- Arnala Fort is built on a small island of the port town of Arnala, located around 8 miles north of Vasai, Maharastra, India.
- Being an island fort, it is also called Jaldurg or Janjire-Arnala.
- The Portuguese, who owned this fort rebuilt and gave it the name Ilha das vacas.
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Arnala Fort |
Main entrance as seen from North side.
The solid stone doorway is adorned with pictures of tigers and elephants.
- Detail of images of Tiger and elephant on the entrance door.
- Ramparts and Walls.
- The external ramparts are in a fairly good condition, and a roughly three-meter-wide path exists along the outer walls.
Southern Watch Tower
- There
exists a lone watch tower about 550 meters from the main fort, on the
Southern end of the island. This tower has no entrance gate.
Tourist Attraction :
- Octagonal water reservoir inside the fort.
- Octagonal Water Reservoir and Temples.
- There is a large octagonal fresh water reservoir inside the fort.
- Inside the fort are the temples of Ambakeshwar, Goddess Bhavani, Lord Shiva, and the tombs of Shahali and Hajjali. The 'paduka' or sacred sandals of Shrinityanand Maharaj are housed in a dome on the eastern face of the fort.
History :
- In 1516, a local chieftain in Gujarat,
Sultan Mahmud Begda originally constructed the fort on the island,
strategically located at the mouth of the Vaitarna river.
- In the
1530s, the Portuguese had established their operations in the coastal
area headquartered at Fort Bassein and soon gained control of the
island.
- The Portuguese captain of Bassein donated the island to a
Portuguese nobleman who tore down the old fort and began construction
of a 700-by-700-foot fort.
During the late 17th and early 18th
centuries, after a long struggle with the Mughal Empire, the Maratha
Confederacy came to dominate present day Maharastra.
- In 1737 the then Peshwa Baji Rao I sent his brother, Chimaji Appa, to take the Bassein Fort from the Portuguese.
- After
winning the Battle of Vasai, his general, Shankarji Pant, persuaded
Chimaji to launch an assault on Fort Arnala, for its strategic
importance to the Maratha navy in assaulting Portuguese interests. Their
first assault, coordinated with a Maratha naval force commanded by
Manaji Agre, was routed by a superior Portuguese naval force. A second
assault on the fort on March 28, 1737, caught the Portuguese by surprise
and forced them to abandon the fort.
- The victory was
commemorated by a plaque installed on the northern wall of the fort and
is still visible today. Marathas then rebuilt the fort, constructing
three bastions Bahirav, Bhavani and Bava.
The Marathas controlled the
fort until 1817 when, during the third British-Maratha war, despite
successfully defending the fort, they were forced to surrender the fort
to the British due to their superior naval power.
- The Arnala and
Bassien forts were returned to the Marathas by the British in the treaty
of Salabai, but the forts again changed hands under the treaty of Pune.
- Today the fort is in a state of disrepair.
Labels: Maharashtra