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Bihar |
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Of
all India’s states, Bihar is the
one most intimately linked to the
Buddha’s life, resulting in a trail of
pilgrimages which have come to be known
as the Buddhist circuit. The very name
Bihar is derived from the world ’vihara’,
which means Buddhist monastery. The
Buddhist trail begins at the capital
city, Patna, where a noteworthy museum
contains a collection of Hindu and
Buddhist sculptures. The Khuda Baksh
Oriental Library has rare Muslim
manuscripts including some from the
University of Cordoba in Spain. 40 km
away, Vaishali was the site for the
second Buddhist Council as the presence
of ruins testify. 90 km south of Patna
is Nalanda which translates as ’the
place that confers the lotus’ (of
spiritual knowledge). A monastic
university flourished here from the 5th
to the 11th century. It is said to have
contained nine million books, with 2,000
teachers to impart knowledge to 10,000
students who came from all over the
Buddhist world. Lord Buddha himself
taught here and Hieun Tsang, the 7th
century Chinese traveller, was a
student. Ongoing excavations have
uncovered temples, monasteries and
lecture halls.
Rajgir, ‘the royal palace’, 12 km
south, was the venue for the first
Buddhist Council. The Buddha spent five
years at Rajgir after having attained
enlightenment, and many of the remains
at Rajgir commemorate various incidents,
the hill of Gridhrakuta being perhaps
the most important, as this is where the
Buddha delivered most of his sermons.
Bodhgaya is the spot where Lord Buddha
attained enlightenment, with the
Mahabodhi Temple marking the precise
location. Bihar’s Buddhist circuit has
modest back-up facilities by way of
accommodation, international dining and
surface transport. (For those interested
in the Buddhist circuit, it may be
worthwhile to note that Sarnath, in
Uttar Pradesh, close to Varanasi, is an
important part of the circuit, and has
been beautifully developed. Besides the
excavated sites, a museum here houses
several Buddhist icons, among them the
Ashoka Lion, India’s national emblem).
Patna - The imperial city
Patna
once called Pataliputra the
capital of Bihar, is among the world's
oldest capital cities with unbroken
history of many centuries as imperial
metropolis.
A very fertile arched stretch of land
along the bank of the Ganga, the history
and heritage of modern day Patna go back
well over two millennia. Like Delhi,
Patna too had been the regal seat of
governance for successive kingdoms since
ancient times. And to this day, it is
the capital city of the state. As each
ruler ascended in power and established
dynastic glory, he gave his capital a
new name. Thus the ancient Kusumpura
metamorphosed through Pushpapura,
Pataliputra, Azeemabad and now into
Patna, a continuous history ranging from
6th century BC to present times – a
record claimed by few cities in the
world. It was Ajatshatru the Magadha
king who first built a small fort in
Pataligram on the bank of the Ganga in
6th century BC, which later blossomed
into the ancient glory still to be seen
in the neighbouring archaeological sites
at Kumrahar. Bhiknapahari, Agamkuan,
Bulandi Bagh and Kankar Bagh.
Pataliputra dominated the political
fortunes of the whole of north India
between 6th century BC and 5th century
AD, a fact established by archaeological
excavations. After a temporary eclipse,
in 16th century Sher Shah Suri returned
the city to its former glory and
established the present Patna. After the
decline of the Mughals, the British too
found Patna a convenient regional
capital and built a modern extension to
this ancient city and called it
Bankipore. It was in Gandhi Maidan in
this area that Mahatma Gandhi held his
prayer meetings.
|
Altitude: 53 metres.
Temperature (°C):
Summer - Max. 43, Min. 21
Winter - Max. 20, Min. 6
Rainfall: 120 cms
Clothing: Summer - Cottons,
Winter - Heavy Woollens
Best Season: October to March |
How to get there
|
Air: I.A flights connect Patna
with Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi,
Lucknow, Ranchi. |
|
Rail: Patna is connected by
rail to Bombay, Calcutta, Guwahati,
Ranchi, Varanasi. |
|
Road: By road Patna to
Nalanda-90 km, Rajgir-102 km,
Pawapuri-90 km, Gaya-172 km
Bodhgaya-179 km, Raxaul-210 km,
Ranchi-335 km, Muzzafarpur-72 km,
Sasaram- 152 km, Vaishali-56 km,
Calcutta-653 km, Delhi-997 km. |
|
Bus Services: Regular direct
bus services connect Patna to
Calcutta, Rajgir, Nalanda,
Pawapuri, Vaishali, Gaya-Bodhgaya,
Ranchi, Raxaul, Muzzafarpur,
Sasaram. |
|
Local Transport: Auto
Rickshaw, Cycle Rickshaw, Tonga,
Bus and Unmetered Taxi. |
What to see
-
Kumrahar
Archaeological findings in this area
establish Patna’s claim to over a
thousand years of political glory -.
600 BC to 600 AD, and then again, 16th
century onwards, spanning the rule of
several dynasties. Very little of this
grandeur remains though, except the
remnants of a huge Mauryan hall
supported by 80 sandstone pillars
dating back to 400 – 300 BC.
-
Golghar
Alarmed by the famine of 1770, captain
John Garstin built this huge granary
for the British army in 1786. The
massive structure is 29 m high and
walls 3.6 m wide at the base. The
stairway winding around this monument
offers a magnificent panoramic view of
the city and the Ganga flowing by.
-
Har
Mandir Takht
It was in Patna, far from Punjab,
where Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth
Guru of the Sikhs who consolidated the
warrior sect, was born in 1660. The
Har Mandir Takht, one of the four
sacred shrines of the Sikhs, stands at
this holy site, The original temple
was built by Maharaja Ranjit Singh and
contains belongings of the Guru and
Sikh holy texts. As a sign of
reverence, it is also called Patna
Sahib by the Sikhs.
