn, in front is Paharganj
and on the south Chemsford Road which intersect at Connaught
Place. New Delhi, the imperial city created by the British
Raj, is composed of spacious, tree-lined avenues and imposing
government buildings, and has a sense of order absent from
other parts of the city.
Central New Delhi
The hub of the metropolis is Central New Delhi, an orderly
plan of wide roads lined with sturdy colonial buildings which
was established soon after the imperial capital of British
India moved here in 1911. At its hub, the royal mall, Rajpath,
runs from palatial Rashtrapati Bhavan, in the west, to the
India Gate war memorial in the east. At the north edge of
the new capital lies the thriving business centre, Connaught
Place, where neon advertisements for Wimpy, American Express,
hotels and countless airline offices adorn the flat roofs
and colonnaded verandas of high white buildings that curve
around a central park to form an almost perfect circle. Most
of the airline offices, travel agents, banks and hotels are
here. There are a number of cinemas and performing arts centres
around Connaught Place, but Delhi's strict licensing laws
effectively curtail nightlife. Central New Delhi also has
its fair share of more recent high-rise offices and hotels,
standing close to pre-British constructions such as the open-air
observatory, Jantar Mantar, and a generous smattering of excellent
museums covering arts and crafts and the lives of India's
post-Independence politicians.
South Delhi
Most of the early settlements of Delhi, including its first
cities, are to be found not in "Old Delhi" but in
SOUTH DELHI, the area south of Connaught Place and Rajpath.
Although the rapid expansion of suburban Delhi is swallowing
up the countryside, the area remains littered with monuments
from the past, and pockets of almost untouched rural peace
make it a fascinating blend of the contemporary, the pastoral
and the historic.
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