Udayagiri - Forts of India (sitios de interés)

Descripción del sitio

Enclosing an area of about 90 acres (36 ha), with an isolated hill 260 feet (79 m) high, the fort contains an old foundry for casting guns. It is reported that a 16 foot (5 m) brass 22 pounder (10 kg) found inside the fort proved too heavy to be moved by 1200 people and 16 elephants.

The tombs of the Dutch Admiral Eustachius De Lannoy, (in whose honour the fort was once called Dillanai Kottai— De Lennoy's Fort), and of his wife and son can be seen inside a partly ruined chapel in the fort.

The fort is situated on the Thiruvananthapuram-Nagercoil National highway at Puliyoorkurichi. This is the most important military station of the erstwhile Travancore rulers, when Padmanabhapuram was their capital.

The fort is built of massive granite blocks around an isolated hillock. It is renovated about AD 1600. The fort is said to have been destroyed by the King Raja Raja Chola.

The fort was rebuilt during the reign of Marthanda Varma, Venad King during 1741-44. Under the supervision of De Lannoy, Belgium General, who served as the Chief of the Travancore Army, East India Company's troops were stationed there till the middle of the 19th century.
De Lannoy's Tomb at the Udayagiri Fort on the Kanyakumari-Trivandrum highway in Kanyakumari District.
De Lannoy's Tomb at the Udayagiri Fort on the Kanyakumari-Trivandrum highway in Kanyakumari District.

In the early days, the fort was of strategic importance. Prisoners captured in the campaign against Tippu Sultan were confined in the fort for some time. In 1810, the East India Company's Army under Colonel St. Leger marched into the Travancore State through the Aramboly Pass to quell a rebellion under the leadership of Velu Thambi Dalavai. De Lannoy, who served Marthanda Varma loyally for 37 years and who was responsible for training his men in modern warfare, lived in the fort for several years and died on June 1, 1777.

His body was buried within the fort and a chapel was built on the spot. De Lannoy's tomb in the fort is marked out by a stone cross planted on the top, with the inscription in both Tamil and Latin. His wife and son were buried by his side.

Recently, officials of the Department of Archaeology have found a tunnel within the fort.

Presently, the fort has been turned into a bio-diversity park by the Tamilnadu forest department, with sites of historical importance, such as De Lannoy's tomb, remaining as protected archaelogical sites under the Archaelogical Department of India.


Mapa del lugar de interés Udayagiri

Panorámica interactiva con Google Street View

fotografía panorámica de Udayagiri, con el API de Google Street View

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