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Delhi is one of the oldest continually inhabited
cities in the world. Having been the capital of several empires
in ancient India, Delhi was a major city in the old trade
routes from northwest India to the Gangetic Plains. Many ancient
monuments, archaeological sites and remains of national importance
have been erected in its history. The Mughals built a section
of the city (now known as Old City or Old Delhi) that served
as the capital of Mughal Empire for a long period. During
the British Raj, New Delhi was built as an administrative
quarter of the city. New Delhi was declared the capital of
India after India gained independence from British rule in
1947. As the seat of the Government of India, New Delhi houses
important offices of the federal government, including the
Parliament of India. Delhi has grown up to be a cosmopolitan
city owing to the immigration of people from across the country.
Like many other large cities of the world, Delhi suffers from
urbanisation problems such as pollution, traffic congestion
and scarcity of resources. The rapid development and urbanisation
of New Delhi and surrounding areas coupled with the high average
income of the populace has largely eclipsed socio-cultural
traits that used to represent Delhi until a few years after
independence.
Human habitation was probably present in and around Delhi
during the second millennium BCE and before, as evidenced
by archeological relics.[14] The city is believed to be the
site of Indraprastha, legendary capital of the Pandavas in
the Indian epic Mahabharata.[9] Settlements grew from the
time of the Mauryan Empire (c. 300 BC).[14] Remains of seven
major cities have been discovered in Delhi. The Tomara Rajput
dynasty founded the city of Lal Kot in 736 AD. The Chauhan
Rajput kings of Ajmer conquered Lal Kot in 1180 AD and renamed
it Qila Rai Pithora. The Chauhan king Prithviraj III was defeated
in 1192 by the Afghan Muhammad Ghori.[9] In 1206, Qutb-ud-din
Aybak, the first ruler of the Slave Dynasty established the
Delhi Sultanate. Qutb-ud-din started the construction the
Qutub Minar and Quwwat-al-Islam (might of Islam), the earliest
extant mosque in India.[9][15] After the fall of the Slave
dynasty, a succession of Turkic and Central Asian dynasties,
the Khilji dynasty, the Tughluq dynasty, the Sayyid dynasty
and the Lodhi dynasty held power in the late medieval period,
and built a sequence of forts and townships that are part
of the seven cities of Delhi. (Source-Wikipedia.org)
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