Name | Price | Validity | Benefits | |
Plan Voucher 46 |
₹ 46.0 | 28 days | Get 10 Local On-net Night Minutes for - 28 Days at 2.5p/sec Local/National Calls, Night minutes benefit available from 2300 Hrs to 0600 Hrs only.. Pack last changed 22 August 2023 |
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Name | Price | Validity | Benefits | |
Plan Voucher 128 |
₹ 128.0 | 18 days | Get 10 Local On-net Night Minutes. All local/National Calls at 2.5p/sec. Night minutes benefit available from 2300 Hrs to 0600 Hrs. Outgoing SMS - Rs1/1.5/5 for Local/STD/ISD. Service Validity- 18 days. Pack last changed 28 March 2024 |
Recharge
|
Name | Price | Validity | Benefits | |
Plan Voucher 46 |
₹ 46.0 | 28 days | Get 10 Local On-net Night Minutes for - 28 Days at 2.5p/sec Local/National Calls, Night minutes benefit available from 2300 Hrs to 0600 Hrs only.. Pack last changed 22 August 2023 |
Recharge
|
city is the 7th largest in Gujarat, located at the foot of the Girnar hills, 355 km south west of state capital Gandhinagar and Ahmedabad. Literally translated, Junagadh means "Old Fort". An alternate etymology gives the name as coming from "Yonagadh", literally "City of the Yona (Greeks)," referring to the ancient inhabitants of the city under the Indo-Greek Kingdom. It is also known as "Sorath", the name of the earlier Princely State of Junagadh.[3] After a brief struggle between India and Pakistan, Junagadh joined India on 9 November 1947. It was a part of Saurashtra state and later Bombay state. In 1960, after the Maha Gujarat movement, it became part of newly formed Gujarat state.An impressive fort, Uparkot, located on a plateau in the middle of town, was originally built during the Mauryan dynasty by Chandragupta in 319 BCE The fort remained in use until the 6th century, when it was abandoned for some 300 years, then rediscovered in 976 CE. The fort was besieged 16 times over an 800-year period. One unsuccessful siege lasted twelve years. There is an inscription with fourteen Edicts of Ashoka on a large boulder within 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) of Uperkot Fort.[4] The inscriptions carry Brahmi script in a language similar to Pali and date back to 250 BCE. On the same rock there are inscriptions in Sanskrit added around 150 CE by Mahakshatrap Rudradaman I, the Saka (Scythian) ruler of Malwa, a member of the Western Kshatrapas dynasty.[5] Another inscription dates from about 450 CE and refers to Skandagupta, the last Gupta emperor. Old rock-cut Buddhist "caves" in this area, dating from well before 500 CE, have stone carvings and floral work. There are also the Khapra Kodia Caves north of the fort, and the Bavapyare Caves south of the fort. The Maitraka dynasty ruled Gujarat from 475 to 767 CE. The founder of the dynasty, General Bhatarka, military governor of Saurashtra peninsula under the Gupta empire, established himself as the independent ruler of Gujarat around the last quarter of the 5th century.