-
Martyrs’ memorial
A memorial to seven freedom fighters
who sacrificed their lives in "Quit
India" movement of August 1942, it is
a modern sculpture facing the
Secretariat where they were shot in
their attempt to hoist the national
flag.
-
Pathar ki Masjid
Adjacent to’Har Mandir Sahib, this
beautiful mosque was built by Parwez
Shah, son of Jehangir, when he was the
governor of Bihar. Situated on the
bank of the Ganga, it is also called
Saif Khan’s mosque, Chimmi Ghat mosque
and Sangi Masjid.
-
Sher
Shah Suri Masjid
Sher Shah Suri built this mosque in
1545 to commemorate his reign. Built
in Afghan architectural style, it is
one of the many beautiful mosques in
Bihar and a landmark in Patna.
-
Khuda
Baksh Oriental Library
A magnificent one man collection of
rare Arabic and Persian manuscripts,
Rajput and Mughal paintings,
assortment of old books and new books
from the university of Cordoba, Spain,
it is one of the national libraries of
India now.
-
Patna
museum
The museum contains a First World War
cannon, metal and stone sculpture of
Maurya and Gupta periods, Buddhist
sculpture, terra-cotta figures. The
famous Didarganj Yakshi of 3rd century
BC and a 16 m long fossilised tree are
some of its special possessions.
-
Jalan
museum
Built at the old site of Sher Shah’s
fart, it has an excellent collection
of jade, Chinese paintings, Mughal
glass and silver filigree carvings. It
is a private collection and visitors
need prior permission.
-
Sadaqat Ashram
It is the headquarters of Bihar
Vidyapeeth, a national university.
India’s first President Dr.Rajendra
Prasad lived here after his retirement
and there is a small museum here
displaying his personal belongings.
-
Maner
About 29 km from Patna, Bari
Dargah, is the cenotaph of the Sufi
Saint Hazrat Makhdoom Yahiya Maner.
The tomb of his disciple Shah Daulat
is also here. It is an important
pilgrimage place for Muslims during
the annual urs.
-
Padri
ki Haveli - an 18th century
catholic church.
-
Biological Park – a zoo cum
botanical garden.
-
Patna
Yoga Vidyalaya. Patna School of Yoga
– famed for excellence of Yoga
teaching.
-
Quila
House (Museum)
-
Laxmi
Narayan Temple
-
Pathar-Ki-Masjid
-
Sanjay
Gandhi Biological Park
-
Rajendra
Mueusm
-
Gandhi
Museum
Excursions
-
Maner 29
kms
-
Sasaram
148 kms
-
Sonepur
25 kms
-
Vaishali
56 kms
-
Nalanda
90 kms
-
Rajgir
102 kms
-
Gaya 174
kms
-
Bodhgaya
179 kms
|
|
Vaishali
Vaishali today is a small village
surrounded by banana and mango groves
and rice fields. But excavations in the
area have brought to light an impressive
historical past. The epic Ramayana tells
the story of the heroic King Vishal who
ruled here. Historians maintain that one
of the world's first democratic
republics with an elected assembly of
representatives flourished here in the
6th century B.C. in the time of the
Vajjis and the Lichhavis. And while
Pataliputra, capital of the Mauryas and
the Guptas, held political sway over the
Gangetic plain, Vaishali was a rich
centre for trade and industry.
Historically important, Vaishali, on the
left bank of the Gandak river, is
spiritually supreme: Lord Buddha visited
this place frequently and at Kolhua,
close by, preached his last sermon. To
commemorate the event, Emperor Ashoka,
in the third century B.C. erected one of
his famous lion pillars here. A hundred
years after the mahaparinirvana of the
Buddha - Vaishali hosted the second
great Buddhist council. Two stupas were
erected to commemorate this event.
Jainism, too, has its origins in
Vaishali, for in 527 B.C., Lord Mahavir
was born on the outskirts of the city,
and lived in Vaishali till he was 22.
Vaishali is then twice blessed and
remains an important pilgrim centre for
both Buddhists and Jains, attracting
also historians foraging for the past.
|
Altitude: 52 metres
Temperature (°C):
Summer Max. 44 Min.21
Winter Max. 23 Min. 6
Rainfall: 120 cms
Best Season: October to March |
How to get there
|
Air: The nearest airport is
Patna 56 km connected by Indian
Airlines to Bombay, Calcutta,
Delhi, Ranchi and Lucknow. |
|
Rail: Hajipur (35 km) on the
North Eastern Railway is the
nearest railway station |
|
Road: Vaishali is connected by
road to Patna (55 km), Muzaffarpur
(36 km) and Hajipur (35 km). |
|
Bus Services: Regular bus
services connect Vaishali to Patna
via Lalgunj, Hajipur and
Muzaffarpur. |
|
Local Transport: Only tongas
and cycle rickshaws are available. |
Places of interest
Special Institutions
The Jain Prakrit Institute offers a
place of study for researchers
interested in Jainology an Prakrit, one
of the spoken languages of Northern
India in ancient times.
Excursions
Visitors must return to Patna (55 km) to
undertake any Excursions they may wish
to organise.
