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![]() Around Andhra in Six Days ... from Chalukya temples to Charminar Photographs and Text: Sanjay Singh Badnor
The flight was packed with businessmen, government officials on election duty and politicians. I must have been the lone tourist on board, heading to explore Andhra Pradesh.
Luckily I spotted the hotel taxi which had come to receive me. Had it not been for the driver's quick manoeuvres, I would have found myself part of the huge political rally which had just commenced from the airport. Hyderabad airport must be one of the few airports located so close to the downtown area. Within minutes I found myself in the heart of town heading for the Grand Kakatiya hotel. Kakatiya?! The name did sound somewhat strange. Was it a locality of Hyderabad? Perhaps it was the owner's name, suggested my driver, who said it was the Andhra norm to name commercial complexes and hotels after the proprietor. We drove up to the hotel and soon I was led to my room, the interiors of which were trimmed with the traditional ikkat fabric and offered a pleasant view of the city. Andhra Pradesh was created largely by merging the former princely state of Hyderabad with the Telugu speaking portions of Madras state. A bit of pre-trip research had armed me with some background info about the state. I knew therefore that most of the state which spreads across the high Deccan plateau is divided into three distinct regions. The Telengana region comprises the northern parts of the province and the Hyderabad region. Then there are the coastal areas; the state has a long coastline along the Bay of Bengal. The southern part of the state is known as the Rayalseema region.
On my first afternoon I decided to acquaint myself with the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad. So I asked my driver to merely cruise about the city. We headed first for Secunderabad, which was the former cantonment area. But today it had more or less merged with Hyderabad. By afternoon I was coasting around Hyderabad's poshest neighbourhood, Banjara Hills, peering at the ostentatious bungalows of Telegu cine stars, politicians and Hyderabad's leading business families. Near Banjara Hills at a shopping arcade, I came across several antique dealers. I swiftly abandoned my sightseeing plans. And the rest of the afternoon was whiled away browsing through sepia tinted lithographs, old Tanjore paintings, furniture, glassware and other bric-a-brac which had probably filtered down to these dealers from the dwindling fortunes of the old aristocratic and landed families of Hyderabad. Hyderabad has a 400-year-old history which began with the establishment of the Qutab Shahi dynasty. Named after Hyder Mahal, the queen of Quyili Qutab Shah, the metropolis is located on the banks of the Musi river and is an important centre of Islamic culture. It is also South India's counterpart to the Mughal splendour of the northern cities of Agra, Fatehpur Sikri and Delhi.
A visit to the Shilparamam crafts village on the outskirts of the city at Madhapur proved extremely interesting. This sleepy craft village houses the huts of artisans from all over the country. A rich variety of colourful crafts were available -- sheet metal art from Pembarthi, Kondapalli toys, Anantpur leather puppets, Banjara needle work, Latur mirrorwork, giant gangalam vessels, Nirmal paintings, terracota, dhurries Dokhra, Kalamkari and lacquerware. To add to the fun folk artistes performed in the middle of the village. A bit of traditional Andhra drumming numbers or tappetagullu, Banjara gypsy dances and skits from mythology. On sale too were a range of spicy snacks -- mirchi bajji, bhelpuri, chaat, jalebis and more.
Sipping a cool gimlet I spied the tea lounge beside the bar which was named Rani Rudrama's Court. Did it have anything to do with Kakatiya, I wondered. "Of course," explained Ashutosh Chibba, the hotel's banquet manager. "The Kakatiya dynasty was one of the more glorious of the southern dynasties and they ruled a large part of the Telengana region in the 12th century." Warangal was their capital city and Rani Rudrama, a Kakatiya queen. Marco Polo visited India during her reign and was spellbound by the tales of grandeur of the Kakatiya kingdom. Finally! an answer to my question. I decided that the next day's agenda would be a trip to Warangal. Seated in an Ambassador car (India's mechanised bullock cart) with ample supplies of beer and mutton biryani to last me an entire week, I rattled along the Andhra state highway towards Warangal (150 km away) through semi-arid countryside that was interspersed with rice fields, date palms, coconut trees, an occasional lake and some fantastic rock formations.
An hour later I called for a break and stepped out to enjoy the countryside. A nearby cluster of palm trees seemed to be the centre of much activity. On closer inspection I realised it was a mid-day party in progress.
We resumed our journey. This time I insisted that my Spice Girls tape be played. The driver obliged reluctantly. By early evening we arrived at Kazipet, where I stopped for a Pepsi and then on to Hanamkonda and finally to Warangal. The town is the site of an ancient mud-brick fort which lies in a sad state of ruin. Built in 1261, not much remains of the fort. It was interesting to scramble about looking at the exquisite sculpture and carved temple gateways, typical of the Chalukyan style of temple architecture.
Back in Hyderabad I still had some sightseeing to do. At the crack of dawn I left the hotel for the old city. I had been there for two full days and still not even had a glimpse of Charminar, Hyderabad's landmark. I still remember being intrigued, as a child, by the sunset yellow packets of Charminar cigarettes, with a sketch of the monument drawn on the outside. That had been my first memory of this spellbinding piece of architecture which I could now see for real in brick and mortar. It was absolutely fascinating against the backdrop of a clear, azure blue sky.
The Muslim month of Ramzan was on and the bazaars were at their liveliest. Parking my vehicle at the Nizam hospital I tried to soak in the atmosphere through my lens. I am not certain whether I succeeded, but I did end up exposing a lot of film.
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Around Andhra, Continued
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