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Heritage
Jaisalmer
- Jaisalmer was founded by the Bhatti Rajput chieftain
Rawal Jaisal in 1156. According to the local legends, seeking
a more secure capital, the usurper was advised by a saint
to build a castle on the Trikuta hill. It was in fulfillment
of Lord Krishna's prophecy that a distant scion of his Yadav
clan would build a kingdom here. There was water on the hill,
a miracle performed by Krishna to quench the thirst of Arjuna.
The hilltop offered the safest fort location, dominating and
surveying the desert for miles.
The
Lunar clan of Bhattis is Krishna's descendant, valiant and
most feared of the dessert marauders, perennially locked in
territorial skirmishes with Jodhpur and Bikaner. One Bhatti
scion-Gaj Singh had founded the city of Ghazni in Afghanistan
but ultimately lost it to forces from Khorasan. One of his
grandsons reclaimed Ghazni, embraced Islam, and came to be
called Chagattas (Mughals). They later plundered the land
of their ancestors between 1000 and 1025 A.D. Again, led by
Babar they came to found the Mughal Empire in India.
Jaisalmer
lay on the camel trade route between India and Central Asia,
a caravanserai for traders and earned its share of profits
without producing anything of its own. But the rise of the
shipping trade and development of the Bombay port led to its
decline in importance. Jaisalmer suffered a further fall in
fortune when following the partition of the country; trade
routes across the border were sealed. Jaisalmer stood high
and dry. But the two wars with Pakistan revived its strategic
importance once again. National Highways and a railways track,
and now an airstrip have brought Jaisalmer within easy reach
of the people.
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