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Despite the challenges that the
desert environment offers, people have settled
all over the Thar and have
innovated in their own small ways to make the arid sands habitable. There
are agricultural and pastoral settlements; villages that have become
pilgrimage centres; there are settlements along the river bank or wherever
water is to be found, fortified shelters offer sanctuary , while jobs are
to be found in mining towns and at seasonal fairs or melas. The central
place is occupied by either a village well or a temple as in the case of
the village Mukam where all social and cultural life revolves around the
temple of Jambheswarji founded in 1593 on the samadhi (grave) of the
saint. Water is, of course, the deciding factor in their location, except
in the case of villages like Goriya which are situated on the Aravalli
tract where water is plentiful.
The most colourful villages in the Thar are to be found
on the Shekhawati tract. These have well-built houses, more often then not
with painted walls and beautiful decorations and wall paintings. If the
villages of the Thar are dotted with jhonpas, the cities feature a variety
of architectural forms and structures. They depict either varying forms of
adjustment with the inclement weather or intense love and pride for
architectural richness apd extravagance. Some of the towns show excellent
town-planning and settlement development. Although habitations are
designed keeping in mind the climate, they are also products of the
political and cultural history of the region.
Some self - sufficient rural villages persist even today
and a compact settlement with its tank or well and a struggling bunch of
acacias, tamarix and zizyphus in the midst of yellowish sand is still the
dominant feature of the landscape. Just as water is the raison d' etre for
the location of villages, truly urban centres and cities are often
associated with a fort perched on a hill, a palace surrounded by a
haphazard collection of houses and enclosed by a city wall, the market
occupying the central position on the roads joining the opposite
gates. |