|
|
|
|
Baidyanath Dham (Deoghar)
Baidyanath Dham situated in the
Santhal Parganas of Bihar, is a very
important piligram Centre. It's famous
for the Hindus for the temple of Shiva-Baidyanath
and the place is a popular holiday
Centre.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer - Max 36.9, Min 23
Winter - Max 27.7, Min 7.4
Best Season: October to
February |
How to get there
|
Rail: The nearest Railway
Station is Baidyanath Dham (Deoghar)
which is a terminal station of a 7
kms branch line orignating from
Jasidih Jn. |
|
Road: By road Baidyanath Dham
(Deoghar) to Calcutta 373 kms,
Giridih 112 kms, Patna 281 kms,
Dumka 67 kms, Madhupur 57 kms,
Shimultala 53 kms etc. |
|
Bus Services: Long distance
buses connect Baidyanath Dham with
Bhagalpur, Hazaribagh, Ranchi,
Tatanagar, Gaya etc. |
|
Local Transport: Unmetered
Taxis, Scooters, Cycle Ricksaws
are available. |
Places of interest
-
Baidyanath Temple
-
Nandan
Pahar
-
Naulakha
Mandir
-
Satsang
Ashram
-
Tapovan
Excursions
-
Basakinath Temple (42 kms): Famous for
Shiva Temple
-
Harila
Joria (8 kms): Famous for Shiva Temple
-
Trikut
(16 kms): Sources of the River
Mayurakshi
Miscellaneous
-
Shopping
Centres: Bihar State Handloom Emporium
-
Santhal
Parganas Gramodyog Samittee
-
Santhal
Parganas Khadi Gramodyog Bhavan
-
Yoga
Institution: Balanand Ashram Yogashala,
Karnibagh.
|
Gaya
Bihar
has some of the most sacred Buddhist and
Hindu shrines. Gaya is one of the most
important pilgrimage places for the
Hindus. It is believed that a Hindu will
reach heaven if his last rites are
offered under the celebrated
’Akshayabat’ or immortal banyan tree,
standing in the yard of Vishnupad
temple. Believed to be built on the
footsteps of Vishnu, the grand temple
was renovated by Ahalyabai, queen of
Indore.
Around
Gaya
-
Brahma - Yoni, Ramshila,
Pretishila – beautiful hills.
-
Deo
– 20 km from Gaya, Surya temple here
is the site of famous Chhath puja in
November. Kurkihar - ancient
habitation with ruins. Presumed to be
the Kukkutapadagiri mentioned by Hiuen
Tsang in 7th century.
-
Barabar caves – 40 km from Gaya,
earliest Buddhist rock cut caves.
Sasaram – 123 km from Gaya, tombs of
Sher Shah Suri, his father and son.
There is a cave with Ashokan edicts
and a Dargah on Chandan Pir Hill.
-
Pawapuri
In Pawapuri or Apapuri, 38 km from
Rajgir and 90 km from Patna, all sins
end for a devout Jain. Lord Mahavira
breathed his last here and was
cremated here. People took away not
only the ashes but also the scooped
out earth and thus a tank came into
being. Now the famous Jalamandir
marble temple stands at the site.
There is another Jain temple here viz.
Samosharan.
-
Parasnath hill
It is believed that 22’ tirthankars’
out of 24 attained salvation here and
is one of the most sacred pilgrim
centres for the Jains.
-
Call
of the hills
The Chotanagpur plateau is one of the
most beautiful areas in Bihar. Studded
with hills 300 – 900m in altitude and
covered with verdant virgin forests,
this area of rivers, lakes, meadows
and valleys is an ideal retreat of
peace and beauty. Rich in wildlife,
these forests are an anthropologist’s
delight, since the ancient lifestyle
of the tribes like Santhal, Ho, Munda,
Oraon, Koi, Chero, Kharia, Paharia has
remained essentially unaltered.
-
Ranchi
This erstwhile summer capital of Bihar
is 676 m in altitude and is a
beautiful hill station. There. are
beautiful water falls around, with
lilting names like Hundru, Jonha,
Dasamghagh and Himi. Other landmarks
are a Shiva temple on a hill top with
Ranchi lake at the foot of the hill,
and Morabadi hill and Tagore hill.
-
Hazaribagh
A small hill resort 93 km from Ranchi
and 616 m above sea level, though
having usual lakes and hills, is more
famous for its wildlife sanctuary.
Wildlife like bear, nilgai, sambar,
chital, tiger, panther, kakar, etc.
can be viewed from 10 watch towers.
February – March and October –
November are the best seasons for
visiting here. Tilaiya dam 63 km away
is a picnic spot.
-
Netarhat
Called the ’Queen of Chotanagpur’ this
exquisite little hill station has
fantastic sunrise and sunset. Situated
1127 m above sea level, it has
beautiful waterfalls around, like
Upper Ghagri and Lower Ghagri.
-
Palamau
A popular tourist resort 140 km from
Ranchi. Betla National Park is nearby
where gaur, chital, elephant, sloth
bear, wild bear, sambar, nilgai, kakar,
chinkara, mouse deer, dhole, tiger and
panther can be seen. This is one of
the Tiger Project Reserves. There are
tree top towers, watch towers and
ground level hideouts for professional
photographers. February – March and
October - November are the best
seasons and excellent accommodation is
available here.
-
Jamshedpur
It is one of India’s earliest planned
cities and to this day beautifully
maintained and managed, in spite of
being an industrial township.
Industrial giants like TISCO, TELCO
are situated here. Surrounded by the
Dolma hills, it has retained its hill
station atmosphere.
-
Damodar Valley
Site of one of the earliest power
projects, river Damodar is harnessed
here in a massive network. Maithon.
Panchet and Tilaiya are the major
dams.
-
Dhanbad
This centre of coal mining and
industries lies 171 km from Jamshedpur
and is famous for the picturesque
Topehanchi lake nearby. Bokaro Steel
Complex is 47 km away.
-
Bhagalpur
Famous for its silk and a university
town today, it has a long heritage of
learning. The ruins of the ancient
Vikramshila university is 42 km away.
Rock cut temple at Colganj and Vishnu
temple on a hill top are tourist
attractions.
-
Monghyr
The little town has nothing to show
today for its long history except a
Mughal fort and a temple, but it was
once the capital of the ancient Anga
kingdom. The British conquered Bihar
in the battle of Buxar at Buxar
nearby. There is a sound and light
show at Buxar recounting the story of
Ramayana and history of India.
How to get there
Gaya is an important railway junction.
There are bus services from all
important towns of Bihar.
