Vihara

an ancient land

Like in many ancient civilisations, Indian way of life was also clustered around its magnificent rivers. And, few riviers of the world have moulded the culture, economy and personlity of the people evolving on their banks as the great river Ganga. Cutting straight across Bihar from west to east, the bounteous Ganga had make the region so fertitle and plentiful that its natural prosperity nurtured a veritable fountainhead of political and cultural civilisations down the millennia. And, the unbelievable range and quantity of mineral wealth buried under the region certainly helped. To this day, the coal belt in Bihar is the mainstay of thermal energy in north India. Bihar has 41% of the total mineral wealth of India. Here, kingdom after kingdom rose and fell, leaving their indelible mark on history. Rival kings fought legendary battles, devastating the land and people. Yet, by some strange alchemy, the same land saw the birth or maturity of some of the most gentle and progressive religious teachers like the Buddha, Mahavira and Guru Gobind Singh. Then came the Muslims, ruling with panache for five centuries, to be eliminated in their turn by the ever expanding coloisation of the English, who ruled till the middle of this century. Bihar today is a quaint interface of the old and news. Hallowed by the footsteps of the Buddha, the fertilt plains remain rich in farm lands growing paddy, cotton, sugar cane, wheat, maize, barley, jute and fruit. Bihar's modern visage sports some of India's largest stell and mining industries.
Bihar
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