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Accommodation price codes Haryana and Punjab

All accommodation prices in this book have been categorized using the price codes below. Prices given are for a double room, and all taxes are included. For more details, see p.51.

uptoRs100 Rs300-400 Rs900-1500
Rs100-200 Rs400-600 Rs1500-2500
Rs200-300 RS600-900 Rs2500 and upwards

gurudwara at Anandpur Sahib, the European-inspired Kapurthala or any of the countless brick villages. You’11 find the inhabitants, many of whom seem to have a cousin in Toronto or Southall, extremely hospitable.

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Accommodation price codes of Ladakh

All accommodation prices in this book have been categorized using the price codes below. Prices given are for a double room, and all taxes are included, for more details. OuptoRs100 Rs30CMOO Rs900-1500 R3100-200 Rs400-600 Rs1500-2500 Rs200-300 Rs600-900

Accommodation price codes All accommodation prices in this book have been categorized using the price codes below. Prices given are for a double room, and all taxes are included. For more details. up to Rs100 Rs300-400 Rs900-1500 Rs100-200 Rs4Q0-600 Rs1500-2500 RS200-300 RS600-900

Accommodation price codes to Goa

All accommodation prices in this book have been categorized using the price codes below. Prices given are for a double room, and all taxes are included. For more details. up to Rs100 Rs300-400 Rs900-1500 Rs100-200 Rs4Q0-600 Rs1500-2500 RS200-300 RS600-900

Accommodation price codes in Gujarat

All accommodation prices in this book have been categorized using the price codes below. Prices given are lor a double room, and all taxes are included. For more details, O up to Rs100 RS300-400 Rs900-1500 Rs100-200 Rs400-600 Rs1500-2500 Rs200-300 Rs600-900

Accommodation price codes in Delhi

All accommodation prices in this book have been categorized using the price codes below. Prices given are for a double room, and all taxes are included. For more details, see p.52. OuptoRs100 O Rs300-400 O Rs900-1500 Rs100-200 RS400-600 Rs1500-2500 Rs200-300 Rs600-900

Amritsar in Haryana and Punjab

The Sikh's holy city of AMRITSAR, site of the fabled Golden Temple, is the largest city in Punjab: noisy, dirty, dusty and hopelessly congested. Its one saving grace is the Golden Temple, whose golden domes soar above rheteing streets. Amntsar is also an important staging post or those crossing In do—Pakistani frontier at Wagha, 29km west.

City transport in Haryana and Punjab

Chandigarh is too spread out to explore on foot, but cycle- and auto-rickshaws cruise the streets. Auto meters are invariably "out of order" so be sure to negotiate prices first. Cycle rickshaws are much cheaper, but the drivers find the long haul up to the north end of town or to the railway station tough going, so allow plenty of time. Next to the prepaid auto-rickshaw booth behind the ISBT, the main taxi stand (0172/704621) is open 24hr. CITCO s Tour and Travel Wing at the ISBT can also arrange half- or full-day excursions and will probably get you a

The Capital Complex in Haryana and Punjab

Three blocks north of the centre, in the shadow of the Shivalik Hills, the Capital Complex, Sector 1, is the site of some of Le Corbusier's most ambitious experiments. The concrete campus, set amid balding sun-parched lawns, was designed to express the strength and unity of independent India. Ironically, the area is now surrounded by barbed wire and patrolled by armed guards, and has been indefinitely closed to casual tourists since the assassination of the chief minister of Punjab, Beant Singh, in front of the Assembly in October 1995. Check at the tourist office to sec if guided tours have

Golden rules of Amritsar in Haryana and Punjab

Visitors of all nationalities and religions are allowed into the Golden Temple provided they respect a few basic rules, enforced by patrolling guards. Firstly, tobacco, alcohol and drugs of any kind are forbidden. Before entering, you should also leave your shoes at the free cloakrooms, cover your head (cotton scarves are available outside the main entrance - or wear your Kullu hat), and wash your feet in the pool below the steps. Photography is permitted outside, but not inside any of the shrines tours, provides details on temple accommodation and has books and leaflets about the temple and Sikh faith.

Haryana and Punjab

The prosperous states of HARYANA and PUNJAB occupy the flat and fertile tract of river plain that extends northwest from Delhi, towards the mountains of Jammu & Kashmir and the border with Pakistan. Divided by the Partition of August 1947, Punjab has been systematically shorn of its once vast territory: losing the Punjab Hills to Himachal Pradesh and later sacrificing a further chunk to create Haryana. Crossed by the five major tributaries of the Indus, the former British-administered region of Punjab ("Land of Five Rivers") was split down the middle at Independence. Indian Muslims fled west into Pakistan, and Hindus

Practicalities in Haryana and Punjab

The infrastructure of Anandpur Sahib underwent rapid development to cope with the high number ot visitors attending the tricentenary celebrations of the Khalsa in 1999 but accommodation is limited to the gurudwam, ITDC's new luxury hotel and further afield at the nearest town, Ropar. there's Puikcassia Tourist Complex, the Boat Club, (01881/22097), in pleasant riverside grounds 45km south on the Chandigarh-Mandi highway. Local buses run between Ropar and Anandpur Sahib, but there are plans for a new high-speed railway line between Anandpur Sahib, New Delhi and Chandigarh.

