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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Fort Badshahpur  





1.2  Begum Samru Place  





1.3  Badshahpur Stepwell  





1.4  Akhara Stepwell  





1.5  Dhumaspur Stepwell  







2 Assembly constituency  





3 References  



3.1  See also  





3.2  Citations  
















Badshahpur






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Coordinates: 28°2335N 77°0253E / 28.393°N 77.048°E / 28.393; 77.048
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Badshapur
Badshahpur
city
Badshapur is located in Haryana
Badshapur

Badshapur

Location in Haryana, India

Badshapur is located in India
Badshapur

Badshapur

Badshapur (India)

Coordinates: 28°23′35N 77°02′53E / 28.393°N 77.048°E / 28.393; 77.048
Country India
StateHaryana
Elevation
240 m (790 ft)
Population
 (2001)
 • Total16,064
Languages
 • OfficialHindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
ISO 3166 codeIN-HR
Vehicle registrationHR
Websiteharyana.gov.in

Badshapur is one of the 4 sub-division of Gurugram districtofHaryana state, situated on the Gurugram-Sohna road (NH-248A). It is named after the Badshahpur Fort, which in turn was the abode of the wife of Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar.[1] Badshahpur is a part of Badshahpur assembly constituency of Haryana having majority of Rao Sahabs/Ahirs.

History[edit]

The history of Badshahpur dates back to medieval times. The paragana of Badshahpur-Jharsa was ruled by Begum Samru (b.1753 – d.1836).[2] It was later under the rule of Bahadur Shah Zafar.[1]

Fort Badshahpur[edit]

Fort Badshahpur was the palace of one of the wives of mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar. The unprotected fort is in ruins and needs restoration.[3] It has been encroached by the people.[1][4]

Begum Samru Place[edit]

Begum Samru Place at Gurugram lies between Badshahpur-Jharsa. The paragana of Badshahpur-Jharsa was ruled by Begum Samru (b.1753 – d.1836) and she built a palace for herself between Badshahpur and Jharsa.[2] Her palace has been completely lost to encroachments. Palace building is located between Gurgaon and Jharsa village, much of which was used as district collector's residence or camp office. Built in Islamic style, the ruins of this palace survived till about 2008 in Gurgaon.[5]

Badshahpur Stepwell[edit]

Badshahpur Mohanlal Stepwell, built in 1905 by Mohan Lal and currently owned by his grandson Ved Prakash Mangla (c. 2018), is a stepwell on sector road near Sohna Road in Badshahpur in Gurugram.[1][6] It was built to conserve the water due to the crisis,[1] and also as a source of water for the domesticated animals.[6] Ansal University's Sushant School of Art and Architecture (SSAA) students conducted a research on it in 2005.[6]

The catchment area has been obliterated due to construction and encroachment.[1] The neglected unkempt flies-ridden stepwell is without any protective wall.[6] INTACH had offered to preserve the stepwell and also written to the Government of Haryana to reserve it.[1] INTACH could not preserve it due to lack of agreement on terms with the owner who wants to maintain it himself.[6]

Plundered Badshahpur Qila

In January 2018 SSAA and INTACH discovered that HUDA is in the process of constructing a road which might lead to the destruction of this stepwell.[1][6] HUDA officials agreed to review it and if needed will alter the road to avoid risk to the stepwell, deputy commissioner assured to have it preserved.[1][6]

Akhara Stepwell[edit]

Akhara Stepwell, also Akhara Baoli, is a stepwell in inside a functional akhara on the same road as the "Badshahpur Baoli", only few km away, in Badshahpur. Constructed with local materials, such as stone, all these baolis of Gurugram district have mixed Ahir-Rajput-Jat-Mughal architectural style of 18th-20th centuries with Islamic pointed arches and cusped or segmental arches.[7] In 2018, activists filed the case against the church which tried to illegally grab and destroy this legally protected baoli through fraud.[8]

Dhumaspur Stepwell[edit]

