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Grand Trunk Road

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fr:Grand Trunk Road The Grand Trunk Road is the Indian Subcontinent's first, largest and oldest major road, linking Calcutta on the Bay of Bengal coast with Kabul in Afghanistan via the Khyber Pass. The Grand Trunk Road spans a distance of over 2,500 km, and connects up the important cities of Benaras, Kanpur, Delhi, Amritsar and Lahore.

The Grand Trunk Road was built in the 16th century by Sher Shah Suri, the then Emperor of India, with the intention of linking together the remote provinces of his vast empire for administrative and military reasons. Originally known as the Sadak-e-Azam, the Grand Trunk Road was the traditional route for invasions of the subcontinent by Afghan and Persian invaders, as well as one of the most important trade routes in the region. Later renamed and improved by the British rulers of colonial India, the Grand Trunk Road was sometimes referred to as the "Long Walk".

Today the Grand Trunk Road continues to be one of the major arteries of India and Pakistan, and the Indian section is part of the ambitious Golden Quadrilateral Project. For over 400 years from before Rudyard Kipling's time to the present day, the Grand Trunk Road has remained "a river of life such as exists nowhere else in the world".

Literature

  • Rudyard Kipling, Kim : Considered to be Kipling's finest work, and set mostly along the Grand Trunk Road. Free e-texts are available, such as the one here.
  • Anthony Weller, Days and Nights on the Grand Trunk Road (Marlowe & Company, 1998)
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