بعدسة Jit Bose
ابحث عن فنادق بالقرب من حصن شيترادورجا، في تشيترادورجا من AED 56
- تغيُّر خططكاحجز في فنادق توفر إلغاء مجانيًا
- كن دقيقًاابحث فيما يقرب من مليون منشأة فندقية حول العالم
التحقق من الأسعار لهذه التواريخ
الليلة
عطلة نهاية هذا الأسبوع
عطلة نهاية الأسبوع القادم
أفضل خياراتنا لفنادق حصن شيترادورجا

5.0 من 10، (6)
السعر الحالي هو AED 81
الإجمالي: AED 86
يشمل الضرائب والرسوم
من 2026/01/13 إلى 2026/01/14
السعر الحالي هو AED 53
الإجمالي: AED 56
يشمل الضرائب والرسوم
من 2026/01/07 إلى 2026/01/08
السعر الحالي هو AED 55
الإجمالي: AED 58
يشمل الضرائب والرسوم
من 2026/01/07 إلى 2026/01/08
أقل سعر عُثر عليه في الليلة الواحدة خلال آخر 24 ساعة بناءً على سعر إقامة ليلة واحدة لشخصين بالغين. الأسعار ومدى التوفر عرضة للتغيير. قد تسري شروط إضافية.
![Chitradurga Fort or as the British called it Chitaldoorg, is a fortification that straddles several hills and a peak overlooking a flat valley in the Chitradurga District, Karnataka, India. The fort's name Chitrakaldurga, which means 'picturesque fort' in Kannada, is the namesake of the town Chitradurga and its administrative district.[1][2][3]
The fort was built in stages between the 17th and 18th centuries by the dynastic rulers of the region, including the Rashtrakutas, Chalukyas and Hoysalas as well as the Nayakas of Chitradurga, feudal lords in the Vijayanagar Empire. The Nayakas of Chitradurga, or Palegar Nayakas, were most responsible for the expansion of the fort between the 15th and 18th centuries. They were defeated by Hyder Ali at Chitradurga in 1779. Later the fort was expanded and strengthened by Hyder Ali and his son Tippu Sultan,who succeeded Madakari Nayaka V, the last ruler of the Nayaka clan. The fort is built in a series of seven concentric fortification walls with various passages, a citadel, masjid, warehouses for grains and oil, water reservoirs and ancient temples. There are 18 temples in the upper fort and one huge temple in the lower fort. Among these temples the oldest and most interesting is the Hidimbeshwara temple. The masjid was an addition during Hyder Ali’s rule.[1][2][3] The fort's many interconnecting tanks were used to harvest rainwater, and the fort was said to never suffer from a water shortage.](https://images.trvl-media.com/place/6258978/ce8102d8-3a49-4fea-b521-ae9a7e5b3446.jpg?impolicy=fcrop&w=1200&h=500&q=medium)










