Indian Cities Situated at River Bank

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Indian Cities Situated at River Bank Indian Cities situated at River bank • Cuttack is situated on bank of river? 1. Brahmaputra 2. Mahanadi – Ans. 3. Tapti 4. Gandak • Ahmedabad is situated on bank of river? 1. Saryu 2. Mahanadi 3. Narmada 4. Sabarmati – Ans. • Prayagraj is situated on bank of river? 1. Ganga 2. Yamuna 3. Saraswat 4. All of the above – Ans. • Hyderabad is situated on bank of river? 1. Krishna 2. Moosi – Ans. 3. Kaveri 4. Jhelum • Nasik city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Chambal 2. Yamuna 3. Mahanadi 4. Godavari – Ans. • Lucknow city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ganga 2. Yamuna 3. Saryu 4. Gomati – Ans. • Agra city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ganga 2. Yamuna – Ans. 3. Son 4. Saraswati • Ayodhya city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Gomati 2. Yamuna 3. Ganga 4. Sarayu – Ans. • Surat city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Tapti – Ans. 2. Yamuna 3. Mahanadi 4. Godavari • Srinagar is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ravi 2. Beas 3. Sutlej 4. Jhelum – Ans. • Kota city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Chambal – Ans. 2. Betwa 3. Yamuna 4. Ganga • Jabalpur city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Chambal 2. Narmada – Ans. 3. Mahanadi 4. Kosi • Ludhiana city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Beas 2. Ravi 3. Sutlej – Ans. 4. Godavari • Patna city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Sone 2. Koshi 3. Ganga – Ans. 4. Yamuna • Malegaon is situated on which bank of river? 1. Girna 2. mausam 3. Sutlej 4. Confluence of Girna & Mausam – Ans. • Madurai is situated on which bank of river? 1. Kaveri 2. Cheyyar 3. Palar 4. Vaigai – Ans. • Dibrugarh is situated on which bank of river? 1. Brahmaputra – Ans. 2. Godavari 3. Hugli 4. Yamuna • Kolkata city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Hooghly – Ans. 2. Ganga 3. Bhagirathi 4. Yamuna • Patna city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Sone 2. Koshi 3. Ganga – Ans. 4. Yamuna • Ujjain city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Betwa 2. Chambal 3. Shipra – Ans. 4. Ken • Thiruchirapalli city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Vaigai 2. Adyar 3. Noyyal 4. Kaveri – Ans. • Madurai city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Vaigai – Ans. 2. Adyar 3. Noyyal 4. Kaveri • Rajamundary city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Krishna 2. Godavari – Ans. 3. Noyyal 4. Kaveri • Kurnool city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Vaigai 2. Adyar 3. Tungabhadra – Ans. 4. Kaveri • Amravati city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Krishna – Ans. 2. Adyar 3. Noyyal 4. Kaveri • Kochi city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Vaigai 2. Adyar 3. Noyyal 4. Periyar – Ans. • Badrinath city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ganga 2. Yamuna 3. Alaknanda – Ans. 4. Mandakini • Gorakhpur city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ganga 2. Yamuna 3. Rapti – Ans. 4. Gomati • Mirzapur city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ganga – Ans. 2. Yamuna 3. Saryu 4. Gomati • Badrinath city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Ganga 2. Yamuna 3. Alaknanda – Ans. 4. Mandakini • Erode city is situated on which bank of river? 1. Krishna 2. Kaveri – Ans. 3. Noyyal 4. Adyar .
