Scindia Dynasty

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Austin Coutinho
The history of commemorative architecture in the Indian subcontinent is a journey from the sacred to the sovereign. While funerary practices varied across cultures, the transition from simple burial to "celebratory remembrance" found its early known monumental expression in the Stupa. Originally…
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Nandika Bhargava and Sarthak Sharma
On the crafts map of India, Gwalior is not prominent. Amidst the sheer diversity of craft practices in the region of Madhya Pradesh — Chanderi and Maheshwar saris, Bagh prints, Bhopal’s Zari or Zardozi work — Gwalior is not considered a centre of crafts. Whether this is a result of poor marketing…
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Shikha Dhakad 
Gwalior is not only made up of its fort and palaces, but also of its smaller, less visible geographies — its lanes and neighbourhoods that continue to shape everyday life in the city. These spaces, often overlooked in formal histories, offer a different way of reading the city: through its people,…
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Tulika Shrivastava
When we turn to the history of a city such as Gwalior, narratives tend to coalesce around its monumental architecture — its fort, palaces, and temples — structures that articulate the authority and aspirations of ruling elites. This emphasis produces what may be described as a vertical…
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Dr Meeta Pandit
Gwalior is known as the “land of music.” Even the children of Gwalior are reputed to wail melodiously. Over the years, the city, a vibrant and innovative hub of musical history, gave rise to a variety of styles, many of which have found worldwide recognition. Therefore, it is not surprising that…
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Meenakshi Vashisth
When one thinks of India’s narrow-lane railways or tram-like tracks winding through marketplaces and grazing past fields, the mind almost instinctively travels to Calcutta (now Kolkata) or perhaps the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. The Calcutta trams rattling through Chowringhee and across Maidan…
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