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Going to hampi is completely because of Jackie Chan. We took advantage of the summer vacation in 2010. At that time, there were no Chinese visits, so I almost didn’t feel that there was an excessive development of stone city. A hampi market is very lively. There are also many people at night. There are also many Europeans and Americans. The signal is not good. It’s a reliance operator, but the scenery is really good just in time for the pilgrimage period. Many people in the temple visit. There are also many people living in the temple. Shopping is also cheap.
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Going to hampi is completely because of Jackie Chan. We took advantage of the summer vacation in 2010. At that time, there were no Chinese visits, so I almost didn’t feel that there was an excessive development of stone city. A hampi market is very lively. There are also many people at night. There are also many Europeans and Americans. The signal is not good. It’s a reliance operator, but the scenery is really good just in time for the pilgrimage period. Many people in the temple visit. There are also many people living in the temple. Shopping is also cheap.
The history of hampi can be traced back a long time, and the magic is that the victorious dynasty that exists in such a stone mountain, built a capital of this scale, full of stone monuments: temples, temples, squares, roads, markets, cities,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Stone chariots, giant cows, elephant houses, lotus temples, trapezoidal wells, palace ruins,,, I think it is the most interesting place to visit Indian monuments! By the way, a movie of Jackie Chan seems to have been here.
On the 36 square kilometers of Hampi, more than 3,700 historical sites are scattered, temples, ruins, temples that you have only seen in the original paintings of the game... It's everywhere! Any place elsewhere is a attraction with a ticket of more than 100 yuan. Here it is quietly located by the river, on the mountain, in the stone seams, a few steps is one, free to see vomit. At one end of the village is Matanga Mountain. It takes 40 minutes to climb to the top of the mountain and overlook the entire lost world. The mountaintop has a wide view and magnificent scenery, which is absolutely not to be missed! Of course, there are very few people here, and the selfie will not be surrounded by Indians, if you are not afraid of the foot frame and camera being winded down the cliff!
Hampi village is surrounded by a small river. The river valley is full of water and grass, and the cattle and sheep are flocked. In stark contrast to the ruins. If you are tired from visiting the temple, you may wish to walk along the river in the morning and evening when the sun is not high, you will never be disappointed. When you arrive at the river in the morning, the elephants of the temples in the village will take a bath here. She lay peacefully in the river, and two men scrubbed her with brushes and cleaning supplies. After wiping her, she stood up and staggered back to the temple. Along the river, there were ancient reliefs on the boulders, and the years were almost blurred. The scenery along the river is beautiful, and nature and monuments are perfectly integrated. The locals bathed and laundry, rushed to the ferry, and there were children playing, and the water splashed. A tower was exposed in the distance, and several ancient temples were on the other side. In the afternoon, I returned to the river to watch the sunset quietly. The rocky rocks by the river show magical colors in the sunset, and everything seems unreal. The tall people in the martial arts novels, find a paradise to live in, probably like this.
The name Hampi, originally from the Indian epic Ramayana, is rumored to be the hometown of the monkey Hanuman (the prototype of Sun Wukong). In 1336, the Vijayanagar dynasty chose this place as the capital of the empire and expanded over the next two hundred years to rule the entire South India, one of the largest Hindu empires in history. By the 16th century, it was an international metropolis of more than half a million people, and it was also a major Hindu religious center, with palaces and temples. It was not until 1565 that Muslims destroyed the glory of the Vichayanagar dynasty and looted the city for six months. The magnificent imperial capital collapsed and fell silent on the boulder wasteland. In 1986, it was listed as a World Heritage Site, and has since attracted backpackers from all over the world. Hampi ranked first in the India Lonely Planet selection, even surpassing the Taj Mahal. Few places like Hampi, around a small village, scattered with such a magnificent temple complex and a ghostly stonehenge. We stayed here for 7 days, living between the ruins of the temple, lingering, is the longest stay on this trip.