In Amritsar, with its ancient bloodstained streets, or in Anandpur Sahib with its innumerable brooding gurudwaras, the Disney motif would be out of place. In Kapurthala, it just adds to the surrealism of the cityscape. For the Europhiles who ruled what used to be the richest princely state in the rich Jalandhar Doab had baroque, exotic tastes they indulged to the hilt. The erstwhile state of Kapurthala was founded in 1777 when one Jassa Singh Ahluwalia drove out Ibrahim Bhatti and established his dynasty. The town was built by his successors, among whom one name stands out His Highness Farzand-i-Dilband, Rashik-ul- Itkad-i-Daulat-i-Inglishia, Raja-i-Rajagan Maharaja Sir Jagatjit Singh of Kapurthala, who ruled from 1890 to 1947 and died in 1949. Jagatjit Singh had a conspicuous fondness for art and women. When in Kapurthala, the maharaja was prone to driving around in a gold and silver carriage drawn by six or eight horses wearing emerald-studded harnesses. He was fluent in French and Spanish, married a Spanish dancer and travelled extensively, apart from Europe, in South America, Egypt and Morocco. He even came back clean-shaven from one of his trips, much to the consternation of his Sikh state. But it was France that was his spiritual playground He engaged French culinary experts, drank spring water from Evian, spent a considerable amount of his pleasure-seeking time there, and made French the language of his court. For this all-enveloping mania he was conferred the Grand Cross of the Legion d Honneur by France, where flags were kept at half-mast when he died. And it was Jagatjit Singh who hired, needless to say, French architects to design the sumptuous New Palace in Kapurthala, the State Gurudwara, the State Mosque and the Villa Buena Vista.