Where to stay
Many dharamshalas, modest hotels and
rest house are available.
|
|
Bodhgaya
Bodhgaya is one of the sacred places
for the Buddhists as well as for the
Hindus. Here under the Bodhi Tree,
Gautama attained supreme knowledge to
become Budhha, the `Enlighted One'.
"The Buddha once lived here"
Lord Buddha the gentle colossus who
founded the first universal religion of
the world, worked and lived much of his
life in Bihar though he was born in
Kapilavastu, now in Nepal. Most of the
major events of his life, like
enlightenment and last sermon happened
in Bihar. Significantly. the state’s
name originated from ’Vihara’ meaning
Buddhist and Jain monasteries, which
abounded in Bihar.
Though the Buddha was born as a Sakya
prince in the Terai foothills of the
Himalayas, Buddhism as a religion was
really born in Bihar and evolved here
through his preaching and the example of
his lifestyle of great simplicity,
renunciation and empathy for everything
living. Perhaps the present day life of
trauma and tension reminds us of the
other alternative that was always
available to us, the Buddha’s way of
life, gentle and simple.
Several centuries after Buddha’s passing
away, the Maurya emperor Ashoka (234-198
BC) contributed tremendously towards the
revival, consolidation and spread of the
original religion. It is the monasteries
Ashoka built for the Buddhist monks and
the pillars erected to commemorate
innumerable historical sites associated
with the Buddha’s life, mostly intact to
this day, that helped scholars and
pilgrims alike to trace the life events
and preachings of a truly extraordinary
man.
The Buddha attained enlightenment in
Bodhgaya, under the Bodhi tree, 10 km
from Gaya. the ancient Hindu pilgrimage
centre. The tree from the original
sapling still stands in the temple
premises. It is the most important
Buddhist pilgrimage centre as Buddhisrn
was born here.
The magnificent Mahabodhi temple in
Bodhgaya is an architectural
amalgamation of many centuries cultures
and many heritages that came to pay
their homage here. The temple definitely
has architecture of the Gupta and later
ages, inscriptions describing visits of
pilgrims from Sri Lanka, Myanmar and
China between 7th and 10th century AD.
It is perhaps still the same temple
Hiuen Tsang visited in 7th century.
|
Altitude: 113 metres
Teperature(°C):
Summer- Max.47, Min.28
Winter- Max.28, Min.4
Rainfall: 186 cms ( Mid. June
to Mid. September )
Best Season: October to March |
How to get there
|
Air: Nearest airport is Gaya
12 kms. However convienent airport
is Patna. Indian Airlines connect
Patna to Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi,
Ranchi & Lucknow. |
|
Rail: The nearest railhead is
at Gaya, 12 kms. |
|
Road: Bodh Gaya is connected
by road to Gaya 12 kms, Nalanda 62
kms, Rajgir 46 kms, Patna 152 kms,
Varanasi 215 kms, Calcutta 482 kms. |
|
Bus Services: Daily bus
services connect Bodhgaya with
Gaya, Patna, Nalanda, Rajgir,
Varanasi etc. |
|
Local Transport: Cycle
Rickshaws, Tongas, Auto Rickshaws
are available. |
Places of interest
-
Mahabodhi Temple
-
Animeshlocan Chaiyata
-
Mohanta's Monastery
-
Ratnagar
-
Archaeological Museum
-
Tibetan
Monastery
-
Thai
Temple & Monastery
-
International Buddhist House &
Japanese Temple
-
Buddhist
Monastery of Bhutan
-
The
Burmese Temple
-
The
Chinese Temple & Monastery
Excursions
|
|
Nalanda
Founded
in the 5th centuary A.D. Nalanda is
known as the ancient seat of learning.
World's most ancient University lies in
ruins which is 62 kms from Bodhgaya and
90 kms south of Patna. Emperor Ahoka
built many monastries, temples and
Viharas here.
Though the Buddha visited Nalanda
several times during his lifetime, this
famous centre of Buddhist learning shot
to fame much later, during 5th-12th
centuries. Hiuen Tsang stayed here in
7th century and has left detailed
description of the excellence of
education and purity of monastic life
practiced here. In this first
residential international university of
the world, 2,000 teachers and 10,000
students from all over the Buddhist
world lived and studied here. The Gupta
kings patronised these monasteries,
built in old Kushan architectural style,
in a row of cells around a courtyard.
Ashoka and Harshavardhana were some of
its most celebrated patrons who built
temples and monasteries here. Recent
excavations have unearthed elaborate
structures here. Hiuen Tsang had left
ecstatic accounts of both the ambiance
and architecture of this unique
university of ancient times. An
international Centre for Buddhist
Studies was established here in 1951.
Nearby is Bihar Sharif, where an annual
urs is celebrated at the Dargah or tomb
of Malik Ibrahim Baya. Baragaon, 2 km
away has a sun temple, famous for Chhath
puja. To be visited are Nalanda museum &
Nava Nalanda Mahavihar in addition to
the great ruins.
|
Altitude: 67 metres.
Temperature (°C):
Summer- Max. 37.8, Min. 17.8
Winter- Max.27.8, Min.10.6
Rainfall: 120 cms (June to
September)
Best Season: October to March. |
How to get there
|
Air: The nearest airport is at
Patna 89 kms. Indian Airlines
connect Patna to Calcutta, Ranchi,
Bombay, Delhi and Lucknow. |
|
Rail: Though Rajgir (12 kms)
is the nearest railway station to
Nalanda yet the nearest convenient
railheadis at Gaya 65 kms. |
|
Road: Nalanda is connected by
good road with Rajgir 12 kms, Bodh
Gaya 50 kms, Gaya 65 kms, Patna 90
kms, Pawapuri 26 kms, Bihar Sharif
13 kms etc. |
|
Local Transport: There are no
taxis available in Nalanda. Cycle
rickshws and tongas are the only
modes of transport. |
What to see
-
Hieun
Tsang Memorial Hall, The Nalanda
University Complex, Swarajpur Baragon.
