Incredible India Travel | Social Impact & Culture Tours

Wheat vs Rice: How Two Grains Quietly Shaped Two Indias

20 min · 24. juni 2026
episode Wheat vs Rice: How Two Grains Quietly Shaped Two Indias cover

Beskrivelse

Why does Punjab celebrate its new year in April with bonfires and a festival built around cut wheat, while Tamil Nadu celebrates its harvest festival in January, watching a pot of rice boil over with milk and jaggery. Why do the temples of the south rise in towering gopurams visible from a distance, while many temples of the north sit smaller and more intimately set into a riverbank or hillside. Why does the north's classical music tradition favour a single performer exploring a raga alone, while the south's classical tradition favours an ensemble in constant, audible dialogue with itself. One honest, well documented answer, among several that matter, turns out to be sitting on a plate in front of you at almost every meal. It is the grain. This episode traces how two different staple crops, wheat in the north and rice in the south, quietly shaped two different calendars, cuisines and artistic traditions across India over thousands of years, while being equally honest about where this theory holds up and where it does not. What You Will Discover in This Episode How the Indus Valley Civilisation grew wheat and barley as winter staples and rice as a summer crop over four thousand years ago, and how archaeologists at Rakhigarhi found evidence of sophisticated seasonal multi-cropping that predates comparable evidence from Mesopotamia or Egypt Why wheat ripens all at once in spring across the entire northern wheat belt, while rice, dependent on monsoon timing that varies by region, staggers its harvest across a much wider stretch of the calendar Why Punjab's Baisakhi falls every April, marking the wheat harvest and the Punjabi new year, while Tamil Nadu's Pongal falls every January, named for the moment rice cooked with milk and jaggery boils over an earthen pot, and how Onam, Bihu and Nabanna each follow this same underlying logic across other regions How North Indian cuisine centres on wheat breads and dairy based gravies while South Indian cuisine centres on rice, fermented batters and coconut based dishes, and why neither tradition should be read as more or less communal than the other Why North Indian Nagara temples are built around a curved shikhara tower echoing a mountain peak with a small, dim sanctum at their centre, while South Indian Dravida temples rise in towering gopurams visible for miles, built around vast courtyards for grain storage, education and annual festivals, and why this difference likely reflects geography and centuries of stable patronage rather than any difference in devotion The genuinely surprising case of Indian classical music, where the northern Hindustani tradition, born in royal courts, favours a single performer's unhurried solo exploration of a raga, while the southern Carnatic tradition, born in temples, favours a tightly coordinated ensemble in constant real time dialogue, a pattern that runs in the opposite direction from what the wheat and rice theory would predict The honest limits of this entire theory, including why rice growing Bengal produced one of India's most distinguished intellectual traditions and why wheat growing Punjab is home to the deeply communal langar tradition, both of which complicate any simple version of this story How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete wheat belt and rice belt heritage circuit to life for international travellers Experience the Two Indias With 5 Senses Tours Our Delhi tours take you through the heart of India's wheat belt, the Indo-Gangetic plain that has grown wheat for over four thousand years, at https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/] Our Kerala tours take you into the rice belt, where the August festival of Onam and centuries of paddy cultivation define the landscape, at https://5sensestours.com/tour/kerala-5-days/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kerala-5-days/] Our Kolkata tours and Kolkata city tour take you into rice growing Bengal, where the Nabanna festival celebrates the new rice harvest each winter, at https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/] and https://5sensestours.com/tour/kolkata-city-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kolkata-city-tour/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

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episode Wheat vs Rice: How Two Grains Quietly Shaped Two Indias cover

