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Ahmedabad founded in the year
1411 AD is located on the banks of River Sabarmati.
Ahmedabad has been named after Sultan Ahmed Shah, who
was primarily responsible for building it. Today, this
city is known as the 'Manchester of the East'. One of
the highly industrialized cities in India, Ahmedabad is
also India's Textile City.The old city of Ahmedabad is
dotted with labyrinthine bylines called 'pols'. The
exquisite carved wooden mansions and havelis are in no
manner less than their stone counterparts in Rajasthan.
The city is full of architectural delights. Though the
capital of Gujarat was shifted from Ahmedabad to
Gandhinagar, it is still the second largest industrial
city in western India.
Ahmedabad, a mass of factories, mosques, temples and
high-rise offices, amazes the visitor by its unique mix
of ancient and modern, along with the combination of
thriving Hindu, Muslim and Jain communities that lend
the city an appealing character that can be hard to
resist. A Witness to Indian Freedom Movement. Ahmedabad
became the base camp for the Indian freedom struggle.
Gandhi built the Sabarmati Ashram on the outskirts of
the city. From here, he guided India to freedom. During
the freedom movement, this city of textiles became the
nerve center of the struggle. It was a spectator to the
strategies and plans of Gandhi, which he chalked out to
make the freedom struggle a mass movement. In 1930, it
was from here that Gandhi started his 'Dandi Yatra' to
break the salt laws of the British. Ahmedabad is now
regarded as a national Pilgrimage, a symbol of
non-violence and peace. A Peek Into History: When Ahmed
Shah inherited the Sultanate of Gujarat in 1411 AD; he
chose to move his capital from Patan to the site of
Asawal village, a small settlement on the east bank of
the Sabarmati, renaming it after himself.
The city quickly grew as skilled artisans and traders
were invited to settle. Its splendid Mosques were
clearly intended to assert Muslim supremacy, and
heralded the new Indo-Islamic style of architecture,
which though best displayed here, is a marked feature of
many Gujarati Cities. In 1572 AD, Ahmedabad became part
of the growing Mughul Empire and was regarded as India's
most handsome city. It profited from a flourishing
textile trade, which exported velvets, silks and
shimmering brocades as far a field as Europe. But after
a devastating famine in 1630 AD and a period of
political instability when government passed to and for
between the Muslims and the Hindu Marathas, the city
went into decline. Another famine in 1812 AD left it
almost crippled, but the merchants and traders who had
left during Maratha rule were encouraged to return five
years later when taxes were lowered by the newly arrived
British. Trade in opium grew, as the British needed
something to offer the Chinese in return for silk and
tea. The introduction of modern machinery re-established
Ahmedabad as a textile exporter that came to be known as
the "Manchester of the east". |