The Extinction Protocol's avatarThe Extinction Protocol

March 25, 2013CYPRUSCyprus clinched a last-ditch deal with international lenders to shut down its second-largest bank and inflict heavy losses on uninsured depositors, including wealthy Russians, in return for a 10 billion euro ($13 billion) bailout. The agreement came hours before a deadline to avert a collapse of the banking system in fraught negotiations between President Nicos Anastasiades and heads of the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Without a deal, Cyprus’s banking system would have collapsed and the country could have become the first to crash out of the European single currency. Swiftly backed by euro zone finance ministers, the plan will spare the Mediterranean island a financial meltdown by winding down the largely state-owned Popular Bank of Cyprus, also known as Laiki, and shifting deposits below 100,000 euros to the Bank of Cyprus to create a “good bank.” Deposits…

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Areeb Fazli's avatarTechnogin

Three Indian Scientists Played a Role in Mapping Universe

Three Indian scientists– Sanjit Mitra, Tarun Souradeep and their graduate student Aditya Rotti — from the Inter- University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA), Pune, were a part of the team.

 

On March 21, the most-refined picture of the early cosmos after the Big Bang, measured by the European Space Agency’s Planck mission, was released at European Space Agency headquarters in Paris.

 

The map suggests that the universe is slightly older than thought. According to the map, subtle fluctuations in temperature were imprinted on the deep sky when the cosmos was about 370,000-years-old.

Planck also provided the most-precise measurements to date of tiny variations in the universe’s oldest light, called the cosmic microwave background (CMB), created more than 13 billion years ago when the universe was young—only a few hundred thousand-years-old, Sanjit Mitra told .

 

These measurements allow exquisite estimates of the age, composition, geometry and fate…

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Kuchesar Mud Fort :Now a Heritage Hotel in Bulandshahr Near Delhi

Kuchesar is a village in the Bulandshahr district of Uttar Pradesh, at a distance of 80 km from Delhi, off the NH 24. It was the seat of Zamindari, or small princely estate, during British Raj.Kuchesar is a village in the Bulandshahr district of Uttar Pradesh, at a distance of 80 km from Delhi, off the NH 24. It was the seat of Zamindari, or small princely estate, during British Raj.

The Jat rulers of Kuchesar, who hailed from Mandoti in Haryana, built their mud-fort sometime in the mid-18th century. The mud-fort of Kuchesar tells of the chequered history of the Jats who vied with the Sikhs, Marathas, Rohillas & Rajputs, as well as with French adventurers and the British East India Company, to fill the vacuum created by the decline of the Mughal empire.

Part of the Kuchesar Fort is now a heritage hotel.Rao Raj Vilas, also known as The Kuchesar Mud Fort, is 18th-century fort a heritage resort formed by restoring a section of Ajit Singh’s family’s ancestral property belonging former princely state, Kuchesar. Surrounded by a 100-acre mango grove, it is located in Kuchesar. From NH-24 that goes to Garh, there is small place known as “Kuchesar Road Chopla” there is a road that is connected to Siyana, after moving 7 km from Chopla one can arrive at Kuchesar , where the Kuchesar Fort is located.

History

During 1740, the Jats became a first rate military power of India. The rulers of Jat of Kuchesar originally belong to Mandoti in Haryana and were the descendents from the Jats of the Dalal sub-caste.

Bhual and his three brothers were the first to arrive in this area during 18th century. His Grandson, Chhatar Singh served with Mirza Ali Beg, the Jagirdar of Chitsauna, obtaining both power and large estate. His sons joined Jawahar Singh, the Jat ruler of Bharatpur to avenge the death of his father Suraj Mal. Later they were offered the jagir of Kuchesar with the title of Rao and office of Chormar by Najib-ud-daulah.

The mud fort of Kuchesar was captured in 1763 but was recovered by the Jat rulers by 1782 and it remained in the family since then and was granted lease by the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam in 1790 and then by the British in 1807. This fort was built with seven turrets as an anti cannon attack from Britishers.

The Kuchesar Fort was brought into the Singh family’s possession in the eighteenth century when the Mughal king Najib-ud-Daula bestowed the Jat family with the title of Rao Bhahadur and the Jagir of Kuchesar comprised 365 villages. Thereafter, structures were added to the fort which reveal different architectural influences. The family currently resides in a part that houses the erstwhile reception and dining halls built in the colonial style. The section that has been made into the hotel bears influence of Mughal architecture. It rooms enclose a square courtyard and have balconies with arches and lattice edges that are quintessentially Mughal in style.

Sources: 1  , 2

 

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