Maharaja Man Singh who ruled
from 1590-1619 had a multi-faceted personality with varied
interests. He started ateliers and departments devoted to
art , crafts, literature and the performing arts. Some of
the Crafts Traditions for which Jaipur is famous for are like
enameling (Minachari), paper mashing and carpet weaving, were
introduced by him with artisans being brought in form Lahore,
Sialkot, Multan and Gujrat. He patronized many poets, authors,
and scholars at his court and was found of dance , music and
drama.
Raja Man Singh is known to have brought these three deities
of "Sangamar ka Sanga Baba / Jaipur Ka Hanuman / Amber
ki Shila Devi" as said in the above popular saying. The
sect of Sangababa is in Sanganer, the image of Hanuman at
the entrance of the gate of Chand pol bazar and the idol of
Shila devi is at Amber.
Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh IIhad earned both the title of
Maharaja in 1707 and Sawai in 1713. The Kachhawahas recognized
the expediency of aligning themselves with the powerful mughal
emperor. However Jai Singh incurred the displeasure of Aurangzeb
successor of Bahadur Shah, who came in 1707.
Bahadur shah's accession was controlled by his Younger brother,
Azam Shah and Jai Singh unfortunately supported the younger
brother's bid for power. Bahadur shah, was eventually given
the Delhi throne, retaliated by invading Amber and ousting
the Young Jai Singh and installing younger brother Vijay Singh
In his place. He regained the capital in 1708, with the help
of Udaipur and Jodhpur (marrying one princes each form the
states) and eventually reconsolidate his rule.
The wealth of the kingdom increased exponentially, and this
together with the need to accommodate the ever burgeoning
population and a paucity of water at the old capital Amber,
prompted the Maharaja in 1727 to commence work on a new city
he named after himself -- Jaipur.
It was a collaborative endeavor, the synthesis of the union
of the Maharaja and the impressive expertise of his chief
architect, Vidyasagar. Jai Singh's Strong grounding in the
sciences is reflected in the precise symmetry of the new city
which, as appeared to the other unplanned and labyrinthine
cities which predominated in North India at that time, was
laid out according to the strict principles of town planning
set down in the "Shilpa Shastra" an ancient Hindu
creative architecture. In the year 1728 - 34 he built the
Jantar Mantar (j(y)antra = instrument, device; mantra = magic
formula) his open air Observatory of outside astronomical
instruments. In mathematics and astronomy, as in war and town-
planning , Jai Singh did nothing by halves -- his scientific
inventiveness was supposed to have emerged when, aged 13,
he devised an irrigation system to water the hanging gardens
of Amber Fort.
The most central of the seven rectangles comprises the city
palace complex, containing the palace itself, the administrative
quarters, the Jantar Mantar (Jai Singh's remarkable observatory)
and the janana mahals or the women's palaces, where the maharajas
held dubious honor of maintaining more wives than any of his
predecessors, although most of these alliances were motivated
more by political expediency than by amorous compulsions.
As an ardent of Vaishvanite in 1714 he reinstated the image
of Govind dev, removing it from the impressive red sandstone
temple built by his ancestor Raja Man Singh, at Vrindavan
and later installed it in 1719 within the city Palace complex.
The City was first not an aesthetic triumph; its stout walls
served to protect its in habitants from would be invaders,
encouraged merchants and trades people to flock here and further
serving to enhance -- the city's growth and prosperity. Jai
Singh's Interest in the Arts, Sciences and Religion fostered
their development in Jaipur, and the royal court became a
center of intellectual and artistic endeavor. As a scholar
and patron of Arts, he attracted some of the most learned
scholars, astronomers, teachers, writers, poets, architects,
lawyers, painters and preachers to his court. An extraordinary
amount of literary activities took place in his reign, surpassing
in its range and volume any of his predecessors or successors.
Sawai Pratap Singh became the Maharaja at the Age of
14 after the death of his brother Prithivi Singh. He ruled
from 1778 to 1803. His 25 year rule witnessed many spectacular
achievements and strategic failures. Being constantly goaded
by the marathas and the mughals he had to face repeated threats
and a heavy drainage of funds.
He is known as the great ruler of Jaipur for his devotion
to Lord Krishna. The fountains behind the Govind Dev temple
are credited to him, his poetic talent and patronage of Arts
and Crafts. The finest example of his connoisseur ship is
the unique monument of Hava Mahal -- the palace of the Winds.
Writing under the penname Brijnidhi , he composed many poems
and songs in large variety of meters.
Sawai Ram Singh II reigned from 1835 till 1880, he
was known as the colorful Maharaja, he was different from
his ancestors in most respects, he was an ardent Vaishaivite.
He was a Shaivite, an ardent devotee of Shiva and he had some
very modern stretches, he enjoyed photography and is the first
great prime who martyred ball room dancing.
Ran Singh II was a great connoisseur of Music and was adept
at playing the Veena - a multi stringed instrument. He was
also a reformist and it was in his reign that slavery, child
infanticide and the cruel custom of Sati were officially abolished
in Jaipur in 1839
The City of Jaipur benefited largely from his close rapport
with the British which constructively manifested itself in
the water works, the gas lights, roads, sanskrit collages
as well as the Maharaja School of Arts and Crafts and the
medical college. The Ram Nivas garden was laid out in his
time with the Albert hall museum at its heart.