Recommended publications
  • 2019-Newsish-Term2.Pdf
    Editors’ Note Teachers in charge: Mrs. Jyotsna Khanna Mrs. Jhimli Mitra Mrs. Aruna Madhusudan Front cover credits: Sakshi Dey Back cover credits: Sanjana Unni Divya Rangarajan Aakarsh Kankaria Our city went from the Chennai floods to the Chennai drought in two years. The contradiction is appalling and there is no one to blame but ourselves. We have been taking this resource for granted for far too long and its implications are now upon us. Being residents of Chennai, we felt the need to spread awareness on this issue. That was the primary reason for choosing this theme-Where’s My Water? People seem to remember this problem for one week but forget it in the next. We realized that we needed to communicate the message in a different manner. Thereby, we decided to talk about the benefits of water, reminding everyone of the abundant resources that water provides us with and why we need to conserve it. In this edition of Newsish, we have addressed the various facets of water including movies, wars, sunken ships and cities, lost treasures, wonders, machines, sports, and religious aspects. We would like to thank Omana Ma’am and all the teachers involved for giving us the opportunity to make this an E-Magazine. The idea behind opting for an online magazine was to put an end to the large amount of paper wastage we were incurring by publishing a printed edition. Sanjana Unni, Diksha Bhaiya, Dhruv Batra, Kyra Philip, Aditya Shankar, Abhinaya Ramadorai, Zayn Sadiq Sait, Sakshi Dey, Shanna Abraham, Aakarsh Kankaria, Divya Rangarajan, Esha Modi, Adam
    [Show full text]
  • LIST of INDIAN CITIES on RIVERS (India)
    List of important cities on river (India) The following is a list of the cities in India through which major rivers flow. S.No. City River State 1 Gangakhed Godavari Maharashtra 2 Agra Yamuna Uttar Pradesh 3 Ahmedabad Sabarmati Gujarat 4 At the confluence of Ganga, Yamuna and Allahabad Uttar Pradesh Saraswati 5 Ayodhya Sarayu Uttar Pradesh 6 Badrinath Alaknanda Uttarakhand 7 Banki Mahanadi Odisha 8 Cuttack Mahanadi Odisha 9 Baranagar Ganges West Bengal 10 Brahmapur Rushikulya Odisha 11 Chhatrapur Rushikulya Odisha 12 Bhagalpur Ganges Bihar 13 Kolkata Hooghly West Bengal 14 Cuttack Mahanadi Odisha 15 New Delhi Yamuna Delhi 16 Dibrugarh Brahmaputra Assam 17 Deesa Banas Gujarat 18 Ferozpur Sutlej Punjab 19 Guwahati Brahmaputra Assam 20 Haridwar Ganges Uttarakhand 21 Hyderabad Musi Telangana 22 Jabalpur Narmada Madhya Pradesh 23 Kanpur Ganges Uttar Pradesh 24 Kota Chambal Rajasthan 25 Jammu Tawi Jammu & Kashmir 26 Jaunpur Gomti Uttar Pradesh 27 Patna Ganges Bihar 28 Rajahmundry Godavari Andhra Pradesh 29 Srinagar Jhelum Jammu & Kashmir 30 Surat Tapi Gujarat 31 Varanasi Ganges Uttar Pradesh 32 Vijayawada Krishna Andhra Pradesh 33 Vadodara Vishwamitri Gujarat 1 Source – Wikipedia S.No. City River State 34 Mathura Yamuna Uttar Pradesh 35 Modasa Mazum Gujarat 36 Mirzapur Ganga Uttar Pradesh 37 Morbi Machchu Gujarat 38 Auraiya Yamuna Uttar Pradesh 39 Etawah Yamuna Uttar Pradesh 40 Bangalore Vrishabhavathi Karnataka 41 Farrukhabad Ganges Uttar Pradesh 42 Rangpo Teesta Sikkim 43 Rajkot Aji Gujarat 44 Gaya Falgu (Neeranjana) Bihar 45 Fatehgarh Ganges
    [Show full text]
  • 1: Uttar Pradesh Flood A. Situation Report
    Situation Report -1: Uttar Pradesh Flood A. Situation Report Due to heavy rainfall in Nepal and Uttarakhand, most of the river including Rapti, Ghaghara, Sharda and Sarayu is overflowing leading to flood situation in the state of Uttara Pradesh. Number of causalities reported 28 Number of people missing 300 Districts affected Bahraich, Shrawasti, Barabanki, Gonda, Siddharth Nagar, Lakhimpuri Kheri, Balrampur, Faizabad, Sitapur Worst affected Districts Bahraich, Shraswasti, Barabanki, Gonda and Siddharth Nagar Number of affected villages 1,500 approx. Official sources in Lucknow said that an alert has been sounded in Bahraich district, which has been the worst affected. The water has entered into hundreds of villages in Mihipurwa, Mahasi, Balha, Kaiserganj and Jarwal development blocks, affecting a population of about 2 lakhs. These sources said that two helicopters are likely to be pressed into service for relief and rehabilitation measures Floods in Uttar Pradesh have raised fears of damage to the cane crop, as 0.6 million hectares of arable lands have been submerged Rising water levels has hit road and rail traffic and Shashtra Seema Bal and PAC jawans have been deployed to evacuate people affected by the floods. In New Delhi, the Ministry of Water Resources said in a statement that the Rapti in Balrampur district of UP was flowing at 104.62m, 0.63m above danger mark. The record for water level in the river was 105.25m on September 11, 2000. According to a Central Water Commission report, after rising menacingly in Kakardhari and Bhinga yesterday, the Rapti has crossed the maximum level in Balrampur and is still rising.
