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Delhi Shopping : |
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Chor Bazaar : |
A Curious bazaar behind the old ramparts of the Red Fort, which comes
to life on Sundays to trade a mix of "secondhand" and allegedly stolen
goods.
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Kinari Bazaar : |
A colourful street set behind the gurudwara on Chandni Chowk, and
connected to the main road by Dariba Kalan, "the street of incomparable
peal", which is the centre for jewellers. The shops in Kinari Bazaar
overflow with bright wedding finery, including garlands made of rupee notes,
grooms' turbans, rosettes and glistening tinsel used by Hindus, Christians
and Muslims in vivid and noisy marriage ceremonies. In October (the
month of Ram Lila) the shops stock props for the annual theatre
productions-bows and arrows, cardboard swords and fake heads for the evil
nine-headed King Ravana.
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Naya Bazaar : |
Spice market on khari Baoli, near Fatehpuri Masjid, clouded with the fine
dust of flour and spices and dried fruits sold here are said to be the best
in Delhi, and many are sold to be the best in Delhi, and many are sold to
wholesales by the sack; weighed-down porters load their burdens onto ox
carts which trundle off to mass of motorized traffic.
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Gadodia Market : |
The covered Gadodia Market, just off Khari Baoli, is a gathering place for
wholesalers who weigh their goods on huge old-fashioned scales. Among
the spices and condiments you can find aniseed, turmeric, pomegranate, dried
mangoes, ginger, saffron, reetha nuts (used for washing hair and cleaning
silver), lotus seeds, pickles, sugars, chutneys and edible leaves of silver
paper used to coat sweets and cakes.
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Meena Bazaar : |
A distinctively islamic bazaar of cramped shops clustered around the base of
the Jami Masjid, full of clothes, domestic implements and smells not found
in Hindu regions of the city. Here you can buy burquas, dupattas,
topis, caged chickens, bangles, kebabs, sticky sweetmeats and devotional
pictures for shrines.
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Car Parts Bazaar : |
South of the Jami Masjid, the stalls that make up this bazaar stock, or
rather pile high, new and secondhand automobile parts from all models,
rnging from speedometers and the all-important horn to complete engines.
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Chawri Bazaar : |
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Named After the Marathi word Chawri (meeting place), this street, running
west from the Jami Masjid, was once flanked by the huge mansions which were
destroyed by the British after the Murthy. In the nineteenth century
it was famous for its "dancing girls", who looked into the streets below
from arched windows and balconies; they were moved out by the Delhi
Municipal Corporation in the twentieth century. Today the shops
specialize in copper and brass Buddhas, Vishnus, Krishnas, belis, lamps,
ashtrays, masks and boxes.
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Nai Sarak : |
The long road, Nai Sarak, which connects Chawri Bazaar with Chandni Chowk, is
lined with nineteenth- and twentieth-century building whose lower storeys are
used for making and selling paper, and houses shops stocking educational books
and stationery.
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Kalan Mahal : |
A small market street further south of the Jami Kalan Mahal is the gathering
place for brass polishers, and also has stalls displaying intricately carved
bone necklaces.
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Popultry and Fish Markets : |
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East of Kalan Mahal the air is filled with the unmistakable smell of fish.
Pilled high on lorries and stored in barrels of ice, transported between
cramped stalls on the heads of porters, every imaginable kind of fish is
traded here before finding its way onto plates all over the city. In
between fish stalls, chickens lie cramped in stacked cages before being
slaughtered and plucked. |
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