Set in the present time Bhopal, the serial revolves around the love story of Mr Chintu and Miss Chinki. Chintu stays in a joint family and is a simple, innocent guy. He is famous in college and loved by his neighbours. Majority of decisions in the family are taken by elders and chintu knows the fact. It is time for Chintu to get married as per his family wishes rather his own will.
Chinki is from a small family. She is independent-minded person but very soft and kind at heart. She is very clear that she needs to marry a guy who measures up to her father in thoughts and values. She loves her grandmother who believes in romance. Partially supporting Chinki is their loyal servant with whom the grand mother always fights.
Chintu accidentally meets Chinki and falls in love with her. In subsequent episodes the love story progresses with hits, misses, confusions. The love letters, family opposition, hidden meetings, and funny excuses to go on a date form the core part of the story. Chintu's friend Kishan is the major supporter who gives the ideas and get based too. Yet things get resolved, Chintu and Chinki get married. After their marriage, the story revolves on how Chinki progresses from a nuclear family to a large joint family with Chintu. Thus the love story takes a journey of its own constrained by limitations of joint family beliefs and values.
Mukesh Ambani and Nita Ambani are the most famous couple in the business and entertainment world. They are the most sought after couple in Mumbai's elite circle. Cricketers, Bollywood actors, industrialists -- all respect them. Recently, they opened Nita-Mukesh Ambani Cultural Centre in Mumbai, which will hold cultural events in the future. Celebrities from India and abroad attended the festivities. Nita Ambani also performed a classical dance form. Its video went viral. Do you know it was dance that got Nita Ambani and Mukesh Ambani married? Here's their love story.
Who could ever think that an eternal love leading to the saga of infinite bondage can evolve out of a desert like land and would blossom to be the reason to gift our world a poem-in-marble, The Taj!
The Taj Mahal, a spectacle in white marble, unparalleled in grandeur that depicts the sheer opulence of an era. The awesome structure, the monument of love that Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan gave to the world, stands as a testimony of his intense love for his wife Mumtaz Mahal.
As a tribute to a woman of exotic beauty and as a monument of a love story, which is keeping us engrossed even when we are reading through these pages here, truely an ever-lasting romance of a love not ended as yet, the Taj reveals its subtleties to its beholder!
The saga of The Taj would be half told if the myths related to it are not mentioned. Like many a great buildings the Taj Mahal has its myths and legends. It seems that there is more fiction on the Taj than serious scholarly research. Several of the stories belong solely to oral tradition and are told by the guides, some are so established that they form a popular history of the monument and have made their way into guidebooks, and some have been taken up by scholars, or even created by them, and thus become part of the scholarly debate.
To the last category belong the oldest tales of the Taj. Here the most widely known is the story of the second Taj, the 'Black Taj', which Shah Jahan intended to build in black marble opposite the present mausoleum, on the site of the Mahtab Bagh. It goes back to Jean-Baptiste Tavernier who, when at Agra in 1665 AD, reported that 'Shahjahan began to built his own tomb on the other side of the river, but the war with his sons interrupted his plan, and Aurangzeb, who reigns at present, is not disposed to complete it. Shah Jahan was put under house arrest by his own son and successor by force, Aurangzeb. The latter did not agree with his father on most issues and was particularly opposed to him building a black Taj as his own mausoleum.
Upon Shah Jahan's death, Aurangzeb made the body of the Emperor, who got the body of his beloved Mumtaz in a golden casket from Burhanpur to Agra, carried in a boat by only two men and buried him in the Taj, next to his wife in probably the simplest manner.
As a tribute to a woman of exotic beauty and as a monument of a love story, which is keeping us engrossed even when we are reading through these pages here, truely an ever-lasting romance of a love not ended as yet, the Taj reveals its subtleties to its Beholder! Come!! Be Thy One!!!
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