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Today Patna is an important business centre of eastern India. More
significantly, it is a gateway to the Buddhist and Jain pilgrim
centres of Vaishali, Rajgir, Nalanda, Bodhgaya etc.
Places to see -
Kumrahar Excavations - located in the south of
the city, the archaeological findings in this area establish Patna's
claim to over a thousand years of political glory - 491 BC to 600
AD. Very little of this grandeur remains though, except for a few
pillars from the assembly hall dating back to the Mauryan period
and the foundations of the brick Buddhist monastery known as Anand
Bihar.
Har Mandir - located at the eastern end of the
city, in the Chowk area of old Patna, is one of the holiest of the
Sikh shrines. It was built by Ranjit Singh and marks the place where
Guru Gobind Singh, the 10th and the last of the Sikh Gurus was born
in 1660.
Golghar - is a huge beehive shaped building. It
was constructed as a granary by Captain John Garstin in 1786 for
the British army. The massive structure is about 25m high and the
winding stairway around it offers fine views over the city and the
Ganges.
Patna Museum - has an excellent collection of
stone sculptures dating back to the Maurya and Gupta period, terracotta
figures and archaeological findings from sites in Bihar like Nalanda.
It also houses the world's longest fossilized tree - 16m and 200
million years old. There is also a fine collection of Chinese paintings
and tangkas (Tibetan cloth paintings).
Khuda Baksh Oriental Library - founded in 1900,
this library has a renowned collection of very rare Arabic and Persian
manuscripts, Mughal and Rajput paintings and oddities like the Koran
inscribed in a book only 25mm wide. The library also contains the
only books to survive the sacking of the Moorish University of Cordoba
in Spain.
Qila House - also known as Jalan Museum, is built
on the foundations of Sher Shah's fort. It contains an impressive
private collection of antiques including a dinner service that once
belonged to George III, Marie Antoinette's Serves porcelain, Napoleon's
four poster bed, Chinese jade and Mughal silver filigree. Please
note prior permission is required for a visit.
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