South
of Bihar, on the Bay of Bangal, industrial India is left behind.
Green plain, river valleys, mountains, Forests and beaches constitute
the landscape of one of India' s most thoroughly rural states.
The whitewashed mud village houses stand amidst bright green
paddy fields and there are sandy and un spoilt beaches as well
as lakes. The Chilka Lagoon is the largest brackish lake in
Asia and has rich bird life.
Orissa offers the gournet a variety of sea food: lobster, prawns
and crab, all of which the Oriyans transform into delectable
creations. The hill forest of central Orissa are a tribal area
and the home of wild animals, including tigers and elephants.
Some 62 distinct tribal groups have been identified as living
in the state. They make excellent carvings of wood and soapstone,
exquisite silver filgree jewellery and children's toys, and
also colourful votive paintings on canvas- the famous pattachitra
folk paintings. Most of Orrisa's horn work, brass and ironware,
silk and handloom products-the Sambalpuri and Cuttack saris,
for example-owe their fineness to a rigorously developed folk
handicraft centers, but beautiful temple cities where pilgrims
come to worship and to celebrate festivals. The chief attractions
of Orissa-Bhubaneshwar, Puri and Konark-form a compact, easy-
to- visit triangle.
The seventh to 13th centuries were the great age of Orissan
temple building, the age of Brahmin resurgence under the Kesari
and Ganga Kings. Before that, we hear not of Orissa but of the
kingdom of Kalinga where in 262 BC, after a bloody war, the
Mauryan emperor Ashoka converted to Buddhism. From then until
the fourth century Buddhism and Jainism held sway, but after
the seventh century Hinduism reasserted itself.
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