Wheat vs Rice: How Two Grains Quietly Shaped Two Indias

Why does Punjab celebrate its new year in April with bonfires and a festival built around cut wheat, while Tamil Nadu celebrates its harvest festival in January, watching a pot of rice boil over with milk and jaggery. Why do the temples of the south rise in towering gopurams visible from a distance, while many temples of the north sit smaller and more intimately set into a riverbank or hillside. Why does the north's classical music tradition favour a single performer exploring a raga alone, while the south's classical tradition favours an ensemble in constant, audible dialogue with itself. One honest, well documented answer, among several that matter, turns out to be sitting on a plate in front of you at almost every meal. It is the grain. This episode traces how two different staple crops, wheat in the north and rice in the south, quietly shaped two different calendars, cuisines and artistic traditions across India over thousands of years, while being equally honest about where this theory holds up and where it does not. What You Will Discover in This Episode How the Indus Valley Civilisation grew wheat and barley as winter staples and rice as a summer crop over four thousand years ago, and how archaeologists at Rakhigarhi found evidence of sophisticated seasonal multi-cropping that predates comparable evidence from Mesopotamia or Egypt Why wheat ripens all at once in spring across the entire northern wheat belt, while rice, dependent on monsoon timing that varies by region, staggers its harvest across a much wider stretch of the calendar Why Punjab's Baisakhi falls every April, marking the wheat harvest and the Punjabi new year, while Tamil Nadu's Pongal falls every January, named for the moment rice cooked with milk and jaggery boils over an earthen pot, and how Onam, Bihu and Nabanna each follow this same underlying logic across other regions How North Indian cuisine centres on wheat breads and dairy based gravies while South Indian cuisine centres on rice, fermented batters and coconut based dishes, and why neither tradition should be read as more or less communal than the other Why North Indian Nagara temples are built around a curved shikhara tower echoing a mountain peak with a small, dim sanctum at their centre, while South Indian Dravida temples rise in towering gopurams visible for miles, built around vast courtyards for grain storage, education and annual festivals, and why this difference likely reflects geography and centuries of stable patronage rather than any difference in devotion The genuinely surprising case of Indian classical music, where the northern Hindustani tradition, born in royal courts, favours a single performer's unhurried solo exploration of a raga, while the southern Carnatic tradition, born in temples, favours a tightly coordinated ensemble in constant real time dialogue, a pattern that runs in the opposite direction from what the wheat and rice theory would predict The honest limits of this entire theory, including why rice growing Bengal produced one of India's most distinguished intellectual traditions and why wheat growing Punjab is home to the deeply communal langar tradition, both of which complicate any simple version of this story How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete wheat belt and rice belt heritage circuit to life for international travellers Experience the Two Indias With 5 Senses Tours Our Delhi tours take you through the heart of India's wheat belt, the Indo-Gangetic plain that has grown wheat for over four thousand years, at https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/] Our Kerala tours take you into the rice belt, where the August festival of Onam and centuries of paddy cultivation define the landscape, at https://5sensestours.com/tour/kerala-5-days/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kerala-5-days/] Our Kolkata tours and Kolkata city tour take you into rice growing Bengal, where the Nabanna festival celebrates the new rice harvest each winter, at https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/] and https://5sensestours.com/tour/kolkata-city-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kolkata-city-tour/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

24. juni 202620 min
episode Chanakya's 40 Ways to Steal: How Ancient India's Most Dangerous Book Catalogued Every Way to Rob a Government, and How a Librarian Found It Again Eight Hundred Years After It Vanished cover

Chanakya's 40 Ways to Steal: How Ancient India's Most Dangerous Book Catalogued Every Way to Rob a Government, and How a Librarian Found It Again Eight Hundred Years After It Vanished

