Location: 190 km From Jaipur,
Rajasthan
Tourist Attractions : Mandawa Fort,
Haveli
Best Season: October-March |
Tourism in
Mandawa
About Mandawa
Mandawa is a town in Jhunjhunu district of
Rajasthan in India. It is part of Shekhawati
region. Mandawa is situated 190 km off
Jaipur in the north. The town lies between
latitude 28°.06’ in the north and longitude
75°.20’ in the east. Mandawa is known for
its fort and havelis. The fort town of
Mandawa is well connected with the other
places in region through a good network of
roads.
History
The City of Mandawa was made a thikana in
the mid of 18th century by the Bhojraj Ji
Kasubsub clan of Shekhawat Rajputs. About
the origin of this town there have been
earlier references to Mandu Jat as founder
of the Mandawa village. He first established
a dhani (hamlet) and dug a well here, which
was completed on savan badi 5 samvat 1797
(1740 AD) (source – Mandawa Bodh, Mandawa
special issue, July 2005). Initially this
place was known as ‘Mandu ki dhani’, ‘Mandu
ka bas’ or ‘Manduwas’ which changed to ‘Manduwa’,
‘Mandwa’ and finally ‘Mandawa’.
A remote feudal principality in the centre
of the Shekhawati region, Mandawa was a
trading outpost for the ancient caravan
routes that stopped here from China and the
Middle East. Thakur Nawal Singh, the Rajput
ruler of Nawalgarh and Mandawa, built a fort
in 1755 to protect this outpost. The
township that grew around the fort soon
attracted a large community of traders, who
settled here.
Geography
Mandawa is located at 28.05° N 75.15° E. It
has an average elevation of 316 metres (1036
feet). in the north side it has four village
named bazisar kamalsar kuharu and godu ka
bas and east side three village named
tetara(chandrpura), syopura and hanumanpura
(dular ka bas), south sides village name are
mithwas, dinwa ladhkhani and west side are
sadinsar, tihawali and dabari
Population
As of 2001 India census[2], Mandawa had a
population of 20,717. Males constitute 51%
of the population and females 49%. Mandawa
has an average literacy rate of 58%, lower
than the national average of 59.5%: male
literacy is 70%, and female literacy is 45%.
In Mandawa, 18% of the population is under 6
years of age.
Tourist Attractions in Mandawa
Mandawa fort
The fort of Mandawa was founded in the 18th
century. Thakur Nawal Singh, son of Shardul
Singh, founded the fort in vikram samvat
1812 (1755 AD). The fort dominates the town
with a painted arched gateway adorned with
Lord Krishna and his cows. Built as per a
medieval theme, the castle of Mandawa is
adorned with beautiful frescoes. The rooms
of this palace are decorated with Lord
Krishna paintings, exquisite carvings and
amazing mirror work. The Durbar Hall of the
palace houses a number of antiques and
paintings.
Situated in the middle of the town, the
Mandawa Fort has now been converted into a
heritage hotel.
Havelis
This town has been referred to as the "open
art gallery" of Rajasthan because the entire
Shekhawati region and not just Mandawa is
dotted with fascinating mansions(havelis)
that have lavishly painted walls.
Hanuman Prasad Goenka Haveli
This haveli has a painting depicting Indra
Dev on an elephant and Lord Shiva on his
Nandi bull.
Goenka Double Haveli
This haveli, with two gates, has monumental
façade of elephants and horses. The outer
walls, jutting balconies, alcoves and
overhanging upper storeys of the Goenka
Double Haveli are replete with patterns and
paintings, ranging from traditional
Rajasthani women and religious motifs to
Europeans in stylish hats and Victorian
finery.
Murmuria Haveli
The paintings of trains, cars, George V, and
Venice were executed on the walls of this
haveli during the 1930s by Balu Ram, one of
the last working artists of the region. In
pictures - like Lord Krishna with his cows
in English courtyard and a young Nehru on a
horseback, holding the national flag - this
haveli uses a unique theme blending the East
with the West. The haveli also features a
long frieze depicting a train with a crow
flying above the engine and much activity at
the railway crossing.
Jhunjhunwala Haveli

The haveli is decorated with striking gold
leaf painted room to the right of main
courtyard.
Mohan Lal Saraf Haveli
The picture of a Maharaja stroking his
moustaches beautifies this haveli.
Gulab Rai Ladia Haveli
This haveli is located in the south of town,
where the decoration of the outer and inner
walls is perhaps the finest in Mandawa.
Blue washes here and there betray
twentieth-century censorship of the erotic
scenes that had been commonly acceptable one
hundred years earlier.
The Binsidhar Newatia Haveli, Lakshminarayan
Ladia Haveli and Chokhani Double Haveli are
some other havelis in the area.
Murals in the Thakurji temple located
opposite the Goenka Double Haveli and the
Murmuria Haveli include soldiers being shot
from the mouths of cannons, a reflection of
the horrors of the Mutiny of 1857. Further
west are a couple of chhatris, and a
step-well, still used today and bearing
paintings inside its decorative corner
domes.
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