It has withstood the test of
time. It has survived severe lashings from the sea, the sun and the rain. It
has survived the attacks of marauding Maratha warriors, English ships and
Portuguese schooners. For more than three hundred years, it has stood in mute
silence as witness to the troubled past of India.
It is the island fort of Janjira, a story I promised in my blog post Nothing
but the sea and the sand.
The fort was built in the 17th
century by the Sultans of Ahmednagar, on an island about 2 kms from the coast
of a village called Murud. The name Janjira could have been derived from the
Arabic word Jazira meaning island.Shivaji, I am told, tried 13 times to take
the fort but did not succeed. His son Sambhaji also came a cropper. The Peshwas
made several attempts but failed. The Portuguese and the British tried their
might but could not conquer the fort.
The fort was supposed to have had
several cannons striking terror in the hearts of anyone approaching the fort
with malafide intentions. Like the famous guns of Navarone, these cannons too
had built quite a reputation. It might have needed several Mallorys and Andreas
to topple these cannons. Three of them can still be seen on the fort. The guns
have fallen silent but standing next to one, it is very easy to imagine the
power they would have wielded.
A wonder of Nature can be seen
inside the fort. Two fresh water springs, two kms in to the sea amidst such
saline water, still yield plenty of sweet water to the thirsty and /or curious
tourist.
A word about the sail boats by
which one can reach the island. It is a delight to watch the boatmen maneuver
the sails to catch the same draft of wind to sail to the island and back.
Close
Iyer Thank you. I was wondering where you disappeared.
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