|

Wankaner
derives its name from the
geographical feature related to
the location of the town: 'Wanka'
means a bend and 'ner' means
water stream in Gujarati.
Wankaner literally means a bend
on the stream and it is located
on the bend of the Machchhu
river.
The Jhala Rajput clan ruled
Wankaner, the capital of the
former princely State of
Wankaner, till Indian
independence in 1947 AD. It was
one of the four princely states
of Jhalawad, other three being-
Wadhvan, Limbdi and Dhangadhra.
Sartanji founded the princely
State of Wankaner in 1605 AD and
the town was fortified in the
late 18th century for protection
against the bandits and
neighboring enemies. King
Amarsinhji, a noble ruler, who
made Wankaner a rich city-state,
ruled Wankaner up till 1947 AD.
Under the patronage of
Amarsinhji, 5 palaces and many
bungalows were built and named
after the rulers of the princely
States of Kutch, Rajkot,
Mayurbhanj and Jamnagar.
Amarsinhji built the Ranjit
Vilas Palace on a hill,
overlooking Wankaner town. It
took seven years to complete
(1907-14 AD) and was designed by
Amarsinhji himself. It was
inaugurated by and named after
his dear friend Jam Ranjitsinhji
of Jamnagar. The ground of the
palace extends to two hundred
and twenty five acres. The state
guesthouse, Chandra Bhavan is
also located in the same campus
in the vicinity of the Ranjit
Vilas Palace.
Ranjit Vilas Palace is a very
eclectic building, a bold
attempt to sythesise various
architectural styles. The front
and back facades are
appropriately designed in
response to its location. The
receding volumes, on the front,
creating a series of terraces
culminating in two beautifully
designed pavilions with gothic
arches. The back facade, on the
town side, really establishes
the palace as an impressive
landmark. The seven storied
central clock tower capped by a
Mughal dome and two five storied
high bastions, at both the
corners, culminate in hexagonal
chhatris. The facade has arcades
of arched Victorian windows
Italianate pillars, Gothic
arches and classical parapets. A
massive Dutch roof spans the
central wing of the palace. A
double staircase is the unique
feature of the interior of this
palace, where the royal ladies
could ascend and descend without
being seen by men. A similar
double
staircase at Chateau de
Chambord, Loire, France, dating
to the Renaissance period,
inspired this staircase.
Ranjit Vilas Palace has a
memorable collection of swords,
shields and daggers, 95 species
of stuffed animals, duelling
pistols, pig sticking spears,
silver, linen chests,
silver-plated howdahs, thrones,
paintings and portraits. The
palace has magnificent spiraling
marble staircase, stained glass
galleries, chandeliers and
period furniture. The garage, on
the grounds of the palace
complex, has Vintage cars like
the 1921 Rolls Royce Silver
Ghost, some imposing American
cars and horse drawn carriages.
The palace also has a stable of
Kathiawadi horses. There are
large grounds with beautiful
Italianate fountains.
Wankaner also has a step well,
the last one to be built in
Gujarat. In the royal oasis
complex, the 3-storied step
well, has 2 underground floors
with cool subterranean marble
rooms, fine sculptures and a
fountain.
Wankaner was among the first few
royal families of India to
convert their palaces into
Heritage Hotels, which have
guestrooms, maintained in the
original royal style.
Excursion
Morbi (Green Chowk, Darbargadh,
Art Deco Palace, Wellingdon
Secretariat, railway station,
Nehru Gate, Lakhdhirjee
Engineering College) 27 km,
Halvad (Ek-dandia Mahal-wooden
palace, cenotaphs of warriors-chhatris,
step wells, Shiva Temples) 75 km
Travel
Information
Air
Nearest airport is Rajkot
(53 km), Ahmedabad (220 km)
Rail
Wankaner City on
Ahmedabad-Rajkot railway line
Road
Rajkot (53 km), Ahmedabad (220
km)
Local transport
Non-metered auto rickshaws.
|