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PALACE · INDO-SARACENICAn opulent Indo-Saracenic palace of domes, columns and carved stone — built in the reign of the cricketing king Ranjitsinhji, echoing Europe's grand houses.
Among Jamnagar’s most magnificent buildings is the Pratap Vilas Palace, raised in the early 20th century during the reign of Jam Ranjitsinhji — the legendary cricketer-prince ‘Ranji’, after whom India’s Ranji Trophy is named. Built in the ornate Indo-Saracenic style, it marries European palatial grandeur with Indian craft: its silhouette of domes and long colonnades recalls the great houses of the West, while the detail is unmistakably Indian.
Look closely and the stone columns are carved with flowers, fruit, birds and creeping vines; three great glass domes once crowned the roofline. It speaks of the wealth, confidence and cosmopolitan taste of the Nawanagar court at its height.
Today the palace serves an institutional role and is not always open inside, but even its façade — symmetrical, columned and richly sculpted — rewards a visit. (Do check access locally before going.)
The Indo-Saracenic Pratap Vilas Palace.
Domes and colonnades of the Jam court.
The palace is built during Jam Ranjitsinhji's reign.
It honours Ranjitsinhji's father, Pratapsinhji.
Indo-Saracenic — European form, Indian ornament.
It passes to institutional use; access is now limited.
Indo-Saracenic domes and colonnades.
Built under the famous cricketer-king.
Columns of flowers, fruit and birds.
Three great domes once crowned it.
The Nawanagar court at its height.
A striking, symmetrical exterior.
Domes and colonnades.
Columns and ornament.
Take in the symmetry and domes.
Look for flowers, fruit and birds.
Recall the cricketer-king's story.
Ask locally about interior visits.
Frame the colonnaded front.
Continue to the lake and old city.
Carved columns and a domed roofline.
Pratap Vilas is a showpiece of the Indo-Saracenic style, which fused European planning and silhouette with Indian decorative detail. Its long symmetrical façade, classical colonnades and (originally) three glass domes recall grand Western palaces, while the carving — vines, flowers, fruit and birds worked into the stone columns — is rooted in Indian craft.
The result is a building that looks at once familiar and exotic: a European country house dreamed in Gujarat stone, expressing the outward-looking confidence of Ranjitsinhji’s Nawanagar.
Indo-Saracenic style
Symmetrical colonnaded façade
Carved floral-and-bird columns
Once-glazed glass domes
Cool and pleasant — the best season to explore Jamnagar.
Lush and green; the wetlands and lakes brim with birds.
Hot and dry — sightsee early or late in the day.
⏰ Photograph the façade in soft morning or late-afternoon light, and confirm interior access beforehand.
Jamnagar Airport is nearby.
Jamnagar station, then a short drive.
Within Jamnagar; reachable by taxi or auto.
DOMES & STONE
The full colonnaded, domed façade.
Soft morning or late-afternoon light.
Close-ups of the carved columns.
Respect the working institution.
Lanes of gleaming hand-beaten brassware
A serene Krishna temple & centre
Vast flamingo flocks in winter
Quiet shores & flamingo-rich mudflats
India's first — corals, sponges, octopus & islands
◐ Dawn · the island fort
Rotla, kadhi, shaak and ghee-rich fare.
Gathiya and farsan, a Saurashtra staple.
The old city's bustling bazaar snacks.
Jamnagar's food is largely vegetarian.
An early-20th-century Indo-Saracenic palace in Jamnagar, from Jam Ranjitsinhji's reign.
The Jam of Nawanagar and a legendary cricketer — the Ranji Trophy is named after him.
Indo-Saracenic — European form with Indian carved ornament.
Its carved columns and the three glass domes that once crowned it.
Access is limited as it now serves an institution — check locally.
Generally it's viewed from the exterior; confirm on site.
In soft morning or late-afternoon light for the façade.
Lakhota Lake, Darbargadh and Bala Hanuman temple.
Sweet sugar-cane & chikoo country
Track the elusive bear in the border hills
Gujarat's famous black-sand seafront
Walk through the boyhood home of Sardar Patel
A museum honouring Bhavnagar's heritage
WHERE TO STAY
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