Travel: The Most Instagenic Wells are a World Heritage Site

Forget the Taj Mahal! You who want a mainstream anti holiday in India can try to come to Karnataka City. There is a beautiful well that is a world heritage site.

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Hampi is a half-destroyed temple complex in Karnataka, India. Once a residence for 250,000 people in the era of the Vijayanagar Empire, this place is filled with Hindu temples.

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Among the Hampi ruins, there is a well or a sacred water dam commonly called Pushkarani. Despite being thousands of miles from the city, these wells are considered part of the Ganges River.

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The shape of these wells is practically extraordinarily beautiful. Box-shaped pool, this well is given many pyramidal stairs.

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The number of stairs is hundreds. In view of various sides, this well became the most instagenic corner in Hampi. As a result, Hamdi became one of the world's most beautiful World Heritage Sites, UNESCO!

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Despite the hundreds, the staircase well was made to make it easier for anyone entering or leaving the well at the same time.

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