Anagpur Dam
Anangpur Dam | |
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File:Surajkund dam "downstream" side.jpg
Anangpur Dam
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Location | Delhi and Haryana |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Construction began | 8th century |
Dam and spillways | |
Impounds | local nallah (stream) |
Height | 7 m (23 ft) |
Length | 50 m (164 ft) |
Reservoir | |
Creates | Water supply & Irrigation |
The Anangpur Dam, located close to the Anagpur village (also called Arangpur) in Faridabad district of Haryana, India, is 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) away from the more famous Surajkund. This unique Indian hydraulic engineering structure was built during the reign of king anagpal ruler
of the Tomar dynasty in 8th century. It is approachable by road from Delhi from the Delhi - Mathura road. The ruins of the fortifications found in Anangpur village establishes by an inference that it was built by Anangpal as part of the Lal Kot that was developed as the first city of Delhi in the 8th century.[1][2][3]
Topography
A local nala (stream) originating in the Aravalli hills was intercepted by building a dam at a chasm to store rain water. It is basically a water harvesting structure meant to store rain water during the monsoon season for beneficial uses of irrigation.[1][2]
History
Anagpal I, the Tanwar rajput, moved his fiefdom to the south of the Aravalli hills, south of the present day Delhi at the far end of the 10th century. Within the boundaries of the present day Haryana, on the border with Delhi, they built the Surjakund reservoir near Surjakund village and another dam in its close vicinity near the Arangpur village as the Anangpur dam. It is said that Anangpal who built Surjakund and Arangpal (also known as the builder of Lal Kot, called the first city of Delhi) who built Arangpur dam belonged to the same dynasty but belonged in different periods.[4]
Structure
The ancient and solid gravity dam structure, a pre-Islamic structure that fords a local nala (stream) is 7 metres (23 ft) in height and 50 metres (160 ft) in length between the two banks. It has been built with quartzite stones (locally available), duly chiselled and dressed, as a regular dam section with downstream base width increasing in steps with depth up to the foundation. It has entry manholes from the top of the dam, which lead into the body of the dam for inspection and control of flow through sluices for downstream uses. The intake entry into the sluice is on the upstream side. The downstream outlet end leads to the flat terrain below the dam at the ground level. The reservoir created by the dam is mostly silted over the centuries but it is said to be in use.[2][5]
Access
Anagpur which is 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) from the dam is 19 kilometres (12 mi) from Delhi city and is approachable from Qutub Minar and Surajkund. But the access to the dam is through a path from the Anagpur village, which goes through flat pastureland and then over a rocky forested hill.[1][2]
Gallery
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Stepped "downstream" side of dam.jpg
Downstream view of the dam
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Steps going into the dam1.jpg
Gallery entry into the dam
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Steps going into the dam.jpg
Steps into the gallery inside the dam
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Sluice (Anagpur Dam).jpg
Sluice inlet in the dam
References
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anagpur Dam. |
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