    [Show full text]
  • Techofworld.In Techofworld.In
    Techofworld.In Techofworld.In 1. Which Indian river merges the Ravi? a) Indus b) Jhelum c) Chenab d) Beas ANSWER: c) Chenab The Ravi is a trans-boundary river flowing through Northwestern India and eastern Pakistan. 2. Which Indian river does the Beas meet at Harike? a) Indus b) Jhelum c) Chenab d) Satluj ANSWER: d) Satluj The Beas joins the river Satluj at the south-western boundary of Kapurthala district of Punjab. 3. Which Indian river joins the Ganga in Allahabad? a) Yamuna b) Chambal c) Ramganga d) Ghaghara ANSWER: a) Yamuna The Ganges joins the Yamuna at the Triveni Sangam. 4. Which is the largest tributary of the Ganga? a) Ghanghara b) Nandakini c) Sarayu d) Yamuna ANSWER: d) Yamuna Techofworld.In Techofworld.In River Yamuna is also named as Jamuna River. It is majorly located in the northern part of the country. 5. Where does the Chambal rise? a) Dewas b) Dhar c) Khargone d) Mhow ANSWER: d) Mhow The river Chambal which flows through the Northern India begin at the hill of Janapav which is in a village named Kuti, around 15km from Mhow town. 6. Which one of the following does not belong to the tributaries of the Son river? a) Kanhar b) Mayangadi c) Johilla d) Rihand ANSWER: b) Mayangadi Johilla, Rihand, Kanhar and north Koel are the tributaries of the Son river. 7. Which one of the following was known as the "River of Sorrows"•? a) The Chambal b) The Damodar c) The Kali d) The Ramganga ANSWER: b) The Damodar Damodar River was earlier known as the "River of Sorrows" as it Techofworld.In Techofworld.In used to flood many areas of Bardhaman, Hooghly, Howrah and Medinipur districts.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Indus River System River Origin Tributries/Meets with Remarks
    Indus River System River Origin Tributries/Meets with Remarks Indus Chemayungdung Jhelum, Ravi, Beas, Satluj, 2880 Kms Glacier near Chenab Drains in Arabian sea Mansarovar Lake Zaskar,Syang,Shigar & east of Karachi Gilgit Shyok,Kabul,Kurram,Gomal Jhelum Sheshnag lake, near Navigable b/w Beninag in Pirpanjal Anantnag and range Baramulla in Kashmir vally Ravi Rohtang Pass, Kangra Distt. Beas Beaskund, Near origin Tributary of Satluj, meets of Ravi near Kapurthala Satluj Lake Rakas, Near Enters HP near Shipki Mansarovar lake La Pass Indus Water Treaty, 1960 :-> India can use 20 % of the Indus, Satluj & Jhelum & 80% of Chenab Ravi & Beas 5 Rivers of Punjab :-> Satluj, Ravi, Chenab, Beas & Jhelum ( All these as a combined stream meets Indus at Mithankot) Chenab in HP is known as Chandrabhanga because Chenab originate in form of two streams: Chandra & Bhanga on both the sides of the Bada Laccha La pass in HP. Ganga River System Ganga Tributary Origin Meeting Point Remarks Yamuna Yamunotri Glaciar Allahbad (Prayag) Tributaries: Tons, Hindon, Sharda, Kunta, Gir, Rishiganga, Hanuman Ganga, Chambal, Betwa, Ken, Sindh Son (aka ‘Savan’) Amarkantak (MP), Comes straight from peninsular plateau near origin of Narmada Damodar Chandawa, Palamau Hoogli, South of Carries water of Chotanagpur plateau distt. On Chota Kolkata Nagpur plateau (Jharkhand) Ramganga: Doodhatoli ranges, Ibrahimpur (UP) Pauri Gharwal, Uttrakhand 1 Gandak Nhubine Himal Glacier, Sonepur, Bihar It originates as ‘Kali Gandak’ Tibet-Mustang border Called ‘Narayani’ in Nepal nepal Bhuri Gandak Bisambharpur, West Khagaria, Bihar Champaran district Bhagmati Where three headwater streams converge at Bāghdwār above the southern edge of the Shivapuri Hills about 15 km northeast of Kathmandu Kosi near Kursela in the Formed by three main streams: the Katihar district Tamur Koshi originating from Mt.
