UK: M-S 08:00 AM - 08:00 PM GMT
$ 0

Elephanta Caves Experience

Mumbai
Book online or call: +44 0800 015 4961
Duration: 5 h
Activity Level: Easy
Experience: Adventure, Unesco, Family, Nature
Language: English
Photo permit included
Tour by public transport
Canal Boat tour included
Train tickets included
Suitable for little children
Wheelchair accessible tour
Museum ticket included
Light snack included
Lunch included
Transportation included
Walking Tour

Overview

The tour will start with a breath-taking drive toward the Gateway of India, a Prominent Arch Monument, with the famous Taj Mahal Hotel in the background. From here you will then be transferred onto a ferry to get to the famous Elephanta Caves the ferry journey will take approximately 50 minutes.

What's included

  • Guide
  • Transportation
  • Boat ride

Highlights

Elephanta Caves
Elephanta Caves are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a collection of cave temples predominantly dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva. They are on Elephanta Island, or Gharapuri (literally "the city of caves"), in Mumbai Harbour, 10 kilometres east of Mumbai in the Indian state of Mahārāshtra. The island, about 2 kilometres west of the Jawaharlal Nehru Port, consists of five Hindu caves and a few Buddhist stupa mounds that date back to the 2nd century BCE, as well as a small group of two Buddhist caves with water tanks. The Elephanta Caves contain rock cut stone sculptures that show syncretism of Hindu and Buddhist ideas and iconography. The caves are hewn from solid basalt rock. Except for a few exceptions, much of the artwork is defaced and damaged. The main temple's orientation, as well as the relative location of other temples, are placed in a mandala pattern. The carvings narrate Hindu mythologies, with the large monolithic 6.1 m Trimurti Sadashiva (three-faced Shiva), Nataraja (Lord of dance) and Yogishvara (Lord of Yoga) being the most celebrated.
Elephanta Island
Elephanta Island is one of a number of islands in Mumbai Harbour, east of Mumbai, India. This island is a popular tourist destination because of the island's cave temples, the Elephanta Caves, that have been carved out of the rock.
Gateway of India
The Gateway of India is an arch-monument built in the early twentieth century in the city of Mumbai, in the Indian state of Maharashtra. It was erected to commemorate the landing in December 1911 at Apollo Bunder, Mumbai (then Bombay) of King-Emperor George V and Queen-Empress Mary, the first British monarch to visit India. At the time of the royal visit, the gateway was not yet built, and a cardboard structure greeted the monarch. The foundation stone was laid in March 1913 for a monument built in the Indo-Saracenic style, incorporating elements of 16th-century Marathi architecture. The final design of the monument by architect George Wittet was sanctioned only in 1914, and construction was completed in 1924. The structure is a triumphal arch made of basalt, which is 26 metres high.

Itinerary

10:00

Meet the guide at the port entrance of Mumbai
A scenic drive towards the Gateway of India
Transfer onto a ferry to cruise the Elephanta Caves (ferry journey approximately 50 minutes)
Disembark the ferry, walk (or mini train) to the foot of the hill at the Elephanta Caves
40 minutes exploring the Elephanta Caves
Short walk to the top of the Island
Photo opportunities at Cannon Hill
Take the mini train which will take you to board the ferry for the return
Enjoy a 50-minute journey by ferry back to the Gateway of India
Board the coach
Enjoy the drive back passing landmarks (Fort, Colaba)
Drop back off at cruise port of Mumbai

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