Dhumaspur Stepwell, also Dhumaspur Baoli, is a 200 years old Zila Parishad-managed five-story stepwell on the "Jail Road" in Dhumaspur village near Badshahpur in Gurugram. If was built on 2 kanal land from the stones brought from Makrana and Jaipur mines.[8] In 2018, activists filed the case against the church which tried to illegally grab and destroy this legally protected baoli through fraud.[8]

Assembly constituency[edit]

Badshapur assembly constituency is dominated by Yadav/Ahir voters which are nearly 45,000 in number.[9][10] Rakesh Daulatbad is the sitting MLA from Badshahpur.[11] Caste composition of Badshahpur is 45,000 Ahir/Yadavs, 12000 Jats, 20,000 Gujjars, 15,000 Brahmins, 10,000 Rajputs, 11,000 Punjabis and 10,000 Banias 7,000 Prajapati.[9][12]

Badshahpur is quite a large constituency it includes nurpur jharsa, Manesar, Farrukhnagar, and some urban areas of Gurgaon. Villages under Badshahpur are Palda, Sakatpur, Narsinghpur, Mohammadpur Jharsa, Sadhrana, Garhi, Harsaru, Palam Vihar, Mullaheda, Sector 15 Part 2,Sec - 67, Sec - 68, Gadoli, Naharpur, Rampur, Aklimpur, Kadipur, Sarhaul, Shikohpur, Teekli, sector 10A Daultabad, Dundahera, Wazirpur, Hamirpur, Jhund Sarai, Dhanawas, Dhorka, Bhawani Enclave, Dhana Manesar, Saidpur, Mohammadpur, Patli, Bhangrola, kankrola, hayatpur, Judola, Narsighpur, Nurpur, Baskusla Manesar, Chandan Nagar Dhani, Basai Enclave, Sikandarpur Ghosi, Nathupur, DLF Phase 3, Rail Vihar, Sector 57, Greenwood City Sector 45, Tigra, Darbaripur, Hasanpur, Begampur Khatola, DLF Phase 2, Dankot, Ikbal Pur, Kaliyawas, Sultanpur, Sikandarpur Ghosi, Darbaripur, Khandsa, Islampur, Jharsa, Nathupur, Palam Vihar, Ramgarh and Kherki Daula all significant landmarks of Gurgaon city fall under Badshapur assembly constituency.[13][14]

References[edit]

See also[edit]

Citations[edit]

  • ^ Badshahpur Fort and Baoli, Haryana Tourism.
  • ^ "Haryana CM announces infra projects worth ₹2,711-cr; hits out at freebies". Hindustan Times. 30 May 2022. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
  • ^ "A queen's magnificent church". The Indian Express. 2 September 2012.
  • ^ a b c d e f g Will history be buried for a road? A Gurgaon village waits, Indian Express, 18 January 2018.
  • ^ Forgotten stepwells fine examples of our heritage, Hindustan Times, 16 September 2019. Both baolis in Badhshapur are based on the square plan with three side steps and a rectangular single steps to move down into the baoli. A stepped pond was usually built near a temple and the stepped well was built on travel routes or the outskirts of towns by nobles, queens, rich traders and philanthropists of the community to provide drinking water to the passers-by.
  • ^ a b c The allegations of the ancient Bawdi disappearing on church management, Dainik Jagran, 11 January 2018.
  • ^ a b "FG: High-Stakes Badshahpur". Fridaygurgaon.com. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  • ^ "BJP may name Gurgaon candidate after Modi visit". The Times of India. 18 August 2014. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  • ^ "Haryana Elections and Results- News and Updates on Chief Ministers, Cabinet and Governors". Elections.in. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  • ^ "निर्दलीय प्रत्याशी राकेश दौलताबाद ने हर राउंड में कायम रखी बढ़त".
  • ^ "'Social workers' rule the roost in Badshapur". The Times of India. 8 October 2014. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  • ^ "Haryana gets its 1st waste recovery facility in Gurugram's Badshahpur: Officials". Hindustan Times. 8 February 2022. Retrieved 14 June 2022.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Badshahpur&oldid=1228451307"

    Categories: 
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    Stepwells in India
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