The Nalanda Museum (Opens 1000 to 1700
hours. Closed on Friday.)
-
Lauria
Areraj
A 11.5 m high Ashokan column was
erected here in 249 BC. The polished
sandstone pillar has six edicts on it.
The site is 30 km from Motihari.
-
Lauria
Nandangarh
This site, 23 km from Bettiah and 14
km from Shikarpur, has the famous lion
pillar erected by Ashoka. The 8.5 m
polished sandstone column also has an
edict engraved on it. Nearby there are
the remains of Nandangarh Stupa,
believed to contain the ashes of the
Buddha.
Excursion
-
Bihar
Sharif 13 kms
-
Gaya 65
kms
-
Bodh
Gaya 50 kms
-
Rajgir
12 kms
Places of interest
-
Mahabodhi Temple
-
Animeshlocan Chaiyata
-
Mohanta's Monastery
-
Ratnagar
-
Archaeological Museum
-
Tibetan
Monastery
-
Thai
Temple & Monastery
-
International Buddhist House &
Japanese Temple
-
Buddhist
Monastery of Bhutan
-
The
Burmese Temple
-
The
Chinese Temple & Monastery
Excursions
|
|
Rajgir
46 kms
from Bodhgaya, Rajgir is sacred to
the memory of the founders of both
Buddhism and Jainism. Rajgir today is
vestiges of a legendary and historical
remains like the cyclopean wall and the
marks engraved in rocks.
Rajagriha in Patna district was the
ancient capital city of the Magadha
kings. The Buddha often came here to
retreat at the Jivkamaravana monastery
in a beautiful orchard. One of his most
devoted and prosperous devotees, surgeon
Jivaka also lived here. The rich
merchant community here soon became the
Buddha’s followers and built many
structures of typical Buddhist
architecture. The Buddha converted the
Mauryan king Bimbisara, one of his most
celebrated followers at the Griddhakuta
hill, where he delivered many of his
sermons as well. The Japanese have built
a Stupa on top of the Ratnagiri hill,
linked by a ropeway. After the Buddha
reached ’parinirvana’ his followers met
at the Saptaparni cave in Rajagriha, the
first Buddhist Council ever held. It was
here that the teachings of the Buddha
were penned down for the first time.
Rajgir is also an important place of
pilgrimage for the Hindus and Jains.
Other places to be visited are Bimbisara
ka jail, Jarasandha ka akhara, Venuvana,
Karand tank, Maniyar math, Swamabhandar
cave, Pippala cave, Viswa Shanti Stupa,
the famous hot water springs and ruins
of an old fort.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer- Max. 45, Min. 20
Winter- Max. 28, Min. 6
Rainfall: 186 cms (Mid-June to
Mid-September)
Best Season: October to March. |
How to get there
|
Air: The nearest airport is at
Patna 101 kms. Indian Airlines
connect Patna to Calcutta, Bombay,
Delhi, Ranchi and Lucknow. |
|
Rail: Though Rajgir itself is
the railway station yet the
nearest convenient railhead is at
Gaya 34 kms. |
|
Road: Rajgir is connected by
road to Patna 102 kms, Nalanda 12
kms, Gaya 34 kms, Pawapuri 38 kms,
Bihar Sharif 25 kms etc. |
|
Bus: Regular buses are
available from all the above said
points to Rajgir. |
|
Local Transport: Taxis and
Buses and Tongas are available. |
Places of interest
Excursions
-
Bihar
Sharif- 25 kms
-
Nalanda-
12 kms
-
Sawarajpur Baragaon
-
Gaya- 34
kms
-
Bodh
Gaya- 50 kms
-
Kundalpurr- 18 kms
-
Pawapuri:
38 kms. Pawapuri is also known as
Apapuri, is a sacred Jain pilgrim
centre. Jalmandir, a marble temple in
the centre of a big lotus tank, is the
biggest attraction here. Other Places
of interest here are Samosaran and
Naya mandir. It was here thet Mahavir
delivered his last sermon and was also
cremated.
|
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Ranchi
Ranchi is picturesquely situated
in the valley of Chotanagpur at an
altitude of 2140 feet (654.5 metres)
above sea level. It is well known for
its scenic attractions waterfalls,
salubrious climate, glades, barren rocks
and verdant hillocks. It has a number of
industrial field. Ranchi is also a
central place for the study of tribal
ways of life.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer- Max 37.2, Min 20.6
Winter- Max 22.3, Min 10.3
Rainfall: 1530 mm (61.2
inches) annual
Best Season: September to May |
How to get there
|
Air: Ranchi is connected by
regular Indian Airlines services
with Calcutta, Patna, Bombay and
New Delhi. |
|
Rail: Ranchi is on the South
Eastern Railway and is directly
connected with Calcutta, Patna,
Rourkela etc. |
|
Road: Ranchi is situated on
National Highway No.23 & 33 and
there are nets of good roads
around it. Ranchi is directly
connected by regular bus services
with all the main places in the
state and also outside the state. |
Places of interest
Excursions
-
Hundru
Falls (320 ft.) 45 kms
-
Johna
Falls (140 ft.) 40 kms
-
Dassamghagh Falls (144 ft.) 34 kms
-
Hirni
Falls 75 kms
-
Netarhat
156 kms
|
|
Hazaribagh
Nestling
in low hilly terrain,
at an average altitude of 1800 ft. (615
metres) this 183.89 sq. kms National
Park has an abundance of wild animals,
i.e. wild Boar, Sambar, Nilgai, Chital,
Sloth Bear, tiger and Panthar. The 1970
census has established the presence of
14 tigers, 25 Panthers and 400 Sambars.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer- Max. 41.1, Min. 19.4
Winter- Max. 25.5, Min. 7.