Madao Singh II was the next ruler after Ram Singh II
expired in 1880 and he died heirless, as per the tradition
if any King of Jaipur died heirless the adoption of the first
family would be from the Thakur of Thilai. But this tradition
was forsaken by Ram Singh II when he chose the second son
of the Thakur of Isarda. At the time of his adoption, Kayam
Singh (Later Madho Singh II) was employed in the Tonk cavalry
as a sepoy. He was about 18 years old.
Madao Singh II was devoutly religious. Despite his five marriages
and his 18 official mistress, he was heirless. We can see
the clothes and other items of Madho Singh II at the Maharaja
Sawai ManSingh II museum , one remarkable exhibit in set of
voluminous clothes of Madho Singh II who was over two meters
tall, 1.3m wide and weighed 225 kg.
He had made a lot of Progress to the State of Jaipur and was
rewarded by the British for his loyalty, he was made and was
rewarded by the British for his Loyalty, he was made Honorary
Colonel of the 13th Rajputs. There was a lot of development
in the state, he had built a meter gauge live from Sangama
to Sawai Madhopur and which helped Jaipur to get connected
to Various commercial centers. Hospitals , universities, The
Secretariat, residential colonies and colleges were built
as well.
Madho Singh like his adoptive father had repeated history
by adopting his Nephew from Isarda, Kanwar Mormukat Singh,
the younger of the two sons of Thakur Sowai Singh of Isarda.
Kanwar Mormukat Singh was later known as Sawai Man Singh II.
Sawai Man Singh II reigned from 1922 till 1949 when
India gained Independence. He was born on 21st August 1911
as Mor Mukut Singh son of Sawai Singh the Thakur of Isarda
and was chosen by Maharaja Madho Singh II to be the adopted
heir to the throne of Jaipur on 24th March 1921. The Viceroy
of India later accepted the adoption and he was named Sawai
Man Singh II.
Man Singh II was educated at home in Jaipur, at the Mayo College
for Indian chiefs, at Ajmer and in England where he gained
an up-to-date knowledge of Modern militiary science at the
Royal Militiary Academy, Woodwich. He improved the water supply
by building Ram Garh that supplied water to Jaipur. and lightening,
opened the state janana hospital the Lady Wellingdon at Sanganer
which was outside the capital. during his reign, civic buildings
such as schools, hospitals and secretariats were built outside
the original walls.
Following the independence in 1947, the status of the princely
states was to change forever. In March 1949 ,Jaipur merged
the Rajput states of Jodhpur, Jaisalmer and Bikaner, Becoming
Greater Rajasthan. Jaipur was honoured above the other states
when the title Raj Pramukh was conferred on Man Singh II who
was inverted with administrative supervisor of the new province.
The title was later revoked, and Man Singh II was posted as
Indian ambassador to Spain. In 1956 , Jaipur became the capital
of The state of Rajasthan.
Horse Polo was very popular amongst the Maharajas, especially
during the British Raj. Man Singh II was the finest and most
dashing polo player in the world, whose polo team was champion
in the European Polo circuit in the 1930s. The Polo victory
cinema in Jaipur, built by his polo stick maker commemorated
a world record in the Sport. The "Big Four' consisting
of Maharaja Man Singh, Maharaja Prithvi Singh, Rao Raja Hanut
Singh and Rao Raja Abhey Singh had won all the open tournaments
a record which has never been equaled. Man Singh actually
died playing the sport he loved , at a polo match in England
in 1970.
Area
- 14,068 sq. km. (4.11 per cent of
the State)
Location
The district is situated in the eastern part of Rajasthan.
It is bound in the north by Sikar and Alwar, in South by Tonk,
Ajmer and Sawai Madhopur. Nagaur, Sikar and Ajmer in the west
and in east by Bharatpur and Dausa districts.
Distance from major Cities
- Delhi-261 kms.
- Ahmedabad-625 kms.
- Chandigarh-510 kms.
- Mumbai-1,176 kms.
- Calcutta-1,472 kms.
- Agra-246 kms.
Climate and Rainfall
- The climate of the district is dry
and healthy and is subject to extremeness of cold and heat
at various places.
- The minimum and maximum temperatures
recorded in the district varies from 8.0 to 48 degree celsius
- Normal annual rainfall is 55.64
cms
Administration Setup
After the formation of new Dausa district, there are 13 tehsils
and the same number of Panchayat Samities. The total number
of towns are 14.
Electricity
Jaipur district is receiving the hydro-electric power, supplied
by the Chambal Hydel System. Out of total 2,131 villages in
the district, 2,131 were electrified as on March 2000.
Water
The major rivers passing through the Jaipur district are Banas
and Banganga. The ground water resources to the extent of
about 28.65 million cubic meter are available in the district.
Road Transport
Jaipur city is the capital of the state and is centrally located.
The National Highway No.8 links Delhi to Ahmedabad and No.11,
linking Bikaner to Agra passes through Jaipur district to
a total length of 366 kms. The total length of different types
of roads in the district was about 4,102 kms as of March 2000.
Rail Transport
Jaipur district is connected with meter gauge rail route with
Sri Ganganagar, Ajmer, Udaipur and Sirohi. Jaipur is also
connected with major centres of neighbouring states such as
Agra (Uttar Pradesh), Ahmedabad (Gujarat) and Delhi. Recently,
Jaipur has got connected in broad gauge, enabling direct connections
to cities like Sawai Madhopur, Kota, Jodhpur, Bikaner, Bombay,
Howrah, Lucknow, Kanpur & Delhi.
Air Transport
Jaipur is connected by air with Jodhpur, Udaipur, Aurangabad,
Delhi, Bombay and outside the country with Paris, London &
Dublin.
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