Varanasi: An Old City of India and an Enigma

The legend of the origin of ‘Banaras’ is narrated in the ‘Kashi Rahasya’ a work attributed to ‘Veda Vyas’, the compiler of the Vedas. It was founded at the request of seven ‘Rishia’ who approached Lord Vishnu and desired to be shown the certain road to salvation. It is atleast certain that Banaras had already acquired a reputation for secular serenity in Puranic age and consequently its antiquity is beyond dispute.

          The description of the city in Sanskrit literature is usually found with the names of Kashi and Varanasi. The name of Kashi remain current and in Varanasi was abandoned, and Banaraswas in common use till late. Dr. Sampurnanand. The first Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh renamed it as Varanasi.

          Kashi is derived from ‘Kash’ meaning’ to shine’ and construed as ‘sole illumination’. The nameVaranasiis most probably due to rivers ‘Varuna’ in the north and ‘Assi’ in the south of the city.

          The first historical reference to this city, however, dates back to the days of ‘Buddha’. Sarnath symbolizes the site where Buddha made his first converts. In the 5th century A.D. Fahein visited the city of Banaras. Two centuries later, Hieun-Tsang foundBanaras densely populated and its inhabitants in flourishing state.

          In Ain-e-Akbari there are references about this city. Earlier Mahmud Ghazni visited Banaras in 1019 and 1022 A.D. We also find a reference of Banarasof the time of Babar. The district Gazetteer 6 refers to the fact that troops of Babar were garrisoned at Banaras under Jalal-ud-din. Later on he was compelled to abandon the place and retired to Chunar.

          Akbar also faced great resistance and the area did not fall in the hands of Akbar tell the eastern expedition of Khan-i-Zaman in 1559.Banaras flourished immensely under the tolerant rule of Akbar and once again it assumed its ancient position as the religious centre of the Hindu World.

          The history of Banaras during the first part of the nineteenth century is mainly a record of administrative development under the British rule. Since the mutiny of 1857 Banaras had remain obscene and unimportant and connected chiefly with the improvement of communication, development of the city and various reforms in administration. Nevertheless in the mean time the city has functioned as a religious centre of the Hindus and a somewhat important centre of Commerce in the Purvanchal although it was not important in the national context.

          Although it has been the seat of east-while Banaras state, it is primarily known as the biggest religious centre of the Hindus. It has also been a big centre of Indian renaissance. Famous writers of the Hindu language Tulsi Das, Baba Harish Chandra, Jai Shanker Prasad, Pandit Ram Chandra Shukla and Prem Chandra made this city important with their writings  and made the city a cultural and literary one oat the time. The city is a big centre of tourist attraction ad earns foreign exchange for the country. Later on it has attracted the attention of industrialist and apart from its cottage industries like Zari Sarees, wooden toys etc. The complex of heavy industry is fast building in and around the town.

          Varanasi is the larger city in the middle ganga plan situated on the left Kankar infested high levee of the Ganga crescent, planned out of not a very good site for expansion on the back; the three cultural nuclei of Kedareshwar, Visheshwar and Onkarshwar are separated from each other by the Godavari and the Mandakini, the two venerable rivers, one representing the Ganga of the south and other of the north. The city exerted a potent force for national integration through the imperceptible process of cultural assimilation. The confluence of the Saryu of Varanasi with the Ganga provided the burning ghat, hallowed by trhe memory of Harishchandra, the kig of ancient Awadh and as such, the block to the south came to be known as Awadh. This again means the integration of the Awadh culture of the north with the other cultural currents embedded inVaranasi. These discrete blocks coalesced with each other being joined by the Kedareshwar-Visheshwar lane, the life lie of ancient Varanasi, running parallel to the crescentic Ganga through the crest of the levee over a wooden bridge on the Godawari in the present Dasaswamedh area (preserved in the name of a Mohalla ‘Dedasi Ka Pul’,bridge of  Dedasi). The main  residential area has developed roughly like a bow theGangaforming its string. New residential areas have gone up along the outer roads, like the Durgan-Kund, Vidyapith road and the Jagatganj-Civil Court Road. There are a number of planned colonies now and many emerging up in the city which is fast expanding. Having the first bridge in 1882 on the Ganga in the whole of the Middle GangaValley, the city had the maximum advantage of growth, and has increased its population manifold. It is the world famous centre for handicraft products, and true to its cultural history it is the most famous educational centre with three universities. The city has now developed a metropolitan character. The city, in fact, works as a growth engine for the adjoining Purvanchal region. The city is now also spreading on the road connecting to Allahabad which is G.T. Road. City has functional links with Allahabad city.

Links,Sources and Further Readings:

Wikipedia

  About.com

Posted in Cities, India, Urban Studies | 6 Comments

Self Destruction of Massive Stars in Carina Nebula :Seen Fom The Eye of Chandra

This Chandra image shows the Carina Nebula, a star-forming region in the Sagittarius-Carina arm of the Milky Way, 7,500 light years from Earth. Chandra’s sharp X-ray vision has detected over 14,000 stars in this region, revealed a diffuse X-ray glow, and provided strong evidence that massive stars have already self-destructed in this nearby supernova factory.

Links and Sources

:NASA

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Surprising Findings about Japan’s 9.0 Tohoku-Oki Earthquake

Magnitude 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake and resulting tsunami struck off the northeast coast of Japan on March 11  caused widespread destruction and death. Using observations from a dense regional geodetic network (allowing measurements of earth movement to be gathered from GPS satellite data), globally distributed broadband seismographic networks, and open-ocean tsunami data, researchers have begun to construct numerous models that describe how the earth moved that day.

A study led by researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), published online in the May 19 issue of Science Express, explains the first large set of observational data from this rare megathrust event. They found surprising results….

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Turning Waste In Wealth (Energy)

We constantly turn wealth to waste. Now it is threatening the sustainability of our planet , our race. It  is high time we reverse this process.

TERI’s enhanced acidification and methanation technology is a great leap forward in this direction.

Food is the last thing that comes to mind when one sees rotting and stench-emanating landfills, overflowing with garbage from all over the city. Not surprising then that many will be shocked if they were told that it is an important source in the making of cooking gas.

Of late, there have been experiments to convert the emissions from landfills or garbage dumps to energy so as to power various applications. Though technologies exist, they are crippled with inefficient output and operational problems. The TEAM (T ERI’s enhanced acidification and methanation) technology not only overcomes existing shortcomings but also promises to be an important parallel source of fuel for thermal applications, especially cooking.

Tackling mounting waste (produced as a result of growing urbanization and industrialization) has been one of the biggest civic concerns in modern times (Figure 1). Working towards finding a sustainable solution, researchers at TERI zeroed in on biomethanation as the most desirable alternative for the treatment of solid waste, as it yields biogas that can replace conventional fuels and provides digested sludge that can be used as organic manure.

TERI’s research culminated in the development of a high-rate digester for fibrous and semi-solid organic waste. The technology has been put to use in the waste treatment plant in TERI’s sustainable habitat campus in Gurgaon, Haryana . The plant has been generating good-quality biogas and manure from organic wastes since the year 2000…

Links and Sources:

Teri

Further Readings:

Waste to Energy in India

Wikipedia

Posted in Alternative Energy, BIODIVERSITY, India, pollution, Urban Studies | 2 Comments