Fort of Sariun
The
Sarian fortress was developed amid the Chanderi administration, by
the Chandel Rajputs who had set up their rule at Chanderi in southern
Rajputana. Bilaspur, was at first known as Kahlur, named after Raja
Kahul Chand. The line was however spearheaded under the tenet of Raja
Bir Chand who set up the very condition of Kahlur, which was along
these lines, acquired by the 6th ruler otherwise known as Raja Kahul
Chand.
The
historical backdrop of the Sariun post goes back to the rule of Raja
Mohan Chand, who ruled for a brief timeframe in the wake of having
succeeded his antecedent in 1788 A.D. He was scandalous for having
gotten to know the Gurkhas to battle against Nalagarh and Kangra. It
was amid that time, when the Sariun post was manufactured on the Tiun
range. His absence of premonition, on the other hand, prompted the
catching of the locale by the Gurkhas until they were pushed out by
the British in 1815. The post is totally weather beaten. The relic is
as a stone built, rectangular opening. The passageway has an entryway
that faces the west. It has been concluded from the remnants that the
fortress more likely than not been really high with dividers having a
thickness of one meter. The vestiges of the region inside show the
presence of no less than fifteen front rooms. The dividers of the
fortification have window formed patches on them that have been bored
with a few gaps over the divider to improve effective gunfire on the
adversaries.
It
is clear that a critical level of fastidiousness and consideration
more likely than not gone into building the post. The high dividers
had clearly kept the enemies from climbing and entering inside.
Numerous detainees of war used to be gotten. No indications of a
storehouse or tanks have been noted, yet they must have without a
doubt been available to give sustenance and water.
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