Sindhudurg fort stands on a rocky
island, known as Kurte, barely a km, from the Malavan is 510kms south of
Mumbai and 130kms north of Goa. Sindhudurg was built in 1664-67 AD by
shivaji when all his attempts to take the island fort of Janjira proved
futile. The construction was done under the supervision of Hiroji
Indulkar, an able architect. Shivaji had invited 100 Portuguese experts
from Goa for the construction of the fort. It is also recorded that
3000 workers were employed round the clock for three years to build
Sindhudurg. It was the body from the Sack of Surat that went into the
building of Sindhudurg.
One of the best preserved forts of
the Marathas, the 48 acre Sindhudurg fort has a four kms long zigzag
line of 9 metres high and 3 metres wide rampart with 42 bastions. Apart
from the huge stones, the building material involved 2000 khandis
(72,576kgs)of iron erecting the massive curtain wall and bastions. A
notable feature is that the foundation stones were laid down firmly in
molten lead.
The fort is approachable from the
Malavan pier by a boat through a narrow navigable channel between two
smaller islands of Dhontara and Padmagad. The main gate, flanked by
massive bastions, faces the city. On the parapet, close to the
entrance, under two small domes Shivaji’s palm and footprint in dry lime
are preserved. Also, in thefort there is the Shivaji temple - the only
one of its kind in the country – where the image of Shivaji is without a
beard! Inside the fort there are some temples, tanks and three wells.
It also houses some twenty Hindu-Muslim hereditary families. On a rocky
island between Sindhudurg and the coast stood the small for of
Padmagad, now in ruins. It acted as a screen for Sindhudurg and was also
used for ship-building.
After Shivaji, Sindhudurg passed
through the hands of Rajaram-Tarabai, Angres, Peshwa and the Bhosales of
Kolhapur. It was briefly captured by the British in 1765 Ad And was
renamed by them as ‘Fort Augustus’. Later in 1818 AD, the British
dismantled the fort’s defence structures.
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