1. The Legends of Purana Qila (The Old Fort)
Let us start with the oldest city that Delhi comprises, namely, Indraprastha. According to the legend, Indraprastha was founded by the Pandava princes during the epic ages described in the Mahabharata. Legend has it that when Arjuna, the middle Pandava prince, burnt down the Khandava forest, he saved the family of Moy, an architect and builder of vast experience. To show his gratitude, Moy built the unique city of Indraprastha of unparalleled charm along with its exquisite palace to serve as the capital for the Pandavas in their new kingdom. The ruins of this city were discovered near the old fort in today's Delhi. Archaeologists dated this historical monument to anywhere between 3400 and 4000 BC, which makes it about 5500 to 6000 years old.
The Palace of Illusion
This palace was built by the demon and construction maestro Moy, who was saved by one of the Pandava brothers, Arjuna, while burning down the Khandav forest to build up the legendary city's of Indraprastha, or the abode of Indra, the king of Gods. The unparalleled beauty of the palace sparked extreme envy in Duryadhana, a cousin of the Pandavas and the eldest of the 100 Kaurava brothers. This instigated a dangerous game of treachery of the Kauravas, who manhandled the Pandavas' wife Queen Draupadi. The irreversible game of politics brought the entire country at war that broke out between the Kauravas and the Pandavas' supporters, bringing an end to the classical age in the history of India.
Dreams and Jealousy
The most interesting aspect of the city of Indraprastha was the Palace of Illusion. As described in the Mahabharata, the palace had terraces that looked like ponds and ponds that looked like land. The mystery that surrounded the entire architecture added to its irresistible charm. As described in the epic story, the palace housed real gardens with fruit and flowers made of gems and precious stones, and artificial gardens with real fruit and flowers for visitors to enjoy. For all these reasons, that place was called the Palace of Illusion.
According to the legend, it was because of this illusion that Duryadhana fell into a stream he took for land. The already embarrassed prince was badly mocked by Queen Draupadi, who said that that was what happened to a blind man's blind son. Already jealous of his cousins' prosperity, Duryadhana could not take this mockery passively, as his father was actually a blind man. This event, as the legend says, instigated him to start scheming against his powerful cousins to bring their downfall, including the infamous slander of Draupadi, in which Lord Krishna prevented the ultimate humiliation of the queen at the hands of Duryadhana's brothers by supplying her with countless layers of clothing to save her from becoming forcefully undressed using his sheer magic. Eventually, this event followed by a twelve-year-long exile of the Pandavas led to the great Kurukshetra War, which was the ultimate fight of good against evil.
The Indian Nation
Legend has it that in the Palace of Illusion in Indraprastha a concept of united Bharath (or India) was born. It was there that Lord Krishna killed the evil Shishupala to embark on a journey to conquer evil with good. And it was there that the second Kaurava brother Dushyashana tried to strip Queen Draupadi off her clothes in front of the whole council. Lord Krishna responded to Draupadi's prayers, giving her endless amount of clothes to save her honour. After being dragged to the council by her hair, Queen Drapadi promised to her husbands, the five Pandava princes, that she would not tie her hair until she drenched it with Dushyashana's blood. It was Bhima, the second of the Pandava princes, who fulfilled this promise during the Kurukshetra War by ripping Dushyashana's chest open and taking his blood to the Queen, so that she could wet down her hair with it and finally tie her hair after 13 long years.
Nur the Mighty Elephant
The old fort itself is the theme of numerous legends, from being the center of Dinpanah, the new city founded by Mughal Emperor Humayun, through serving as the famed capital citadel of the Sur Empire, named by Sher Shah Suri as Shergarh, to housing the renamed fort of Nurgarh under the Mughals after they reconquered Delhi. It is said that after Humayun retook Delhi from the last Sur Sultan, he entered Shergarh on his favorite elephant Nur, who was wounded in wounded in the 'earlier' battle to recapture Delhi but still carried the emperor into the citadel, breaking the main arch gate made by the Sur Sultans in the process. Soon after, the famed elephant died and Humayun renamed Shergarh as Nurgarh in his memory.
Centuries before the Shergarh - Dinpanah, Delhi's first medieval settlement was the city around Lal Kot and Qila Rai Pithora. This city was a continuation of the 1st-century AD town of Dilu and has its share of fantabulous legends.