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Heritage
The
history of Mount Abu is as diverse as the city itself. It
was once a part of the Chauhan kingdom of Rajasthan and served
as a summer resort for the Rajput kings of the region. After
that Mount Abu was leased by the British government from the
then Maharaja of Sirohi for use as the headquarter of the
resident to Rajputana (another name for Rajasthan). During
the British rule in India, it used to be the favorite summer
destination of the British who came here to escape the dusty,
dry heat of the plains particularly Rajasthan. It also served
as a sanatorium for the troops. The small huts and cottages
made by the British here tell the story of those times even
today.
Mount
Abu used to be the home of many saints and sages in the old
times. Legend has it that all the three hundred and thirty
million gods and goddesses of the Hindu pantheon used to visit
this holy mountain. It is also the place where the great saint
Vashishth lived and performed a yagna (sacrificial worship
on a fire pit) to create four Agnikula (four clans of fire)
to protect the earth from demons. The yagna was supposed to
have been performed near a natural spring, which emerged from
a rock shaped like a cow's head.
According
to another legend, once sage Vashishth's cow Nandini was trapped
in a deep gorge and could not free herself. The sage appealed
to Lord Shiva for assistance. The Lord sent Saraswati, the
divine stream, to help flood the gorge so that the cow could
float up. Vashishth then decided to ensure that such mishaps
would not occur in future and asked the youngest son of Himalaya,
the king of mountains to fill the chasm permanently. This
he did with the assistance of Arbud, the mighty snake. This
spot came to be known as Mount Arbud and was later changed
to its present form-Mount Abu.
This
place is held in reverence by Jains as well since Jain scriptures
record that Lord Mahavira, the 24th Jain Tirthankar (spiritual
leader), also visited Mount Abu and blessed the city.
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