    [Show full text]
  • Answered On:21.08.2003 Pantry Car Facility in Trains Ramesh Chennithala;Shibu Soren
    GOVERNMENT OF INDIA RAILWAYS LOK SABHA STARRED QUESTION NO:407 ANSWERED ON:21.08.2003 PANTRY CAR FACILITY IN TRAINS RAMESH CHENNITHALA;SHIBU SOREN Will the Minister of RAILWAYS be pleased to state: (a) the criteria adopted for providing Pantry Car facility in trains; (b) whether the Pantry Car facility is available in all long distance trains ; (c) if not, the name of long distance trains in which this facility is not available at present and the reasons therefor; and (d) the steps taken/to be taken by the Railways to provide Pantry Car facility i n said trains particularly in Ernakulam-Nizamuddin Express ? Answer MINISTER OF RAILWAYS ( SHRI NITISH KUMAR ) (a) to (d): A statement is laid on the Table of the Sabha. STATEMENT REFERRED TO IN REPLY TO PARTS (a) TO (dO) F THE STARRED QUESTION NO. 407 BY SHRI RAMESH CHENNITHALA AND SHRI SHIBSUO RENT O BE ANSWERED IN THE LOK SABHOAN 21.08.03 REGARDING PANTRY CAR FACILITY IN TRAINS. (a): Pantry car facility is provided on selected Super fast/Mail/Express trains which run o n popular routes where adequate and satisfactory catering services through static units are not possible. (b): No, Sir. (c) and (d): There are about 103 long distance Super- fast/Mail Express trains on Indian Railways which presently do not have pantry car attached although the journey time is of more than 24 hours each way (a list is enclosed as Appendix). The reasons for non- provision of pantry car facilities in these trains include sufficient stoppages at stations where satisfactory catering services from static catering units are available enroute and operational constraints like non-availability of rolling stock, room on train etc.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ramayana by R.K. Narayan
    Table of Contents About the Author Title Page Copyright Page Introduction Dedication Chapter 1 - RAMA’S INITIATION Chapter 2 - THE WEDDING Chapter 3 - TWO PROMISES REVIVED Chapter 4 - ENCOUNTERS IN EXILE Chapter 5 - THE GRAND TORMENTOR Chapter 6 - VALI Chapter 7 - WHEN THE RAINS CEASE Chapter 8 - MEMENTO FROM RAMA Chapter 9 - RAVANA IN COUNCIL Chapter 10 - ACROSS THE OCEAN Chapter 11 - THE SIEGE OF LANKA Chapter 12 - RAMA AND RAVANA IN BATTLE Chapter 13 - INTERLUDE Chapter 14 - THE CORONATION Epilogue Glossary THE RAMAYANA R. K. NARAYAN was born on October 10, 1906, in Madras, South India, and educated there and at Maharaja’s College in Mysore. His first novel, Swami and Friends (1935), and its successor, The Bachelor of Arts (1937), are both set in the fictional territory of Malgudi, of which John Updike wrote, “Few writers since Dickens can match the effect of colorful teeming that Narayan’s fictional city of Malgudi conveys; its population is as sharply chiseled as a temple frieze, and as endless, with always, one feels, more characters round the corner.” Narayan wrote many more novels set in Malgudi, including The English Teacher (1945), The Financial Expert (1952), and The Guide (1958), which won him the Sahitya Akademi (India’s National Academy of Letters) Award, his country’s highest honor. His collections of short fiction include A Horse and Two Goats, Malgudi Days, and Under the Banyan Tree. Graham Greene, Narayan’s friend and literary champion, said, “He has offered me a second home. Without him I could never have known what it is like to be Indian.” Narayan’s fiction earned him comparisons to the work of writers including Anton Chekhov, William Faulkner, O.