In 1905, a young Sanskrit scholar named Rudrapatna Shamasastry was working through a heap of palm leaf manuscripts in the Mysore Oriental Library, doing the kind of routine cataloguing work a librarian does every day. Then he opened one written in the Grantha script, and the words stopped being routine. He was holding the Arthashastra. Chanakya's lost political treatise, written for the Mauryan Empire roughly twenty four centuries earlier. A book European scholars believed might never have survived, because it had vanished from circulation sometime around the 12th century and had not been seen by a single scholar anywhere on earth for nearly eight hundred years. Buried inside its second book is a chapter Chanakya titled, with characteristic bluntness, Detection of Embezzlement by Government Officials. In it, the man who helped build one of the largest empires in the ancient world catalogued, in exhaustive detail, exactly forty distinct ways a government treasury official could steal from the state. This episode tells the story of that chapter, the empire it was written to protect, and the librarian who rescued it from eight centuries of silence. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of Chanakya, also known as Kautilya, who helped a young Chandragupta Maurya build the first great political unification of the Indian subcontinent around 321 BCE, and his likely connection to the ancient university of Takshashila The forty distinct embezzlement techniques catalogued in Book Two, Chapter Eight of the Arthashastra, including mismatched gift records, phantom recipients and unrecorded raw materials, described with a precision that reads like a modern forensic accounting textbook Chanakya's investigative method of separately interrogating every official connected to a suspicious transaction, the treasurer, the authoriser, the receiver, the payer, to prevent coordinated false testimony, a principle still used in fraud investigations today The honest limitation Chanakya built into his own system, comparing the near impossibility of catching a dishonest official to determining whether a fish swimming underwater has swallowed any of the water around it How the Arthashastra, an influential and widely cited text for centuries, simply disappeared from circulation around the 12th century, vanishing so completely that an entire tradition of European scholarship grew up believing ancient India had learned its principles of statecraft from the Greeks The story of Rudrapatna Shamasastry, born in 1868 on the banks of the Kaveri river, who mastered Sanskrit, Vedic literature, Prakrit, English, German and French before becoming the Mysore Oriental Library cataloguer who discovered the lost manuscript in 1905, published the Sanskrit edition in 1909, and completed the first English translation in 1915 Why Shamasastry's discovery has been called an epoch making event in the history of the study of ancient Indian polity, and how it overturned a settled European assumption about where ancient India's statecraft came from Where the original palm leaf manuscript is preserved today, at the Oriental Research Institute in Mysore, alongside nearly sixty thousand other classical Indian manuscripts How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete story of Chanakya, Takshashila and the Mysore manuscript discovery to life for international travellers Experience Chanakya's Mysore With 5 Senses Tours The palm leaf manuscript Shamasastry discovered in 1905 is still preserved at the Oriental Research Institute in Mysore, alongside the Mysore Palace and the city's deep Sanskrit scholarly tradition. Our Royal Mysore tour explores this heritage in full at https://5sensestours.com/tour/tour-of-mysore/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/tour-of-mysore/] Our Mysore day tour from Bangalore covers the same heritage as a convenient day trip at https://5sensestours.com/tour/mysore-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/mysore-tour/] For a customised journey connecting Chanakya, Panini and the ancient university of Takshashila, contact us at https://5sensestours.com/ [https://5sensestours.com/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

24. juni 202619 min
episode Panini: The World's First Programmer Wrote Code in Sanskrit, Twenty Five Centuries Before Computers Existed cover

Panini: The World's First Programmer Wrote Code in Sanskrit, Twenty Five Centuries Before Computers Existed