Pathankot in Haryana and Punjab

The dusty town of PATHANKOT, 270km north of Chandigarh and 101km to the northeast of Amritsar, is an important cantonment and railway junction close to the frontier with Pakistan and near the borders with Himachal Pradesh and Jammu. Many travellers pass through to pick up bus connections to Dharamsala, Dalhousie, Chamba and Kashmir, or to take the slow train east through the picturesque Kangra Valley.

The Grand Trunk Road in Haryana and Punjab

Crossing Haryana and Punjab en route to, or from, Delhi, you're bound to travel at some stage, along part of the longest, oldest and most famous highway in India Stretching 2000km from Peshawar near the rugged Afghan-Pakistan frontier to Calcutta on the River Hooghly, NH-1. alias the Grand Trunk Road, was described by Kipling in his novel Kim, whose hero and his Tibetan lam i companion set off along it in search up' The River of Arrows", ;is "the Big Road", and "the Backbone of all Hind". The first recorded mention of this trade corridor dates from the fourth century BC,

The City in Haryana and Punjab

Chandigarh's numbered sectors are further subdivided into lettered blocks making route-finding relatively easy. Le Corbusier saw the city plan as a living organism, with the imposing Capital Complex to the north as a "head", the shopping precinct. Sector 17, a "heart", the green open spaces as "lungs", and the crosscutting network of roads, separated into eight different grades for use by various types of vehicles (in theory only), a "circulatory system".

The Jubi Tree in Haryana and Punjab

The gnarled old Jubi Tree in the northwest corner of the compound was planted 450 years ago by the Golden Temple's first high priest, or Babba Buddhaya, and is believed to have special powers. Barren women wanting a son hang strips of cloth from its branches, while marriage deals are traditionally struck in its shade for good luck - a practice frowned upon by the modern temple administration.

Pinjore in Haryana and Punjab

PINJORE, 22km north of Chandigarh and 7km south ofKalka on the Shimla road, is best known for its walled Yadavindra Gardens, one of many sites associated with the exile of the Pandavas, chronicled in the Mahabliarata.The gardens originally belonged to the rajas of Sirmaur, but under the Moghuls, Pinjore was taken over by Aurangzeb's foster brother, Fidai Khan, who erected three pleasure palaces for his wife amid the cypress trees. Legend tells that the raja reclaimed his summer retreat by sending a female fruit-seller with goitre to the imperial imposters. On being told that the woman's unsightly swelling was caused

Listings Amitsar in Haryana and Punjab

Airlines the main Indian Airlines office is on Court Road 0183/213392; Air India (j 0183/546122) js located at the Amritsar International Hotel complex near the bus stand. Ambulance 0183/220900 or 501702. Banks and exchange Several banks offer foreign exchange facilities including the State Bank of India, halfway between the bus stand and the Golden Temple, the Bank of Punjab, near the temple, and the Chartered Bank and ANZ Grindlays, both at Hall Bazaar. Authorized agencies such as Narang Travels at the Amritsar International Hotel arcade, near the bus stand, also change money. Hospitals Kakkar Hospital Green Avenue (0183/506015); Sri Guru

Around Chandigarh in Haryana and Punjab

While Chandigarh's futuristic architecture may be of limited interest to most travellers, the ornamental Moghul gardens in Pinjore, on the northern outskirts of the city, have a much more universal appeal. Southwest of Chandigarh there are further Moghul ruins at Sirhind, a good place to stop overnight between Delhi and Amritsar. Anandpur Sahib, the home of the Khalsa movement and one of Sikhism's most venerated shrines, lies just off the Chandigarh-Mandi highway and makes a worthwhile detour, especially during the festival of Holi.

The Akal Takht in Haryana and Punjab

Directly opposite the ceremonial entrance to the Harmandir. The Akal Takht is the second most sacred shrine in the Golden Temple complex. A symbol of God's authority on earth, it was built by Guru Hargobind in the seventeenth century and came to house the Shiroman Gurudwara Parbandhak committee, the religious and political governing body of the Sikh faith founded in 1925. During the 1984 siege, Bhindranwale and his army used this golden-domed building as their headquarters, fortifying it with sandbags and machine-gun

Moving on from Chandigarh in Haryana and Punjab

Chandigarh's long-distance transport connections are summarized on p.665. The railway station, 8km from the centre, has direct services to Delhi, Amritsar and Jodhpur, Regular buses run to Delhi (248km), but the journey can be made in almost half the time by taking the superfast a/c Shatabdi Express trains (#2006 & #2012 departing at 6.50am & 12.20pm). Second-class tickets cost Rs435, four times the bus price, but the journey is far more comfortable and convenient. Other useful trains include the #4096 Himalayan Queen (dep 5.35pm, arr New Delhi 10.30pm), the daily #4535 Kalka-Amritsar Express (dep 4.58pm, are Amritsar 23.20pm) and the

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