Best Season: October to March |
How to get there
|
Air: The nearest airport
Ranchi (91 kms) is connected with
Calcutta, Patna, Lucknow and Delhi
by regular Indian Airlines
service. |
|
Rail: Nearest railway station
is Koderma which is 59 kms away or
alternately one can apporach the
National Park from Hazaribagh Road
railway station (67 kms) on the
Howarh-Delhi Grand Chord line. |
|
Road: Hazaribagh town is
connected by road to Ranchi 91 kms,
Dhanbad 128 kms, Gaya 130 kms,
Patna 235 kms, Daltonganj 198 kms,
Calcutta (via
Asansol-Govindapur-Barhi) 434 kms. |
|
Bus: The Hazaribagh National
Park is 19 kms from the Hazaribag
town. Regular bus services connect
the town with Koderma, Hazaribagh
Road rly station, Patna, Gaya,
Ranchi, Dhanbad, Dalotongunj and
other nearby places. |
|
Internal Transport: Unmetered
Taxis, Auto Ricksaws, Cycle
Ricksaws and Taxis are available
for the park from the Hazaribagh
town. The approximate charges for
car is Rs.160 for bothway journey. |
Excursions
-
Canari
Hill (5 kms): Cycle Rickshaws
available from the Hazaribagh town.
-
Rajrappa
Falls (89 kms): State Transport Bus
operates daily an early morning
service to this place from the town.
-
Suraj
Kund (72 kms): Hot spring. Buses are
available from the town.
|
|
Palamau National Park (Betla)
Palamau
has the distinction of being the forest
where the world's first tiger census was
enumerated in 1932. Large herds of Gaur
& Chital are commonly seen. Elephants
are present mostly after the monsoons
upto the time when the water holes begin
to dry up in March. Tiger, Panther,
Sloth Bear, Wild Bear, Sambar, Nilgai,
Deer are also permanent residents.
Palamau National Park is now a part of
one of nine tiger reserves in India
under "Project Tiger".
|
Area: Total Area- 1026 sq.km.,
Buffer Zone- 813 sq.km., Core
Area- 213 sq.km., Tourist Zone- 35
sq.km.
Established on: June 1974.
Altitude: 300 to 1140 metres.
Temperature (deg C):
Summer- Max.47, Min.28
Winter- Max.23, Min.07
Best Season: October to March.
Languages Spoken: Hindi,
English. |
How to get there
|
Air: Nearest airport Ranchi is
161 kms away from Betla. Daily
Indian Airlines service connects
Ranchi with Calcutta, Patna,
Lucknow and Delhi. |
|
Rail: The nearest railhead is
at Daltonganj 25 kms from Betla.
And the second nearest railway
station is Ranchi 161 kms from
Betla. |
|
Road: Good motorable road
connects Betla to Daltonganj 25
kms, Ranchi 171 kms, Patna 384 kms,
Hazaribagh 190 kms, Netarhat 211
kms, Calcutta 575 kms. |
|
Bus: Regular direct bus
services are available from Ranchi
and Hazaribagh to Daltonganj via
Khudia Morh from where Betla is 6
kms. |
Facilities
There are
3 elephants of the Department of Tourism
and one jeep of the ForestDepartment to
take the tourists around the park with
guide and spotlight. Five Watch Towers
from where animals can be observed and
photographs taken.
|
|
Dhanbad
Dhanbad
is one of the most important industrial
centres in India. In and around Dhanbad
is the richest mineral wealth of India.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer Max- 22, Min- 08
Winter Max- 44, Min- 22
Rainfall: 1418 mms (July to
September)
Best Season: October to March
Clothings: Summer -
Cotton/Tropical; Winter - Light
Woollen
Languages Spoken: Hindi,
Bengali and English |
How to get there
|
Air: Dhanbad is connected by
Vayudoot Service with Patna and
Ranchi which in turn connected by
Indian Airlines services with
Calcutta and Delhi. |
|
Rail: Dhanbad has an important
railway station on Eastern Railway
and is very well connected with
Patna,Calcutta and other important
Cities in India. |
|
Road: Dhanbad is very well
connected by roads with important
towns in Bihar. |
What to see
-
Central
Mining Research Station
-
Central
Fuel Reaserch Institute
-
Directorate General of Mines Safety
-
Mining
College
Excursions
-
The
collieries, various technical
institutions and research centres of
high order, attractives neighbourhood
and the landscapes are the attractions
of this industrial city.
-
Topchanchi: 37 kms. This is a
beautiful lake, surrounded by green
hills.
-
Jharia:
Suburts of Dhanbad, is rich colliery
centre & has entensive commerce.
-
Sindri:
30 kms. Fertiliser & other factories &
Bihar Institute of Technology.
-
Maithon
Dam: 52 kms. D.V.C Dam.
-
Panchet
Dam: D.V.C Dam.
|
Galudih
Galudih
lies in small hills and attracts the
tourist for its natural beauty with calm
and quiet atmosphare. In the rainy
season the hills, the jungles, the
agricultural lands make Galudih green.
Though the best season is July to March
but actually tourist can visit Galudih
throughout the year.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer Max- 22, Min- 08
Winter Max- 44, Min- 22
Rainfall: 1418 mms (July to
September)
Best Season: October to March
Clothings: Summer -
Cotton/Tropical; Winter - Light
Woollen
Languages Spoken: Hindi,
Bengali and English |
How to get there
|
Air: The nearest airport
Calcutta is 248 kms from Galudih. |
|
Rail: Nearest railway stations
Galudih, Ghatshila (8 kms) &
Jamshedpur (44 kms) are directly
connected by Indian rail with
Galudih. Beter to get down at
Ghatshila by 8011 Howrah-Rourkela
Ispat express (4 hours journey
from Howrah) and then to Galudih
by auto-rickshaw. |
|
Road: By road Galudih to
Calcutta-248 kms, Tatanagar- 44
kms, Ghatshila- 12 kms. |
Places of interest
-
Suvarnarekha River: Suvarnarekha means
the golden line. One can easily make a
morning-walk using station-side road
to reach the river. Barrage on the
river is also an another attraction
here. But the most interesting venture
here is to cross the river by
bullock-cart to reach the hilly
village other bank of the river.
