India – Natural and Cultural Heritage
India is the only country that has the spirit to
respect all religions and have distinct shrines for them. India has a very rich and diverse natural and cultural heritage.
Its
history is quite ancient and goes back to several thousand years. Geography and
natural environment also have played a prominent role in shaping India’s
personality.
India natural heritageincludes natural features,
like mountains, forests, deserts, lakes, rivers, seas, climate, flora and
fauna. There are high mountains and hills, mighty rivers traversing long
distances to small rivers, rivulets and streams, vast fertile plains and river
valleys, dense forests, deserts and a long coastline.
Within this landscape are found different types of
soils, rocks and minerals, and plant and animal life. Variations are also seen
in climate, ranging from temperature to extreme hot to extreme cold, arid to
areas with abundant rainfall.
Cultural heritage is the creation of human
beings by the use of their intelligence, skill and artistic ability. It may
also be a cumulative result of different practices, ranging from religious to
social.
India cultural heritage is broadly divided into
two categories:
- Archaeological cultural heritage – It comprises physical objects, materials, concrete forms, etc.
- Living cultural heritage – It includes a host of things, ranging from ideas to traditions, living styles, practices, etc.
India is by area, the seventh largest country in
the world, but by population, it is the second largest. India’s northern
boundary is demarcated by the Himalayas and other mountain ranges, except in
the Nepal region, which is marked by low hills.
China, Nepal and Bhutan are India’s neighbors in
the north-east and Pakistan and Afghanistan in the north-west. To the east of
India lies Myanmar, while surrounded by India’s eastern and north-eastern
states is Bangladesh. Eastern India is, as a result, linked to the
north-eastern territories by a strip of land that is only about 50 km wide at
its narrowest.
Below the broad territorial expanse of northern
India is Peninsular India, with the Arabian Sea to its west and the Bay of
Bengal to the east. Just south to peninsular India is Sri Lanka, separated from
the mainland of India by the Palk Straight and the Gulf of Mannar. The Andaman
and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal and Lakshadweep and Minicoy in the
Arabian Sea are integral parts of Indian Territory.
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