    [Show full text]
  • Sadhus in Democratic Politics in Late 20 Th Century India
    "WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN" Sadhus in Democratic Politics in Late 20 th Century India MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE by OF TECHNOLOGY JUL 1 6 2009 Rajesh Pradhan S.M.Arch.S. Architecture & M.C.P. City Planning LIBRARIES Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1989 SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN POLITICAL SCIENCE AT THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY FEBRUARY 2009 ©2009 Rajesh Pradhan. All rights reserved. The author hereby grants to MIT permission to reproduce and to distribute publicly paper and electronic copies of this thesis document in whole or in part in any medium now known or hereafter created. ARCHNES Signature of Author: SDep ment of Political Science / ,,ebTer 21, 2008 Certified by: .................... ........ .................. Melissa Nobles Associate Irofessor of Political Science Thesis Supervisor Accepted by:.. ..................................... Roger Petersen Associate Professor of Political Science Chair, Graduate Program Committee "WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN" Sadhus in Democratic Politics in Late 20 th Century India by Rajesh Pradhan Submitted to the Department of Political Science on October 21, 2008 in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science Supervised by Melissa Nobles, Associate Professor of Political Science ABSTRACT This empirical study examines the political significance of religious leaders-known commonly as sadhus-in a huge and mature democracy like India. During the late '80s and the '90s, a flurry of sadhu activism coincided with the dramatic rise of a previously insignificant political party, the Bhartiya JanataParty (BJP). As a conservative Hindu nationalist party, the BJP allied with many sadhus, came to power at the center and in many states, breaking the monopoly that the relatively secular Congress party had held for more than four decades.
    [Show full text]
  • Dasharatha Is Cursed
    “Om Sri Lakshmi Narashimhan Nahama” Valmiki Ramayana – Ayodhya Kanda – Chapter 64 Dasharatha is Cursed Summary King Dasaratha continued to narrate to Kausalya how he went to the aged parents of the deceased sage and informed about the death of their son and its cause, how he escorted them to their son to the river where he was lying dead, how embracing the boy they wept and offered libations of water to his spirit, how invested with an ethereal body, the spirit ascended to heaven while consoling the aged couple and finally how, having cursed the king that he too would die of agony caused by the separation from his son, the aged couple gave up their lives. Having thus narrated the story of his getting the curse long back and loudly weeping, king Dasaratha dies of grief. Chapter [Sarga] 64 in Detail vadhamapratiruupam tu maharsestasya raaghavah | vilapanne va dharmaatmaa kausalyaam puna rabraviit || 2-64-1 The high souled Dasaratha, while lamenting about the unworthy killing of that sage, spoke further to Kausalya as follows: tat ajnaanaan mahat paapam kritvaa samkulita indriyah | ekah tu acintayam buddhyaa katham nu sukritam bhavet || 2-64-2 Having done that great sin inadvertently, having my senses confounded and I being alone, I thought of using my reason of what best can be done.” tatah tam ghatam aadaya puurnam parama vaarinaa | aashramam tam aham praapya yathaa aakhyaata patham gatah || 2-64-3 “Taking the best water fully in that pitcher, I went to that hermitage by the path as directed by the young sage. Page 1 of 17 “Om Sri Lakshmi Narashimhan Nahama” Valmiki Ramayana – Ayodhya Kanda – Chapter 64 tatra aham durbalaav andhau vriddhaav aparinaayakau | apashyam tasya pitarau luuna paksaav iva dvijau || 2-64-4 tan nimittaabhir aasiinau kathaabhir aparikramau | taam aashaam mat krite hiinaav udaasiinaav anaathavat || 2-64-5 “There I saw the frail, blind and aged parents of the young sage.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction the Universe