-
Satgurum:
15 kms towards the north-side of the
tourist lodge its an another river
here. Seven streams of the river
encircle seven separate hills seven
times, hence the river is named as
Satgurum. Trecking to the hills
through the jungle-path full of
unknown trees and flowers are the best
attraction here. Elephants may also be
seen in the jungles.
Excursions
-
Tatanagar
-
Dimna
Lake (Tatanagar)
-
Jubili
Park (Tatanagar)
-
Burudihi
Lake
-
Dharagiri
-
Jadugorar Jungle
-
Devi
Rakshkhini Temple
-
Copper
Mines
-
Ghatshila
|
Giridh
32 kms from Madhupur,
Giridh is now a District Town of Bihar.
Regular Buses connect Giridh with Munger,
Dhanbad, Bhagalpur, Koderma and other
places. Usri falls is only 11 kms away
from Giridh. Tongas are available as the
main local transport here.
Miscellaneous information
-
Restaurants: Khalsa Hindu Hotel,
Lakshmi Hotel, Sinha Hotel, Nandan
Hotel, Padam Hotel.
-
Bar:
Milan Bar
-
Club:
Lions Club, Giridih Club.
-
Banks:
United Bank of India,UCo Bank,Bank of
India,State Bank of India.
|
Jamshedpur (Tatanagar)
This is the place where the
foundation of Indian Steel Industry
was laid in the end of the last century.
Late Jamshedji was the founder of this
city who founded Tata Iron and Steel
Company at this site. This city is named
after the founder and has two names
Jamshedpur & Tatanagar. It is heavily
industrialized but very clean and
modern.
|
Climate: Tropical Max 46.7 C,
Min 6.1 C |
How to get there
|
Air: Tatanagar is connected
with Calcutta by Vayudoot Flights
which in turn is connected to
major cities in India. |
|
Rail: Tatanagar (Jamshedpur)
is an important railway junction
station on the South Eastern
Railway and is connected directly
to all the major cities of India,
viz. Calcutta, Bombay, Patna,
Ranchi, Puri etc. |
|
Road: Jamshedpur is connected
by road with most of the major
cities in India. Regular bus
services are available from
Jamshedpur to Ranchi 131 kms,
Patna, Gaya, Calcutta 252 kms,
Hazaribagh etc. |
|
Internal Transport: Mini
Buses, Taxies, Auto Rickshaws and
Cycle Ricksaws are available in
all parts of the town. |
Places of interest
-
Jubilee
Park: This is 200 Acre Park with a
mini golf course and a lake.
-
Dimna
Lake: 8 miles from Jamshedpur nestling
at the foot of Dalma hills.
-
Rivers
Meet: The confluence of rivers Kharkai
and Suberurekha is located.
-
Dalma
Hills: North of Subarurenkha river it
stretches from east to west by about
16 kms. It is accessible by Jeepable
road.
-
Aditypur:
An Industrial colony & Technical
institute to train Engineers.
Excursions
-
Jaduquora: Located on Hata-Musabani
road and is about 40 kms from
Jamshedpur.
-
Musabani:
40 kms from Jamshedpur, Copper Mines
are located.
-
Noamundi:
64 kms South West of Chaibasa. It is
mining centre for Iron ores.
-
Ghatshila: 23 miles east of Jamshedpur,
Ghatshila is the birth-place of late
Bibhuti Bhushan Bandyapadhaya, a
famous writer. Timber industries are
situated here.
Water Falls
-
Durga
Mahadeva: 4 miles of Tromundi has 6
water falls from a height of 50 ft.
-
Hirni
falls: 42 miles north of Chaibasa on
Ranchi - Chaibasa Road.
Accommodation: There is an Inspection
Bunglow here.
-
Dasam
falls: 62 miles from Jamshedpur on
Tata - Ranchi Road.
Accommodation: Forest Deparment
Bunglow is available here.
Forests
-
Kolhan
Forest
-
Chaibasa
Forest
-
Saranda
Forest
-
Dalbhum
Jungle
-
Porhat
Forest
|
Jasidih
29 kms.
An Important Railway Junction for
Baidyanathdham Trains.
Where To Stay
Restaurants:
Dinabandhu
Hotel, Janata Hotel, Railway Catering
etc.
Banks:
Allahabad
Bank.
|
Netarhat
Popularly called the `Queen of
Chhotanagpur'
Netarhat is 154 km west of Ranchi Town.
It is a plateau covered with thick
forests situated at a height of 3,700
feet or 1128 metres. Generally people
visit this place to enjoy the breath
taking Sunrise and Sunset.
|
Temperature (°C):
Summer - Max 30, Min 16
Winter - Max 10, Min 1.
Best Season: Throughout the
year |
How to get there
|
Air: Nearest Airport Ranchi
(154 kms) is connected by Indian
Airlines flights with Bombay,
Patna, Calcutta & New Delhi. |
|
Rail: Nearest Railway Station
is Ranchi 154 kms. Though Rajgir
(12 kms) is the nearest railway
station to Nalanda yet the nearest
convenient railheadis at Gaya 65
kms. |
|
Road: Nalanda is connected by
good road with Rajgir 12 kms, Bodh
Gaya 50 kms, Gaya 65 kms, Patna 90
kms, Pawapuri 26 kms, Bihar Sharif
13 kms etc. |
|
Local Transport: There are no
taxis available in Nalanda. Cycle
rickshws and tongas are the only
modes of transport. |
What to see
-
Hieun
Tsang Memorial Hall
-
The
Nalanda University Complex
-
Swarajpur Baragon
-
The
Nalanda Museum (Opens 1000 to 1700
hours. Closed on Friday.)
