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Palamau
on the Auranga river , 20 miles south-east
of Daltonganj as the crow flies, from which
the district takes its name is for historian
and archaeologist the most interesting place
in the district, for it was for many years
the seat of the Chero chiefs and it contains
the ruins of the two great forts built by
them, the capture of
which by Mughals and later by the
British resulted in the collapse of the
Chero resistance, the forts lie within the
reserved forests and in order to preserve
them the jungle has to be cut back at
intervals. They are a favourite haunt of
tigers, whose pug marks may nearly always be
seen in and around the fort. The walls which
are in preservation |
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are
about 5 feet in thickness and those of
the old fort bear marks of cannon balls
and bullets in many places. In the new
fort the Nagpuri gate is of great
beauty. It is said to have been imported
of great expense by Medni Roy, the
greatest of the Rajas of “Palamau”,
after he had sacked the place of the
Maharaja of Chhotanagpur, but the side
of the fort on which it was erected was
declared to be unlucky, and the entrance
was bricked up, the carving being left
where it was.
The gate has now been opened and
some of the adjoining masonry has been
demolished in order to preserve it.
The following account is taken
from the Report of the Archeological
Survey, Bengal Circle in 1903-1904 : “
There are two forts at Palamau, inside
the jungle, close to each other. They
are distinguished by the name of Purana
Kila and Naya Kila, although the both
appear to be of about the same age. The
style of the walls and buildings so
closely resembles that at Rohtashgarh
and Shergarh that both forts may safely
be put down at the same time, viz., the
beginning of Mughal period. The old fort
is of regular shape, about one mile in
circumference. The ground upon which it
stands rises in terraces, the higher
part is divided from the lower one by a
cross wall.
The walls are in places of
considerable thickness, about 8’ the
path way on top between the battlements
measuring 5’- 6”. In other places
they are thinner.
The four gates are strongly
fortified with inner and outer courts
and provided with watch towers. The
outer battlements of the walls are
loop-holed. Inside are the remains of
for two-storied houses and mosque with
three domes. The inner cross wall has
one gate, in front of which is a deep
well cut out of the rocks with a vaulted
tunnel leading down to it.
The walls are built of stones and
concrete, like those at Rohtashgarh and
Shergarh. The houses are plastered over
and remains of paintings and stucco
ornamentation are seen here and there,.
In all these respects, the buildings
closely agree with those in the other
hill forts, already referred to. I
observed one statue of Buddha close to
the eastern gate and another broken
Hindu or Buddhist idol, but no temple
was found by me. The new fort is built
around the slopes of a conical hill.
There are two lines of walls. Each
making up a square. The inner line
clusters around the peak of the hill the
outer line is somewhat lower down. The
walls are of the same kind as in the old
fort. The outer walls are of
considerable breadth, the passage along
the roof between the battlements
measuring 14’ and the total breadth
amounting to 18’.there are no separate
building inside the enclosure, but the
walls have galleries, open to the
interior, sometimes of several stories.
The most interesting object is fine
stone-carved window about 15’high.
There is nothing to match this either at
Rohtasgarh or Shergarh. The carving is
distinctly of the Mughal type. Another
similar window close to it is broken and
some wall near it also have fallen down
and now block up the passage so that it
is difficult to get a view of this
excellent piece of carving. The above
note still holds good.
Palamau is now often mistaken as Palamau
District. It may be mentioned here that
the East India Gazetteer by Walter
Hamilton (1815) has the following
description lf this district:--“A
hilly and jungly district in the
province of Jharkhand, situated between
the 23rd and 25th
degrees of north latitude. This is one
of the least cultivated and most thinly
inhabited territories in the Company’s
dominions, a great proportion of the
land consisting of hills covered with
jungle. The soil in many parts is
strongly impregnated with iron. |