In 1959 a computer scientist named John Backus invented a notation for describing the grammar of programming languages. It is called Backus Naur Form, and it is one of the foundational tools of modern computer science. Every programming language you have ever used was at some point defined using a descendant of this notation. In 1967 a researcher reading an old Sanskrit grammar wrote a letter to the Communications of the ACM, the most respected computer science journal in the world, to point out something extraordinary. Someone had already invented Backus Naur Form. Twenty five hundred years earlier. In Sanskrit. Panini was a scholar who flourished between 400 and 200 BC, and in order to describe the rules of Sanskrit grammar he invented a notation equivalent in its power to that of Backus. The researchers proposed a new name for the notation computer scientists had been using for nine years. The Panini Backus Form. This episode tells the story of Panini, the Sanskrit grammarian born near the Indus river in what is now Pakistan, who wrote a grammar so rigorous, so mechanical and so completely rule based that twenty five centuries later, computer scientists building the first programming languages discovered he had already solved their problem. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of Panini, born in Shalatula near Attock on the Indus river sometime between the 4th and 7th century BC, and his likely connection to the ancient university of Taxila, which also produced Chanakya, the strategist behind the Mauryan Empire, and Charaka, the father of Ayurvedic medicine The structure of the Ashtadhyayi, Panini's eight chapter grammar of Sanskrit containing approximately 4000 sutras, generative rules that completely define the language mechanically rather than through memorised examples, in a structure modern linguists compare directly to a formal computer programming language How Panini classified 1700 basic linguistic elements into systematic categories using single letter symbolic markers called anubandhas, a technique functionally identical to how modern programmers define variable classes and apply functions across entire categories of data The 1967 letter to the Communications of the ACM in which researcher P Z Ingerman demonstrated that Panini's notation was structurally equivalent in power to Backus Naur Form, leading to the proposed term Panini Backus Form, and why this discovery mattered so much precisely because Backus had developed his notation independently, with no knowledge of Panini's work How Panini's rule based grammar uses recursion, transformations and metarules, rules about rules, in an architecture that mirrors exactly how a modern compiler operates, where certain rules transform raw input and higher order rules determine which transformations apply and in which order Why Sanskrit, structured according to Panini's deterministic grammar, has become a subject of active research in modern artificial intelligence and large language models, with researchers finding that Panini's generative rules offer measurable computational efficiency advantages over languages that rely on memorised patterns The honest and important distinction between what Panini actually achieved, a complete formal system describing an existing human language, and what Backus and Naur achieved, an artificial language built for a machine, and why the structural toolkit required to solve both problems with total precision turned out to be, almost exactly, the same toolkit How Panini connects to India's broader ancient scientific tradition, including Kanada's atomic theory in Gujarat, the calculus described by Karnataka's mathematicians five centuries before Newton, and the modern physics achievements of Kolkata's Bengali scientists, forming an unbroken line of rigorous Indian thought spanning more than two thousand years How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete ancient Indian science and intellectual heritage trail to life for international travellers through expert guided experiences connecting Delhi, Gujarat, Karnataka and Kolkata Experience Panini's World With 5 Senses Tours Panini's birthplace near the Indus river sits within reach of one of the most historically layered regions accessible from northern India, and the broader story he belongs to stretches across the entire subcontinent. Our Delhi tours connect international travellers to the closest major gateway for exploring this ancient intellectual landscape at https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/] Travellers who want to walk the same ground that shaped Kanada's atomic theory can extend their journey to our Ahmedabad tours in Gujarat at https://5sensestours.com/home-ahmedabad-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-ahmedabad-tours/] The calculus described by Karnataka's mathematicians five centuries before Newton comes alive through our Karnataka tours at https://5sensestours.com/home-karnataka-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-karnataka-tours/] The quantum physics breakthroughs of Kolkata's Bengali scientists are covered in full through our Kolkata tours at https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/] For a customised journey tracing the complete ancient Indian science and intellectual heritage trail, explore our full range of tours at https://5sensestours.com/ [https://5sensestours.com/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

21. juni 202618 min
episode The Building in Kolkata That Produced Six Scientists Who Changed the World cover

