LUCKNOW
For a brief while for about 150 years, between 1722 and 1856, Luc­know, the capital of Awadh, shone like a cosmopolitan jewel. The Awadhi naw­abs and their courtiers created a culture of poetry and art so refined that we still use that tehzeeb as a benchmark. The Nawabs, especially the fourth, Asafud­daulah, were great builders, transform­ing a provincial Mughal town into a wondrous capital with famous buildings such as the Rumi Darwaza, the Bara Imambara with its maze, Bhulbhulaiya and a baoli that kept the subterranean rooms of the nawabs cool in summer and the Chota Imambara, among many more. Lucknow is connected to all major cities by air, road and rail.