Excursions
-
Bihar
Sharif 13 kms
-
Gaya 65
kms
-
Bodh
Gaya 50 kms
-
Rajgir
12 kms
|
Shimultala
A popular
Health Resort.
Deoghar (55 kms) is connected by Bus.
Local
Transport:
Cycle
Rickshaw, Tongas and Station Wagon.\
What
to see
-
Haldi
Jharna - 3 kms
-
Soikitia
- 3 kms
-
Lattu
Pahar - 2 kms
|
Tilaiya Dam
It is the
first Dam
and hydro -Electric power Station
constructed by Damodar Valley
Corporation across Barakar river in
Hazaribag district. It is 1,200 ft. long
and 99 ft. high. It is situated in an
ideal surrounding with a Reservoir
streching in 36 sq. kms. The main object
is to control floods.The hydro -electric
station produces only 4,000k. watt. The
beautiful natural surroundings are the
attraction to tourists . the main road
from Barhi on G.T.road throughreservoir
and the hillocks is picturesque.
How to get there
|
Rail: railway station is
Kodarma on Grand Chord line of the
Eastern Railway |
|
Road: s on Patna - Ranchi Road
. 17 kms. from Barhi and 194 kms.
from patna .
The distance from kodarma Railway
Station is 19 Kms. Buses ply
between Kodarma and Hazaribag
through Tilaya Dam. |
Places of interest
-
Hydro.
Electric Power House.
-
Terrace
Gardens on the hillock Deer Park.
-
Picnic
Island with swimming corner
approachable by motor beats available
on hire.
|
Vihara
an ancient land
Like in many ancient civilisations
Indian way of life was also clustered
around its magnificent rivers. And, few
rivers of the world have moulded the
culture, economy and personality of the
people evolving on their banks as the
great river Ganga. Cutting straight
across Bihar from west to east, the
bounteous Ganga had made the region so
fertile and plentiful that its natural
prosperity nurtured to veritable
fountainhead of political and cultural
civilizations down the millennia. And,
the unbelievable range and quantity of
mineral wealth buried under the region
certainly helped. To this day, the coal
belt in Bihar is the mainstay of thermal
energy in north India. Bihar has 41% of
the total mineral wealth of India. Here,
kingdom after kingdom rose and fell,
leaving their indelible mark on history.
Rival kings fought legendary battles,
devastating the land and people. Yet, by
some strange alchemy, the same land saw
the birth or maturity of some of the
most gentle and progressive religious
teachers like the Buddha, Mahavira and
Guru Gobind Singh. Then came the
Muslims, ruling with panache for five
centuries, to be eliminated in their
turn by the ever expanding colonisation
of the English, who ruled till the
middle of this century. Bihar today is a
quaint interface of the old and new.
Hallowed by the footsteps of the Buddha,
the fertile plains remain rich in farm
lands growing paddy, cotton, sugar cane,
wheat, maize, barley, jute and fruit.
Bihar’s modern visage sports some of
India’s largest steel and mining
industries.
|
Arts & crafts
Bihar has its usual assortment of rural
handicrafts of hand painted wall
hangings, wooden stools, miniatures in
paper and leaves, stone pottery, bamboo
and leather goods and appliqué work. But
Bihar’s most famous indigenous art is
Madhubani paintings. Originally humble
expressions of the sheer creativity of
the rural women, this village wall
paintings now adorn gracious city homes
and are exported. This art is a strict
monopoly of the women of Mithila. Done
in primary colours of natural origin on
paper and cloth, they narrate
mythological and religious events.
However, the ancient designs in bright
colours can still be seen on the mud
walls in the districts of Champaran,
Saharsa, Muzaffarpur, Vaishali,
Darbhanga, Samastipur. Begusarai, Purnea,
Bhagalpur and of course, Madhubani the
trade centre for this unique art.
|
Wildlife sanctuaries
-
Hazaribagh wildlife sanctuary – 107 km
from Ranchi, February - March, October
- November.
-
Palamau
tiger reserve - February - March,
October – November. 180 km from Ranchi.
Lawalong wildlife sanctuary - October
- June, 100 km from Gaya.
-
Mahuadanu wildlife sanctuary –
November – June, 80 km from Daltanganj.
-
Dalma
wildlife sanctuary –October - June, 10
km from Jamshedpur.
-
Rajgir
wildlife sanctuary – October –
June,102 km from Patna. -
-
Topchanchi wildlife sanctuary –
October – June, close to Dhanbad.
-
Valmikinagar wildlife sanctuary -
October - June, 100 km from Bettiah.
-
Gautam
Buddha wildlife sanctuary – 45 km from
Gaya.
-
Kabar
Lake bird sanctuary – November –
March, 22 km from Begusarai.
|
Fairs & Festivals
In the
true spirit of its multi religious
heritage, Bihar celebrates its many
religious festivals and fairs of great
local appeal. Like most ancient fairs in
India, Sonepur fair is also steeped in
mythology and folklore. Today, it is a
fantastic cattle fair, perhaps the
largest in Asia. The fortnight long fair
is held on the full moon day of Kartik
(November) and all manners of domestic
and farm animals are bought and sold.
Buddha was born, attained enlightenment
and passed away, all on the same full
moon day of April/May, Thus, Vaisakhi
Poornima, one of the most beautiful full
moon nights in the year, is celebrated
as Buddha Jayanti.
Bihar being a holy land for the Jains as
well, two major Jain festivals are
celebrated here - Mahavir Jayanti at
Parasnath Hill in April and Deo Deewali,
which commemorates the final liberation
of Lord Mahavira.
Unique in Bihar is Chhath Puja, or
worship of the sun god. Most famous one
is at the sun temple in Baragaon near
Nalanda, where new paddy, sweets and
fruits are offered in
worship. Traditional Indian festivals of
Ramnavami, Dassehra, Diwali and Holi are
also celebrated with great extravaganza
in Bihar.
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