Some of the remaining photos of Mahabalipuram – ‘Pallava’ remains
related posts :Recent Posts
- A theist debate
- Bicycle Repairman
- Thorpe park colossus
- 10 Public Intellectuals
- Review:Dil Bole Hadippaa
- Movie verdicts of weekend
- How to convert an indian to christianity
- Early believer
- Vande Mataram
- World Naked Bike Ride – London 2009
- Review : Love Aaj Kal
- End of the week
- Maharashtra Police, they are second to only the Scotland Yard of Britain
- 484
- Movie Review : Kambakht Ishq
Recent comments
Archives
Category Cloud
Top Posts
- What do the numbers on bottom of bottles indicate?
- I recall 500 English movies …
- South-Indians , North-Indians and hypocrisies
- My best Minesweeper score
- My first crush
- My celebrity Look-alikes
- Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus
- Bachodi’s 2nd theory of De-evolution
- How to write lyrics for bollywood movies
- Narasimha's devorce
- Ten ways to stop telemarketing calls
- ನನ್ನ ಓದುವ ಹುಚ್ಚು
Blogroll
Blog Stats
- 202,882 Unique hits
What I shared recently
- Today is Blasphemy Day
- Freedom And The Burkha
- Indian people are the worst people: Pure and proven
- How natural pearls are extracted?
- Top 8 sites to waste your time
- Wealth of Nations: 1500 and 2002 compared
- KANK 2 - King ANd Krish
- Super-Rich Indian Gurus who don't deliver what they promise
- Remembering the Partition
- Sexy Indian Ads
var bt_counter_type=1;
var bt_project_id=2598;
pages
Archives
- November 2009 (1)
- October 2009 (1)
- September 2009 (3)
- August 2009 (6)
- July 2009 (4)
- June 2009 (4)
- January 2008 (1)
- December 2007 (5)
- November 2007 (2)
- October 2007 (2)
- September 2007 (4)
- August 2007 (11)
- July 2007 (18)
- June 2007 (20)
- May 2007 (17)
- April 2007 (20)
- March 2007 (22)
- February 2007 (16)
- January 2007 (24)
- December 2006 (11)
- November 2006 (4)
- October 2006 (7)
- September 2006 (3)
- August 2006 (17)
- July 2006 (2)
- May 2006 (1)
- March 2006 (1)




nice pics there… btw where do you stay in chennai?
Dear,Friend
Mahabalipuram, or Mamallapuram, was the chief seaport of the Pallavas who
ruled most portions of South India from the first century B.C to the eighth century
A.D., and it is now recognized as the site of some of the greatest architectural and
sculptural achievements in India. The temples of Mamallapuram, built largely
during the reigns of Narasimhavarman and his successor Rajasimhavarman,
showcase the movement from rock-cut architecture to structural building.
Please Visit For More Detail
http://desidirectory.com/india-travel-guide/