Sunday, April 13, 2014

Daulatabad

 Our first day trip away from Aurangabad took us to the the 14th century fort of Daulatabad.  Not more than 30 minutes away and we saw the fort high on a hill.  We then found ourselves winding our way through some of the outer gates and finding our way to the parking lot and entrance.  Armed with our camera and water bottles we started our adventure through the grounds and upward towards the fort.
This was the roadway into Daulatabad.  The gates and the fort itself employed the defensive technique of disorientation by requiring lots of turns and dark corners for an enemy that was able to breech a doorway or gate.  The biggest challenge now was that it only alloys for one way traffic.


H and N inspect one of many cannons throughout the fort.  Others were located in the alcoves on the right as well.

H finds the perfect passageway through an ancient doorway. 

Biggest cannon yet...but bigger ones were to come later in the day. 

Mom is always happy to snap pictures of the elephant carvings.  This was one of many.

H wanted to climb up.  We also thought this would be a good place for Rapunzel to drop her hair.

We marched past the minaret in the background and then found this tower with one of the fort's most famous cannons with ram's head.  While off it's mount we could see the original brass mount that allowed the cannon to spin a full 360 degrees around this tower.  N waited patiently for this picture as the cannon was being mobbed by a school group when we arrived who all straddled the cannon, clearly ignoring the instructions on the nearby sign.

Like Hyderabad, Daulatabad was mostly Muslim territory as indicated by the large minaret and this mosque.  Other mosques were located around the site as well as Hindu shrines that were built in later years.

Dad and N found a carved passageway in the rock to pose for this picture.  At this point much of the pathways, rooms, and other elements of the fort were carved right out of the rock.


As usual, H couldn't resist climbing.  He hates heights so he's really more of a crawler than a climber.  In any case, it's hard to keep him off of areas like this.

Exploring the pathway from the outer gates to the fort entrance.

There were a couple of school groups visiting on the same day.  They spent quite a bit of time chasing us down and demanding photos.

We usually travel on our own so having Mustafa along with us to snap a family picture was really nice.  This was near the bottom of the climb.
As we got to the main fort entrance it went right into the face of the rock.  The only way up was through caves full of bats.  Dad and Mustafa were the only ones that went on at this point.

This photo shows how steep the hill is where the fort is located.  The moat which was carved around the circumference of the fort and was  once filled with crocodiles is visible on the left.

The view from the top.  The orange minaret is visible just left of center and many of the outer fort walls can be seen wandering their way around the flat areas below. 

2 comments:

  1. Thanks! This was fun to read. I feel a bit as though I had been there with you all.

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  2. IB Core Seminar is Grandma Jan. Sorry.

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