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Bairat
Bairat is a town in northern Jaipur District of Rajasthan, India. Bairat is located 52 km north of Jaipur, and 66km west of Alwar.
Bairat - History
The ancient name of the town was Viratnagar, and its history goes back to the time of the Mahabharata. Viratnagar was the capital of the ancient Indian kingdom (Mahajanapada) of Machcha or Matsya. The kingdom came under the control of the neighboring Chedi kingdom in the 5th century, and was later part of the Mauryan Empire. The ruins of the Bijak-ki-pahadi, a Buddhist chaitya (chapel) from the 3rd century BCE, is the oldest freestanding Buddhist structure in India. The town also has the ruins of a Buddhist monastery, a wood and timber shrine, and rock-cut edict from Emperor Asoka that date from the Mauryan period.
In 634 Xuanzang had visited the Baitat and Mathura towns. He went east to Jalandhara in eastern Punjab, before climbing up to visit predominantly Theravada monasteries in the Kulu valley and turning southward again to Bairat and then Mathura, on the Yamuna river.
The town has a number of Mughal structures, including a chhatri (cenotaph) with some of the earliest surviving murals in Rajasthan, and a lodge where the Mughal emperor Akbar hunted and stayed overnight on his yearly pilgrimage to Ajmer.
The town's Viratnagar Museum houses artefacts from Bairat's long history, including sculptures, coins, pottery, seals, and metal objects.
Other related archives3rd century BCE, 5th century, 634, Ajmer, Akbar, Alwar, Asoka, Buddhist, Chedi, India, Jaipur, Jalandhara, Kulu valley, Machcha, Mahabharata, Mahajanapada, Mathura, Mauryan Empire, Mughal, Punjab, Rajasthan, Theravada, Xuanzang, Yamuna river, chaitya, chhatri, monastery
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