A Bard Sings a Story in Jhansi

 

Lets face it, Jhansi is not really up there on the tourist circuit. But then again, who hasn’t heard of it? Made famous by Rani Lakshmibai, who still exemplifies courage and defiance, whose story the bards of Bundelkhand still sing….well, I like to think the guide sounded like one, reciting lines from the famous poem at the fort as the sun went down over the ramparts, giving me goose-pimples.

 

Reaching Jhansi

The colours flow down the fort wall

We were to RV with the cousins at Jhansi but the train was running late as we crossed the low lying lake on the outskirts of Jhansi town. A huge figure in a strange pose on a hacked hill caught my eye. Later someone enlightened me that it was Major Dyan Chand in a hockey playing stance. Infact it seems that this area gave a handful of hockey players to the national team. Since we were in Jhansi for the night we decided to explore a bit and catch the sound and light show at the fort.

Read about how we beat Murphy’s Law to get here in- Picture Postcards from Bundelkhand

 

Marching through the Fort

One of the remaining pretty structures

The guide took us for a bit of a quick march through the fort trying to give us our bang for the buck considering we’d landed close to closing time. Fortunately it is a tiny albeit well maintained fort with barely a clutch of buildings including a shaft, diligently pointed out to us, where people were hung regularly. It was a spot on the route taken by the queen everyday, to visit the temple nearby. So she apparently prevailed on the king to do away with this macabre affair which I’m sure didn’t help her reach a zen state.

 

Surveying the Town

Facing the fire

This cannon is placed above the Ganesh temple in the fort. It faces the old entrance(Now closed.) with a typical serpentine path leading in. Standing here we spied the orange coloured tower of a church and a butterscotch coloured building which the guide told us was the Rani Mahal. The place where Rani Lakshmibai was moved to when the British took over the fort. The Mahal has some fine wall paintings and is a sort of museum housing ancient stone sculptures. Both structures looked as if they had been transported straight from Spain.( I have no idea why I thought so.) Like a lot many old garrisons Jhansi has more than it’s share of churches.

Explore the churches of another garrison in- 3 Churches in Mhow: Discovering Obscure History and Outstanding Carols 

 

The Fort’s Fire and Fury

Bhavani Shankar on an elephant’s back

So one of the cannons is called Kadak Bijli and another Bhavani Shankar.  I think naming objects confers them distinct personalities instantly. This cannon was a piece of art and I love the way it looks as if it’s been placed on an elephant’s back with the stone base also curving like an elephant’s trunk.

 

More Than What Meets the Eye

An archway to nowhere

The fort was made by a Bundela king around 1613 AD but was gifted to Bajirao a century or so later. A substantial part of it is actually underground including tunnels that disappear in different directions and several structures on top were razed by the British. The voices of Om Puri and Shushmita Sen tell the subsequent intertwined destiny of a fort and it’s last queen, who supposedly (and famously) said- I will never give up my Jhansi!

 

The Site and the Sights

The sun never sets on a legend

Standing literally on the spot where history was made- where Lakshmibai on her horse Baadal with her son tied to her back jumped to escape the British. She survived to fight another day but her horse did not last long. She met her end soon dressed, apparently, as a soldier in a last battle at Gwalior.

Discover the other place in Madhya Pradesh not to be missed in- Mandu & Maheshwar in the Monsoon Mist

14 Replies to “A Bard Sings a Story in Jhansi”

  1. Nicely written.
    The pictures are beautiful.
    Love that bit about butterscotch building and Bhavani Shankar. Made me giggle.
    Keep entertaining 👍

  2. Brings back nostalgic memories of our tenure in the area. Very artistically described. Enjoyed reading the blog.

  3. One has passed through so often but your words and camera lens bring the glory alive. Will cause us to revisit.

    1. Thank you & yes, it is a place people bypass but like so many of our small towns it is seeped in history.

  4. Havent been there but now after reading this travelogue wud like to do so.
    The Scindias and Holkars were part of the Maratha Empire tho quite independent. The Scindias had reduced the Delhi Sultanate to just a protectorate of the Marathas giving annual tax to them. The Sultan was the one deemed approved by the PESHWAS and later the Sikhs.
    This State contd as a vassal of sorts till the British came in control after 1857 or thereabouts.

    1. You should…the area is interesting and pretty to boot:)
      And I should have come to you for historical nuggets:)

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