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Which Indian leader was featured in Vogue way back in 1964?
You probably know that the Bengal Tiger is the national animal of India. But what is our national game? (Do we even have one?!?)
Answers to these and more questions in the pages to follow!
India continues to surprise us every single day.
The diversity, the history, the varied cultures, the delicious cuisines... there is nothing even remotely everyday about this wondrous country.
Over the last few months, we've been bringing you stunning photographs from around the country, taking you down memory lane and even making a bucket list of things to do in India :-)
Today, we list out a few things about India that you probably didn't know and most certainly should be proud of.
So keep clicking and be amazed!
Let's start from Tamil Nadu shall we?
The Brihadeeswarar Temple, located at Thanjavur was constructed by emperor Raja Raja Chola I and boasts of a shikhara or the peak made out of a single 80-tonne piece of granite.
Also known as 'the Big Temple', it turned (and you might need to sit down for this) 1,000 years in 2010.
The Indian Railways employs some 1.4 million people, making it the largest employer in the country.
That's more people than the entire population of countries such as Fiji, Barbados, Maldives and The Bahamas!
With a railway length of 64,460 km, the Indian Railways also boasts of the fourth largest network of rail transport in the world after the US, China and Russia.
A little over 1.3 million!
Which should explain why no one wants to mess around with us :-)
True story!
It was called Mokshapat and the ladders represented virtues while the snakes indicated vices suggesting that one's good deeds would lead one to salvation or moksha and evil would lead to a cycle of rebirths.
Come think of it, the fact that this game was invented by us shouldn't come as a surprise.
Who else would've connected karma and a board game but us?
The good folks in the Indus Valley were using ornamental buttons made out of seashells in 2000 BC.
At about the same time the chaps in (what would come to be called) England were celebrating because they completed this.
Talking of fashion, our very on Chacha Nehru received a nod from the fashionable folks at Vogue magazine.
Nehru, who was pictured in his trademark single-breasted mandarin-collared jacket, triggered a trend, with the 'Nehru jacket' becoming the thing to be seen in.
The Beatles wore it, Johhny Carson wore it and gurus of high fashion went on to include it in their collections.
While its popularity waned in the '60s, the jacket has made a comeback to the runways in the last few decades.
While we're on clothes, here something you should know:
India's textile industry offers direct employment to some 35 million people in the country.
As of 2009-2010, Indian textiles industry was pegged at $55 billion.
64 per cent catered to the local markets.
We are an agricultural economy. So agriculture, of course, ranks number one here.
More facts about India's economy here
The fortunes of Varanasi have risen and fallen many times over but the city itself has stood strong since circa 1986 BC.
This makes it one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world!
Great many things have been said about Varanasi (or Benaras as it is also called).
This one's by Mark Twain: "Benaras is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend and looks twice as old as all of them put together."
An RTI query from a ten-year-old girl, Aishwarya Parashar, revealed that hockey is not the national game of the country.
Responding to the query, the union ministry of youth affairs confessed that there was no official order or notification that names hockey as the national game.
As it turns out, officially, India doesn't have any national game at all!
Our school text books were wrong all along! :-)
Stumped? :-P
But you probably knew that right?
We won't bore you with the six sigma story that you've heard so many times over or how Prince Charles came to meet these industrious people.
We will however leave you with the official figures as they appear on the website of the Mumbai dabbawala:
Just about 5000 of them deliver 200,000 lunch boxes every single day to and from offices all over the city.
The fact that they have been doing it for 125 years, carrying out their job during peak traffic hours, travelling in trains that ferry over 4500 passengers instead of their capacity of about 2500 and never let the smile vanish from their faces, makes this achievement downright superhuman!