|
Chandigarh, the dream city
of India's first Prime Minister, Sh. Jawahar Lal Nehru, was
planned by the famous French architect Le Corbusier. Picturesquely
located at the foothills of Shivaliks, it is known as one
of the best experiments in urban planning and modern architecture
in the twentieth century in India.
Chandigarh derives its name from
the temple of "Chandi Mandir" located in the vicinity
of the site selected for the city. The deity 'Chandi', the
goddess of power and a fort of 'garh' laying beyond the temple
gave the city its name "Chandigarh-The City Beautiful".
The city has a pre-historic past.
The gently sloping plains on which modern Chandigarh exists,
was in the ancient past, a wide lake ringed by a marsh. The
fossil remains found at the site indicate a large variety
of aquatic and amphibian life, which was supported by that
environment. About 8000 years ago the area was also known
to be a home to the Harappans.
Since the medieval through modern
era, the area was part of the large and prosperous Punjab
Province which was divided into East & West Punjab during
partition of the country in 1947. The city was conceived not
only to serve as the capital of East Punjab, but also to resettle
thousands of refugees who had been uprooted from West Punjab.
In March, 1948, the Government
of Punjab, in consultation with the Government of India, approved
the area of the foothills of the Shivaliks as the site for
the new capital. The location of the city site was a part
of the erstwhile Ambala district as per the 1892-93 gazetteer
of District Ambala. The foundation stone of the city was laid
in 1952. Subsequently, at the time of reorganization of the
state on 01.11.1966 into Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pardesh,
the city assumed the unique distinction of being the capital
city of both, Punjab and Haryana while it itself was declared
as a Union Territory and under the direct control of the Central
Government.
|