The Building in Kolkata That Produced Six Scientists Who Changed the World

There is a building on College Street in Kolkata. It was built in 1875. Its architecture is the confident Victorian Gothic of a colonial institution that expected to last. Tall windows. High ceilings. A sweeping central staircase. A laboratory called the Baker Laboratory that became one of the most productive scientific research spaces in Asia. Its name is Presidency College. And the list of people who studied and taught within its walls across a period of approximately seventy years is so extraordinary that if you compiled it without knowing it was true you would be accused of making it up. Jagadish Chandra Bose. The man who proved that plants have feelings and who transmitted the world's first wireless signal before Marconi, teaching in its laboratories. Prafulla Chandra Ray. The chemist who founded the Indian pharmaceutical industry and whose students would reshape modern physics, teaching beside him. Satyendra Nath Bose. The physicist whose paper Albert Einstein personally translated into German and whose name is now attached to the most fundamental class of particles in the universe, studying in its classrooms. Meghnad Saha. The astrophysicist whose equation explaining the chemical composition of stars transformed our understanding of the cosmos, studying beside Bose in the same year. CV Raman. The physicist who discovered the effect that bears his name and won India its first Nobel Prize in science, conducting his experiments in its Baker Laboratory. Amartya Sen. The economist whose work on poverty and human development won the Nobel Prize in Economics and whose name was given to him by Rabindranath Tagore, studying in its economics department decades later. Six individuals. One building. Physics. Chemistry. Astrophysics. The God Particle. The Raman Effect. The Nobel Prize for Economics. And almost no international tourist who visits Kolkata knows this building exists. This episode is the complete story of the most extraordinary concentration of scientific genius in modern Indian history, and the heritage trail in Kolkata that brings it to life. What You Will Discover in This Episode How a single educational institution on College Street in Kolkata, founded as a result of a meeting in 1816 between progressive British and Bengali reformers, became the most intellectually productive building in the history of South Asia across nearly two centuries The complete story of Jagadish Chandra Bose, who demonstrated wireless transmission of electromagnetic waves in Calcutta in 1895, a full year before Marconi's celebrated demonstration in Britain, and who also invented the crescograph, an instrument that proved plants respond to heat, light and electrical stimuli in ways functionally analogous to animal nervous systems The story of Prafulla Chandra Ray, who founded Bengal Chemical and Pharmaceutical Works in 1901, the first pharmaceutical manufacturing company in India, while living with extraordinary personal simplicity and mentoring the two students who would go on to transform 20th century physics How Meghnad Saha, who grew up in poverty in rural Bengal with precarious access to education, developed the Saha Ionization Equation in 1920, a discovery that gave astronomers for the first time the ability to determine the chemical composition and temperature of stars from their light alone, transforming astrophysics from a descriptive science into a predictive one The extraordinary story of Satyendra Nath Bose, who in 1924 wrote a paper on quantum statistics that European journals rejected, and who responded by posting it directly to Albert Einstein, who recognised its significance immediately, translated it into German himself, and gave his name to the entire class of particles now known as bosons, including the Higgs boson discovered at CERN in 2012 and popularly known as the God Particle The discovery of the Raman Effect by CV Raman in 1928 in the Baker Laboratory at Presidency College, the phenomenon in which scattered light changes wavelength according to the molecular composition of the substance it passes through, a discovery so significant that Raman was reportedly confident enough of its impact to book his ticket to Stockholm before the Nobel committee had even made its decision How Amartya Sen, given his name by Rabindranath Tagore, used the Bengal Famine of 1943, a famine that killed between two and three million people while food was actually being exported from Bengal, to demonstrate that famines are caused by a failure of economic entitlement rather than a shortage of food, transforming global development economics and humanitarian policy The extraordinary genealogy connecting all six scientists, in which Jagadish Chandra Bose and Prafulla Chandra Ray taught Satyendra Nath Bose and Meghnad Saha, who became classmates and lifelong collaborators, while CV Raman used the same Baker Laboratory that Bose established, and Amartya Sen studied economics in the same institution decades later How the Bengali scientists' work connects directly to daily life today, from the wireless technology in your phone, to the Raman spectroscopy used in pharmaceutical quality control and on Mars rovers, to the stellar composition calculations that depend on the Saha equation, to the global famine prevention policies built on Amartya Sen's theory of entitlement How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete Bengali scientists heritage trail to life for international travellers through expert guided visits to Presidency College and the Baker Laboratory, the Bose Institute, the Indian Botanic Garden and the Indian Museum Experience the Bengali Scientists Heritage With 5 Senses Tours The building where six scientists who changed the world studied and taught is still standing on College Street in Kolkata. The Baker Laboratory where CV Raman discovered the effect that won him India's first Nobel Prize in science is still there. The Bose Institute, founded by Jagadish Chandra Bose in 1917 as the first multidisciplinary research institute in India, still preserves his original scientific equipment. And the Great Banyan Tree in the botanical garden that carries his name, a single tree over 250 years old covering more than three and a half acres, is still growing. Our Kolkata tours cover the complete Bengali scientists heritage trail including Presidency College, the Bose Institute and the Indian Museum, connecting the most extraordinary concentration of scientific genius in modern Indian history to the living city where it happened. Book at https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/] For travellers extending their Bengal heritage experience, our Sundarbans wildlife tour covers the extraordinary mangrove ecosystem of the Bengal delta where Royal Bengal tigers swim between islands. Book at https://5sensestours.com/tour/sundarban-wildlife-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/sundarban-wildlife-tour/] For a customised private Bengali scientists heritage journey, contact us at www.5sensestours.com [http://www.5sensestours.com] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert-guided and completely customised for your group.

