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ArticleCurrentsAlthough no Indian forts were destroyed by sudden disasters, there are several which were abandoned due to the ambitions of their rulers and have consequently deteriorated over time. Very few castles have survived unchanged since the early Middle Ages or even since the 14th-15th centuries: most of those built in the 10th-15th centuries were later rebuilt and altered. Castles were still used as living quarters until the 19th-20th centuries, and so were continually modified. Even now, some of them are private property.By: Vijaya Super adminWednesday, May 12, 2021WATER, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT
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ArticleCurrent stateAlthough no Indian forts were destroyed by sudden disasters, there are several which were abandoned due to the ambitions of their rulers and have consequently deteriorated over time. Very few castles have survived unchanged since the early Middle Ages or even since the 14th-15th centuries: most of those built in the 10th-15th centuries were later rebuilt and altered. Castles were still used as living quarters until the 19th-20th centuries, and so were continually modified. Even now, some of them are private property.By: Vijaya Super adminWednesday, May 12, 2021HEALTH AND NUTRITION+1
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ArticleIndia fortThree major methods were used for the construction of ancient Indian forts. The first consisted of earthen ramparts. Often they were constructed of the sand which was dug out of the ditch surrounding the fort. The second of rubble with earth on the outside which was more sturdy. The third type of construction was with stone and masonry work. The last was the strongest. Often materials from demolished forts were reused in the building of new forts.[2] By 4 BCE, fortified cities were common in India. The largest ones were between the city of Mathura (on the Yamuna river) and Magadha (on the Ganges). Another series of forts in the south, was on the Ujjain (on the Narmada) leading into the Deccan. These are inferred by the remains of fort walls and bastions seen on excavation at Rajagriha and at several sites in the Gangetic plain notably Kaushambi. At the latter site huge walls of burnt brick, which look like they have been battered. There does not seem to be any formal planning of these forts.[3]By: Vijaya Super adminWednesday, May 12, 2021CULTURE AND SOCIETY+1
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ArticleForts in IndiaMost of the forts in India are actually castles or fortresses. But when the British Government in India were cataloging them in the 17th–19th century they used the word forts as it was common in Britain then. All fortifications whether European or Indian were termed forts. Thereafter this became the common usage in India. In local languages, the fort names are suffixed by local word for fort thus usage of the Sanskrit word durga, or Urdu word qila or the Hindi word garh or gad in Rajasthan, and Maharashtra is common.[1] For example, Suvarnadurg, Mehrangarh, Sudhagad etc. IndianBy: Vijaya Super adminWednesday, May 12, 2021HEALTH AND NUTRITION
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PostFind a useful resource about Agriculture: https://www.springer.com/journal/40003By: Vijaya Super adminThursday, May 13, 2021AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS+1
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Posthttps://www.myntra.com/By: Vijaya Super adminThursday, May 13, 2021HEALTH AND NUTRITION
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