    Introduction Geography is made up of two Latin words geo and graphy. Techniques in Geography Geo means “Earth” and graphy means “to describe”. Thus the general meaning of geography is the branch of science Important techniques used for the geographic enquiry are which explains about the Earth. the following: Greek scholar Haecetus has been regarded as “father of 1. Cartography: It is the science and art of drawing maps geography”. Another Greek scholar Eratosthenes first coined and charts. the term geography. He wrote the book Geography. Alexander 2. Mathematical Geography: It is closely related to the Von Humboldt and Carl Ritter are known as “founders of making of maps and interpretation and analysis of modern geography”. statistical data. 3. Remote Sensing and Geographic Information System (GIS): Remote Sensing and GIS have emerged as the most important and powerful technique for the study of geographic problems. The Universe l The universe contains billions of stars, planets, asteroids, l The Moon, for example, is a satellite of the Earth. It moves comets, meteors, solid and gaseous particles, which are around the Earth and also around the Sun along with the called celestial bodies. Earth. l Meteors: Small pieces of space debris (usually parts of Celestial Bodies comets or asteroids) that are on a collision course with the l Nebula: It is a diffused mass of interstellar dust or gas or Earth are called meteoroids. When meteoroids enter the both, visible as luminous patches or areas of darkness Earth’s atmosphere they are called meteors or colloquially depending on the way the mass absorbs or reflects a shooting star or falling star.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancient Indian History Chapter 1
    Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History History: Chronology Geography Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History History: Chronology (time) Geography (space) Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History The history of India is also influenced by its Geography. Hence the study of Indian Geographical features will help us to understand our History better! Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History The history of India is also influenced by its Geography. Hence the study of Indian Geographical features will help us to understand our History better! Indian subcontinent has three main regions: The Himalayan Mountains The Indo – Gangetic Plains The Southern Peninsula Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History The history of India is also influenced by its Geography. Hence the study of Indian Geographical features will help us to understand our History better! Indian subcontinent has three main regions: The Himalayan Mountains The Indo – Gangetic Plains The Southern Peninsula Indian subcontinent has the following 7 countries: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives and Sri Lanka. Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History The history of India is also influenced by its Geography. Hence the study of Indian Geographical features will help us to understand our History better! Indian subcontinent has three main regions: The Himalayan Mountains The Indo – Gangetic Plains The Southern Peninsula Indian subcontinent has the following 7 countries: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives and Sri Lanka. Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History The Himalayan Mountains Chapter 1: India – Geographical Features and their Impact on History The Himalayan Mountains The Himalayan Mountains are situated on the north of India.
    [Show full text]
  • Read Magazine
    Trendy Travel Trade with Food & Shop Volume VII • Issue IX • October 2020 • Pages 76 • 100/- #ShuddhDesiRomance Address: Good Wood Estate, Lower Bharari Road, Bharari Road, Shankli, Longwood, Shimla, Himachal Pradesh 171001 Phone:0177 265 9012 Royal Journey of India Archaeological Tour of Majestic Kerala Enchanting Himalayas Tribal Trail Buddhist Temple with 18 to 20 Nights Rajasthan 14 to 15 Nights with Taj 15 to 17 Nights North East India Tour Mumbai – Mangalore – Bekal – Wayanad Bhubaneswar - Dangmal - Bhubaneswar 21 to 23 Nights 13 to 15 Nights 14 to 16 Nights Delhi - Jaipur - Pushkar – Ranthambore – Kozhikode(Calicut) - Baliguda Delhi – Jaipur – Samode – Nawalgarh – Delhi - Agra - Darjeeling - Gangtok - Delhi - Varanasi -Bodhgaya - Patna Sawai Madhopur – Kota – Cochin – Thekkady – Kumarakom– - Rayagada - Jeypore - Rayagada - Bikaner – Gajner – Jaisalmer – Osian Phuntsholing - Thimphu - Punakha - -Kolkata - Bagdogara - Darjeeling - Bundi - Chittorgarh - Bijaipur - Quilon – Varkala – Kovalam Gopalpur - Puri – Bhubaneswar Udaipur - Kumbalgarh - Jodhpur - – Khimsar – Manvar – Jodhpur – Rohet – Paro - Delhi - Pelling (Pemayangtse)- Gangtok - Jaisalmer - Bikaner - Mandawa – Delhi Mount Abu – Udaipur – Dungarpur Kalimpong -Bagdogra – Delhi – Deogarh – Ajmer – Pushkar – Pachewar – Ranthambhore – Agra – Delhi Contact @ :+91- 9899359708, 9999683737, info@ travokhohlidays.com, [email protected], www.travok.net PUBLISHER'S NOTE Trendy Travel Trade with Food & Shop Volume VII • Issue IX • October 2020 • Pages 76 • Rs.100/- Editor & Publisher
    [Show full text]