Forts in Central India
Daulatabad Fort
Daulatabad (Marathi दौलताबाद; Persian دولتآباد meaning “City of Prosperity”), is
a 14th century fort city in Maharashtra, India, about 16 kilometers northwest of
Aurangabad. The place, was once as known as Deogiri, (circa the sixth century
AD, when it was an important uplands city along caravan routes and is now but a
village, based around the former city of the same name.Starting 1327, it
famously remained the capital of Tughlaq dynasty, under Muhammad bin Tughluq (r.
1325-1351), who also changed its name, and forcibily moved the entire population
of Delhi here, for two years, before it was abandoned due to lack of water.The
area of the city includes the hill-fortress of Devagiri (Marathi देवगिरी)
(sometimes Latinised to Deogiri). It stands on a conical hill, about 200 meters
high. Much of the lower slopes of the hill has been cut away by Yadava dynasty
rulers to leave 50 meter vertical sides to improve defenses. The fort is a place
of extraordinary strength. The only means of access to the summit is by a narrow
bridge, with passage for not more than two people abreast, and a long gallery,
excavated in the rock, which has for the most part a very gradual upward
slope.About midway along this gallery, the access gallery has steep stairs, the
top of which is covered by a grating destined in time of war to form the hearth
of a huge fire kept burning by the garrison above. At the summit, and at
intervals on the slope, are specimens of massive old cannon facing out over the
surrounding countryside. Also at the mid way, there is a cave entrance meant to
confuse the Enemies.
History
The site had been occupied since at least 100 BCE, and now has remains of
Buddhist caves similar to those at Ajanta and Ellora.The city is said to have
been founded c. 1187 by Bhillama V, a prince who renounced his allegiance to the
Chalukyas and established the power of the Yadava dynasty in the west.There is a
tradition that Deoghur or Doulatabad was built in 1203 AD by a Dhangar or
herdsman who acquiring by some unusual good fortune vast wealth was named by his
brother shepherds Rajah Ram and soon after assumed the rank of a Rajah.In 1294
the fort was captured by Ala-ud-din Khilji, and the rajas, so powerful that they
were held by the Sultans of Delhi to be the rulers of all the Deccan, were
reduced to pay tribute. The tribute falling into arrear, Devagiri was again
occupied by the Muslims under Malik Kafur, in 1307 and 1310, and in 1318 the
last raja, Harpal, was flayed alive.Devagiri now became an important base for
the operations of the Delhi Sultanate's conquering expeditions southwards. In
1327 Muhammad bin Tughluq determined to make it his capital, changed its name to
Daulatabad , and tried to march the whole population of Delhi to it.The project
was interrupted by troubles which summoned him to the north; during his absence
the Muslim governors of the Deccan revolted; and Daulatabad itself fell into the
hands of Zafar Khan, the governor of Gulbarga. It remained in the hands of the
Bahmanis till 1526, when it was taken by the Nizam Shahis. It was captured by
the Mughal emperor Akbar, but in 1595 it again surrendered to Ahmad Nizam Shah
of Ahmednagar, on the fall of whose dynasty in 1607 it passed into the hands of
the usurper, the Nizam Shahi minister Malik Amber, originally an Abyssinian
slave, who was the founder of Kharki (the present Aurangabad).His successors
held it until they were overthrown by Shah Jahan, the Mughal emperor, in 1633;
after which it remained in the possession of the Delhi emperors until, after the
death of Aurangzeb, it fell to the first Nizam of Hyderabad. Its glory, however,
had already decayed owing to the removal of the seat of government by the
emperors to Aurangabad.