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Delhi is one of the oldest continually inhabited cities in the
world. Having been the capital of several empires in ancient India,
Delhi was a major city in the old trade routes from northwest
India to the Gangetic Plains. Many ancient monuments, archaeological
sites and remains of national importance have been erected in
its history. The Mughals built a section of the city (now known
as Old City or Old Delhi) that served as the capital of Mughal
Empire for a long period. During the British Raj, New Delhi was
built as an administrative quarter of the city. New Delhi was
declared the capital of India after India gained independence
from British rule in 1947. As the seat of the Government of India,
New Delhi houses important offices of the federal government,
including the Parliament of India. Delhi has grown up to be a
cosmopolitan city owing to the immigration of people from across
the country. Like many other large cities of the world, Delhi
suffers from urbanisation problems such as pollution, traffic
congestion and scarcity of resources. The rapid development and
urbanisation of New Delhi and surrounding areas coupled with the
high average income of the populace has largely eclipsed socio-cultural
traits that used to represent Delhi until a few years after independence.
Human habitation was probably present in and
around Delhi during the second millennium BCE and before, as evidenced
by archeological relics.[14] The city is believed to be the site
of Indraprastha, legendary capital of the Pandavas in the Indian
epic Mahabharata.[9] Settlements grew from the time of the Mauryan
Empire (c. 300 BC).[14] Remains of seven major cities have been
discovered in Delhi. The Tomara Rajput dynasty founded the city
of Lal Kot in 736 AD. The Chauhan Rajput kings of Ajmer conquered
Lal Kot in 1180 AD and renamed it Qila Rai Pithora. The Chauhan
king Prithviraj III was defeated in 1192 by the Afghan Muhammad
Ghori.[9] In 1206, Qutb-ud-din Aybak, the first ruler of the Slave
Dynasty established the Delhi Sultanate. Qutb-ud-din started the
construction the Qutub Minar and Quwwat-al-Islam (might of Islam),
the earliest extant mosque in India.[9][15] After the fall of
the Slave dynasty, a succession of Turkic and Central Asian dynasties,
the Khilji dynasty, the Tughluq dynasty, the Sayyid dynasty and
the Lodhi dynasty held power in the late medieval period, and
built a sequence of forts and townships that are part of the seven
cities of Delhi. (Source-Wikipedia.org)
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