Sitabuldi Fort

Sitabuldi Fort
Nagpur, Maharashtra
Entrance to the Sitabuldi fort
Coordinates21°8′54″N 79°5′6″E / 21.14833°N 79.08500°E / 21.14833; 79.08500
TypeLand fort
Site information
OwnerArmy of  India
Open to
the public
26 January, 1 May (Maharashtra Day), and 15 August
Site history
Built byBritish East Company (started construction)
MaterialsSandstone & Black Basalt
Battles/warsBattle of Sitabuldi
Garrison information
GarrisonIndian Army's 118th infantry battalion
Sitabuldi market street, one of Nagpur's commercial areas
Entrance gate of Tekdi Ganesh temple

Sitabuldi Fort (Marathi: सीताबर्डी किल्ला), site of the Battle of Sitabuldi in 1817, is located atop a hillock in central Nagpur, in the Indian state of Maharashtra. The fort was built by the British after they won this area. Mudhoji II Senasaheb Subha was allowed to continue ruling Nagpur after the British had won the battles of Sitaburdi, Sakkardara, and Nagpur. Richard Jenkins entered into a treaty with Mudhoji on 6 January 1818, which was later ratified by the Governor General. Article 7 of the treaty stated: "The two hills of Seetabuldee with the bazaars and land adjoining, to a distance to be hereafter specified, shall be henceforth included in the British boundary, and such Military works erected as may be deemed necessary." By this treaty, the British occupied the Sitaburdi hills and large areas on all four sides. However no major construction work was erected on it for next two years.[1] The area surrounding the hillock, now known as Sitabuldi, is an important commercial hub for Nagpur.[2] To the south is Nagpur Railway Station and behind it is Tekdi Ganapati, a temple of Ganesha.[3] The fort was a home to the Indian Army's 118th infantry battalion (Territorial Army) Grenadiers till 2019.[4][5]

  1. ^ Sane, Hemant; Phanshikar, Shobha. "The Sitabuldi Fort, Nagpur". Academia.edu.
  2. ^ Ravi Teja Sharma (17 March 2007). "The Great Nagpur Boom". Rediff News. Rediff. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  3. ^ "Famous Ganesha Temples and Idols in India". Sify. Archived from the original on 23 February 2010. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference Time & History was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ Arya, Shishir (7 October 2019). "600 jobs to go as 118 Territorial Army unit leaves Sitabuldi Fort". Nagpur News. The Times of India. Retrieved 24 December 2021.