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RAMGARH HILL.

SEPTEMBER, 1873.]

243

ON THE ANTIQUITIES OF RAMGARH HILL DISTRICT OF SARGUJá. BY W. BALL, M.A., GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA.

MY duties as a Geological Surveyor have led me into many remote and seldom-visited

water, and the different seasons at which our

visits were made, his being in the cold season,

localities in Western Bengal. Few of these have

and mine towards the end of March.

appeared to me more curious and interesting

The sandstone out of which the water gushes rests upon a seam of coaly shale 4 feet 5 inches thick, but not of much value for burning. Leaving the fountain and grove, which are at the north-east corner of the rectangular block of

than the Rāmgarh hill, in the district of

Sargujá, Chota Nāgpur Division. Previous notices of some of the antiquities of

the Rāmgarh hill by Col. Ouseley and Col. Dalton, C.S.I., will be found in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal.” In the paper by Col. Dalton there are some technical details of the architecture.

On the 22nd of March 1872 my camp reach ed Khādri, a village some six or seven miles west

sandstone which forms the main mass of the

hill, and renders it a conspicuous and easily recognisable object for many miles around, we proceeded round by the eastern side to the south. The general level of the path, which

runs for nearly three-fourths of the way round

of Lakanpur, in Sargujá, and on the following morning early I started to explore the Rāmgarh

the base of the rectangular mass, maintains an elevation of about 2600 feet above the sea, or of

hill. Two miles south of Khādri we passed

600 below the summit of the hill.

through a miserable Gond (locally Gor) hamlet

High up on the south-east corner, water trickles

called Sãontári, soon after leaving which the path

down over the vertical face of the cliff till it is

became almost obliterated, and we found our

caught by a ledge of rock, which doubtless serves

selves on the rise to the Rāmgarh hill.

to redirect its course and cause its appearance on the north-east. After passing rather more than three-fourths of the way along this path, the attention is arrested by a rudely cut model

Proceed

ing onwards for some distance through a tangled mass of charred and smouldering branches and logs, where the jungle had been set on fire, we at last emerged on a piece of flat ground shaded by a few mango and ebony trees, and bounded on the south by a wall of rock

which rises perpendicularly for several hundred feet.

At the foot of this wall an unusual lux

uriance of the vegetation at once attracted attention,-ferns, species of Ficus, and other

moisture-loving plants being abundant. On going a little closer the cause of this became apparent, as a grotto, to which there is an ascent by a few steps, opened out to view. There, from a fissure in the massive bed of sandstone, a

constant stream of pure water spouts forth in so

strange a way that it is no cause for wonder that the natives regard the place as sacred. Col. Dalton compares the fountain to the one which we are told issued from the rock at the touch of Moses.

I found the water refreshing but not cool; at the same time the temperature was not higher than that of the air, as Col. Dalton found it. This is easily explainable by the probable constancy of the temperature of the

of a temple or memorial stone which is about

four feet high. In the lower portion of it there is a cavity for the reception of a tablet. But no vestige remains of one now, if it ever did exist. This object the natives call mal karn. It is on the right hand of the path. A few steps further, on the left, there is a block of sandstone, which,

if the attention were not specially drawn to it, one might pass without remarking anything particular about it. . It is, however, of some interest, being artificially hollowed, with an en trance facing to the west. This block measures externally 3 ft. 5 in. by 3 ft.8 in. by 6 ft. The en trance is 1 foot 5 inches by 1 foot 4 inches, and the internal length 3 feet 10 inches. The bottom is now somewhat filled up, but it is evident that there was room for a man to creep inside and squat down. The natives call it “Muni goſar’— the Muni's den. Close by this are the remains of an old wall built of uncut stones.

A short distance beyond, the ascent of the great block of sandstone commences by the only prac ticable route : this is at the south-west corner.

  • Wol. XVII. pt. i. (1848), pp. 65-68, and vol. XXXIV. pt. ii. (1865), pp. 23-27.
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