17. juni 202622 min
episode Mumbai to Pune Heritage Tour: The Extraordinary Victorian Railway That 42,000 Workers Built Through the Western Ghats and Changed India Forever cover

Mumbai to Pune Heritage Tour: The Extraordinary Victorian Railway That 42,000 Workers Built Through the Western Ghats and Changed India Forever

In 1854 a British engineer looked up at the Western Ghats and proposed building a railway through them. His superiors said no. He proposed it again. No. Again. No. For decades the answer was always some version of the same thing. The gradients were too steep. The terrain was too difficult. The engineering was impossible. The Western Ghats rose over 1800 feet in sixteen miles between the Konkan coastal plain and the Deccan Plateau, and no conventional railway locomotive could climb a gradient that severe without simply sliding back down the hill. But there was cotton on the other side of those hills. Vast quantities of extraordinary quality cotton growing on the Deccan Plateau, the cotton that the mills of Lancashire needed and that the port of Bombay could export to the world if only someone could find a way to get it down the mountain. Between 1856 and 1863 someone did. Forty-two thousand workers at the peak of construction. Twenty-five tunnels blasted through solid basalt by hand. Eight stone viaducts rising up to 160 feet above the valley floor. Fifty-four million cubic feet of rock excavated over seven years. And a reversing station at Khandala, a piece of Victorian railway engineering so unusual it has no equivalent anywhere else in India, that allowed trains to climb a gradient that every expert had declared impossible by switching direction in a zigzag pattern that traded distance for steepness. The Times of London called it one of the greatest triumphs of 19th-century civil engineering in the world. The tunnels are still there. The viaducts are still there. The trains still use them today. And the story of who built them, including a Victorian woman from Leek in Staffordshire who took over the construction contract after her husband died within a month of arriving in India and managed the most complex engineering project in Asia from England for seven years, is one of the most extraordinary and most completely untold stories in the history of Indian railway heritage. This is the complete story of the Bhor Ghat railway, the Mumbai to Pune heritage tour and the extraordinary human drama behind the engineering achievement that changed India forever. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of why the British East India Company needed to conquer the Western Ghats, the extraordinary commercial imperative of the Deccan cotton trade and how the American Civil War made the Bhor Ghat railway not just desirable but urgently necessary for the survival of the Lancashire textile industry The specific engineering challenge of the Bhor Ghat, why the gradients of one in forty and in some sections one in thirty-seven were far beyond the capability of any conventional adhesion railway locomotive and what the specific technical solution, the reversing station at Khandala, actually involved and how it worked The complete story of the construction between 1856 and 1863, the number of workers that grew from 10,000 in 1856 to over 20,000 in 1857 to a peak of 42,000 in January 1861, the conditions they worked in on bamboo scaffolding above drops of up to 160 feet, the cholera and malaria that swept through the crowded tent cities on the hillside and the several thousand who never came home The extraordinary story of Alice Tredwell, born in Leek Staffordshire in 1823, who took over the construction contract for the most difficult section of the Bhor Ghat railway after her husband Solomon died within a month of arriving in India, managed it for seven years from England through two appointed engineers, inherited £70,000 and chose to honour the contract rather than walk away, was described by a Victorian engineer as having assumed the contract with a remarkable degree of spirit and judgment, also