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Rampart by the Arabian
Sea
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THE
massive late rite walls are coated black with dried algae, a tell-tale
sign of antiquity. They hug the promontory so snugly that it would
seem that Bekal Fort was fashioned out of a seaside cliff. It
is almost as if Nature had been co-opted by the builders of the
fort for their defense needs.
The
revetment of the walls is such that the man-made behemoth offers
the least resistance to the elements. Perhaps that is also the
reason why Bekal is one of the best-preserved forts in this part
of the country. You notice that over the centuries, the alternating
rain and shine have only been able to corrode the walls surfaces
in the most part. Bekal Fort is on the main rail and road route
from Kozhikode to Mangalore.
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Soaring
observation towers lend Bekal Fort a majesty quite becoming of
its former role as a military station. These will be your vantage
points to take in the splendours of the west coast
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The nearest airport
at Mangalore is 80 km away,
while Kanhangad (Kerala), the nearest town, lies 12 km to the
south.There is a separate bus
stop for the Fort on National Highway-17 and the front wall rears
up as you approach the beach about 50 metres from here. The Bekal
Resorts Development Corporation Ltd., has set up an information
counter close to the fort entrance. Tourism brochures of all kinds
are displayed in the small glass-and-plywood cabin, where a couple
of sofas have been provided for visitors. The corporation is spearheading
a multi-crore project aimed at providing infrastructure facilities
such as five-star hotels for tourists.
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Bekal
is to be promoted for attracting foreign tourists to the north
of God's Own Country. After all, it was Kovalam which first drew
back-packers and tan-seekers to the south of the palm-fringed
State back in the 1960's. Pallikere, one kilometre south of the
fort, and Kappil, about five km north, rival the famed beaches
of Kovalam in scenic beauty. The signs of ongoing renovation work
were visible as one entered the fort. Freshly hewn late rite blocks
lay piled up one side of the courtyard. To the left, the walkway
along the outer periphery of the fort wall had been re-surfaced.
It is apparently difficult to remove the black algal coating from
the corroded stone, and the new reddish-yellow layer stood out
like the annual ring at the heart of a tree.
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| Panoramic view |
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The 40-acre enclosed
space of the fort revealed the crumbled foundations of various
structures near the entrance, where archaeological excavation
was under way. There were visitors even at noon that mid-May,
but in the sprawling space, they seemed few and far. A group of
college students was having a photo session on the watchtower.
Now, the monsoon is in full swing.
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The
heat of the sun could be felt only during lulls of the sea breeze,
which has free access everywhere. The lookout openings on the
parapet and even the gun-holes that honeycomb the scarp, serve
as ventilators. You observed that the gun-holes are angled to
enable the defenders to direct raking fire at the enemy from afar,
when he is closer, and when he is almost upon the walls.
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Bekal
Fort was built almost out of the sea, and the waves lap at its
foot during high tide. From its domineering positions on a promontory,
the fort offers a panoramic view of palm-fringed beaches on both
flanks. It is a sheer drop of about 130 feet to the beach below,
where the waves spend their force on granite reefs in a welter
of froth and spray.
When
you stand on the lookout perch facing the ocean, the force of
the wind is such that it almost pushes you back. You visualize
the medieval soldier standing on guard day and night, scanning
the horizon for the first sign of danger in the form of the sail-tops
of an approaching enemy fleet.
Historians
credit Shivappa Naik of the Ikkery dynasty with the construction
of the fort between 1645 and 1660 A.D. The Ikkery Naiks were a
line of feudatory chieftains who rose to power after the decline
of the mighty Vijayanagar empire following the battle of Thalikkotta
in 1565. There is also a version that Shivappa Naik from the Kolathiri
Rajas, who were its original owners, captured the fort.
There
are no remains of a palace inside the fort, which points to the
fact that Bekal was not a centre of administration, but primarily
a defence establishment. The fort seems to have served the Nayaks'
twin purpose of overseas defence and the need to maintain a base
for attacking Malabar. The Chandragiri Fort near Kasargod was
built during this period for the same purpose.
Bekal
fell into the hands of Haider Ali who defeated the Nayaks, and
later came under the control of his son, Tipu. The fort served
as an important military station of Tipu when he launched the
expedition to capture Malabar. An old mosque is situated very
near the fort, which is believed to have been built by the Sultan.
Following the death of Tipu and British hands in 1799, Bekal slipped
into the custody of the East India Company.
During the reign of the British, Bekal fort became the headquarters
of the newly organised Bekal taluk of South Canara district in
Bombay Presidency. South Canara became part of Madras Presidency
in the 1860's and Kasargod taluk was set up in place of Bekal
taluk. Gradually, Bekal declined in importance. Now the Archaeological
Survey of India is administering the fort.
It would appear that even at present, Bekal Fort is putting up
a defense, the only purpose for which it was conceived and created.
The difference is that it is now defending not bustling armies
or the territories and people dependent on them, but itself -
from the ravages of the elements and the challenges of modern
times.
As
of now, the structure stands in detached grandeur, its historic
relevance and aura of invincibility seemingly undimmed by whatever
latter-day mortals choose to do.
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