Bahadur Fort

Ancient Indian fort
18°30′28.63″N 74°42′14.88″E / 18.5079528°N 74.7041333°E / 18.5079528; 74.7041333TypeLand fortHeight503 mt above mslSite informationOwnerGovernment of IndiaControlled by Maratha Empire (till 1637)
Maratha Empire (1759-1818)  United Kingdom
  • East India Company (1818-1857)
  • British Raj (1857-1947)
 India (1947-)Open to
the publicYesConditionRuinsSite historyMaterialsStone

Bahadurgad (Marathi: बहादूरगड, "Bahadur Fort") is a fort in the Pedgaon village of Ahmednagar district in Maharashtra, India.

Location

The fort is located about 100 km from Pune. The nearest town is Daund. This fort lay about 15 km East of the Daund town on northern banks of River Bhima. The Fort is situated in the village Pedgaon.

Places to see

The fort is rectangular in shape with two entrance gates. The gate towards the village is in good condition while that towards the river is in ruined state. There is a 5 feet tall Maruti/Hanuman statue inside the fort along with group of 5 temples which were constructed during Yadav period. The Hemadpanti architecture temples are of Baleshwar, Lakshmi-Narayan, Mallikarjun, Rameshwar and Bhairavnath. There are many heroic stones, Satigal, cannon balls, Deepmal and a statue of Shiva in front of the Bhairavnath temple.[1]

History

Very little is known of the history of the fort. During the Mughal Empire, Pedgaon was one of the chief stores and a frontier post of the Moghul Army. In 1672, the then Deccan Viceroy, Khan Jahan, camped here and tried to pursue the Maratha army headed by Shivaji I. Khan Jahan built water channels in order to bring water from the river Bhima. The Mot and the Persian wheel are well preserved till now. Khan Jahan renamed Pedgaon as Bahadurgad. This fort was captured by Shivaji by fooling the Moghul Chief. There is a 2 storied palace of Aurangzeb inside the fort. It is believed that Sambhaji met Aurangzeb in this palace. In 1759 Pedgaon was captured by Sadashivrao Bhau Peshwa, and remained with the Marathas till 1818.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Bahadurgad, Western Ghats, Sahyadri, Adventure, Trekking". trekshitiz.com.
  2. ^ "Gazetteers Of The Bombay Presidency - Ahmadnagar". Gazetteers.maharashtra.gov.in. Retrieved 2019-10-19.

External links

  • Media related to Bahadurgad at Wikimedia Commons
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