photographed the construction in photographs now preserved in the archives of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in London, completed the project successfully in 1863 and died four years later aged 44 without being mentioned in the Governor's opening ceremony speech The opening ceremony at Khandala on April 21 1863 attended by the Governor of Bombay Sir Bartle Frere, the speech that celebrated the English engineers and compared the railway to the cave temples of ancient India while making almost no mention of Alice Tredwell or the tens of thousands of Indian workers whose labour and whose lives made the achievement possible The 25 tunnels and 8 stone viaducts of the Bhor Ghat railway, their specific engineering achievements and the extraordinary fact that they are still carrying the Mumbai to Pune railway traffic over 160 years after they were built The Karla and Bhaja Buddhist cave temples near Lonavala, carved from the same basalt cliffs that the Victorian engineers blasted through, funded by Buddhist merchants who used the same Bhor Ghat mountain pass two thousand years before the railway arrived, demonstrating that the route through the Western Ghats has been one of the most commercially significant geographical crossings in Indian history for over two millennia The Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus in Mumbai, the UNESCO World Heritage Victorian Gothic railway station that is the most direct physical connection between the Bhor Ghat story and the living city of Mumbai today How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete Mumbai to Pune heritage story to life for international travellers through expert guided experiences covering the Bhor Ghat railway landscape, the Mumbai heritage circuit and the Pune and Aurangabad heritage destinations Experience the Bhor Ghat Railway Heritage With 5 Senses Tours The tunnels that 42,000 workers blasted through solid basalt between 1856 and 1863 are still there. Every Mumbai to Pune train passes through them. The stone viaducts rising up to 160 feet above the Western Ghats valley floor are still there. The reversing station at Khandala is still there, largely abandoned, its overgrown stone platforms and track beds slowly being reclaimed by the forest. And the Karla cave temples that Buddhist merchants built with their trade profits from the same mountain pass two thousand years before the railway arrived are still there, the largest rock-cut chaitya hall in India, still receiving visitors who almost never know the extraordinary commercial and engineering history of the landscape around them. Our Mumbai tours cover the complete heritage of one of the world's most extraordinary cities, including the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus UNESCO World Heritage building and the complete Victorian heritage of Bombay at https://5sensestours.com/home-mumbai-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-mumbai-tou%EE%80%80rs/] Our Pune city tour covers the complete heritage of the Queen of the Deccan including Shaniwarwada, the seat of the Peshwa rulers of the Maratha Empire, at https://5sensestours.com/tour/pune-city-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/pune-city-%EE%80%80tour/] Our Pune tours hub covers the complete range of Pune heritage experiences including the Karla Bhaja caves day trip from Pune at https://5sensestours.com/home-pune-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-pune-tours%EE%80%80/] Our Aurangabad tours cover the complete Deccan heritage circuit including the UNESCO World Heritage Ajanta and Ellora caves, the Bibi Ka Maqbara and the Daulatabad Fort at https://5sensestours.com/home-aurangabad-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-au%EE%80%80rangabad-tours/] For a customised private Mumbai to Pune heritage journey that combines the Bhor Ghat railway landscape, the Mumbai Victorian heritage circuit and the complete Pune and Aurangabad Deccan heritage experience, contact us at www.5sensestours.com 5 Senses T...

16. juni 202622 min