Duration: 07 Nights / 08 Days
Itinerary Details
1st Day – Arrival at Port Blair and transfer to Port Blair hotel (n/s) after lunches Proceed for Corbyn’s
Cove beach & Light and sound Cellular jail
2nd Day – Port Blair (n/s) Covering – Ross Island and Excursion to Coral Island North Bay
3rd Day – Port Blair to Havelock (n/s) Sightseeing (Radhanagar Beach no 7)
4th Day – Havelock to Neil Island (n/s) Covering – Laxmanpur, Sitapur, Bharatpur, etc.
5th Day – Neil Island to Port Blair (n/s)
6th Day – Port Blair (n/s) Covering – Bra tang Island & Lime Stone Cave
7th Day – Port Blair (n/s) Covering – Port Blair City tour
8th Day – Drop at Airport as per the flight schedule
Package Cost: –
@ 14,500/- Per Head. (Land Package) [07 Night 08 Days]
@ 13,500/- Per Head. (Land Package) [06 Night 07 Days]
Package Include:-
- Meals (Breakfast, Lunch, Eve snack & Dinner)
- Hotel accommodation family-wise non-ac
- Pick up & Drop facility and sightseeing as per itinerary.
The Tiananmen, a gate in the wall of the Imperial City, was built in 1415 during the Ming dynasty. In the 17th century, fighting between Li Zicheng’s rebel forces and the forces of the Manchu-led Qing dynasty caused heavy damage to, or even destroyed, the gate. Tiananmen Square was designed and built in 1651, and has since been enlarged by four times its original size in the 1950s.
Near the centre of the square stood the “Great Ming Gate”, the southern gate to the Imperial City, renamed “Great Qing Gate” during the Qing dynasty, and “Gate of China” during the Republican era. Unlike the other gates in Beijing, such as the Tiananmen and the Zhengyangmen, this was a purely ceremonial gateway, with three arches but no ramparts, similar in style to the ceremonial gateways found in the Ming tombs. This gate had a special status as the “Gate of the Nation”, as can be seen from its successive names. It normally remained closed, except when the Emperor passed through. Commoner traffic was diverted to side gates at the western and eastern ends of the square, respectively. Because of this diversion in traffic, a busy marketplace, called “Chess Grid Streets”, was developed in the big, fenced square to the south of this gate.