Category:Ratanpur Fort

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This is a category about ASI monument number
N-CT-21.
<nowiki>Ratanpur Fort; রতনপুর ফোর্ট; రతన్‌పూర్ కోట; ରତନପୁର ଦୁର୍ଗ; An 11th century fort with Hindu temples; ভারতে ভবন; bâtiment en Inde; будівля в Індії; Ancient fort of Ratanpura; Ratan Dev fort</nowiki>
Ratanpur Fort 
An 11th century fort with Hindu temples
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LocationRatanpur, Bilaspur district, Bilaspur division, Chhattisgarh, India
Maintained by
  • Archaeological Survey of India, Raipur circle
Heritage designation
Map22° 17′ 06.91″ N, 82° 10′ 01.59″ E
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Ratanpur (Ratnapura, "city of jewels") is an ancient town which finds multiple mentions in the two Hindu epics – the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. According to legends, this is where Rama's mother was born, as well as a few important events in Mahabharata unfolded. Various records mention the Ratnapura kingdom once had Atharagadas or 18 garhs (forts). It is these 18 garhs of Ratanpur and 18 garhs of Raipur totaling to 36 (chhattis) that the state gets its historic name – Chhattisgarh.

Other than traces of many ancient mud forts, little is left of the ancient forts. In 11th century, the Hindu Haihaya king Ratan Dev moved his capital to the fort of Ratanpur for its terrain and strategic location. He rebuilt the fort with stone walls and decorated the walls and gates with Hindu iconography such as Ganesha, Lakshmi, Shiva, Narasimha, Vedic deities and scenes from Ramayana and Mahabharata. In addition, he built water reservoirs both to meet the needs of his army and also to frustrate any attacks. The fort had four main gates – Simha Dvar, Ganesh Dvar, Bhairav Dvar and Semar Dvar – and minor gates. Ratanpur fort became one of the targets for raids and conquest during the Sultanate era, and later fell to the Mughal army. Many parts of the fort were torn down and a few buildings with Islamic architecture were thereafter added. Between the 16th and 19th century, travelers, colonial administrators and archaeologists reported the town to be a small squalid village with ruins overrun by weeds and in pathetic state.

The extant Ratanpur has seen restoration and infrastructure projects, is a popular regional pilgrimage and tourism site. The restored and cleaned Ratanpur fort is an eclectic mix of 11th century monuments, additions between the 14th to 18th centuries, and restoration efforts that have reused some of the recovered ruins. It is one of the national heritage monuments of India, protected and maintained by ASI.

Media in category "Ratanpur Fort"

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