Rajasthan is not simply a destination — it is an experience of colour, grandeur, and timeless culture that no other region on earth replicates. Covering over 342,000 square kilometres, it is India's largest state by area and home to the Thar Desert, the great Aravalli mountain range, eleven UNESCO-recognised properties, and over 30 major fort and palace complexes.
For British travellers, Rajasthan holds a particular allure. The state's Rajput rulers shaped centuries of subcontinental history, and the British Raj left its own architectural and cultural fingerprint across Jaipur, Jodhpur, and Udaipur. Staying in a heritage haveli, watching a classical dance performance in a palace courtyard, or riding across the Thar on camelback at sunset are experiences that exist nowhere else on the planet — and they are as vivid today as they were for the Mughal emperors who once passed through these very lands.
From the UK, Rajasthan is both accessible — with daily connecting flights from London Heathrow — and distinctly foreign enough to feel like a genuine adventure. The time difference (GMT+5:30) means minimal jet lag disruption, and the English-speaking infrastructure in major tourist cities makes navigation straightforward for first-time visitors.
A Brief History of Rajasthan
The land now known as Rajasthan has been inhabited for over 5,000 years. The Indus Valley Civilisation left traces here, followed by the powerful Rajput clans who rose to prominence between the 6th and 12th centuries AD. These warrior kingdoms — including the Mewar, Marwar, Amber, and Bikaner dynasties — constructed the great forts and palaces that define Rajasthan's skyline today.
The Mughal Empire, at its peak under Akbar (1556–1605), forged alliances with many Rajput rulers, leading to a remarkable fusion of Rajput and Mughal art and architecture that is visible in Jaipur's Amber Fort and Agra's broader heritage. The British colonial period, beginning formally in 1818 when most Rajput rulers signed treaties with the East India Company, brought railways, roads, and Western influences — while the princely states of Rajputana retained significant local autonomy. After Independence in 1947, the state of Rajasthan was formally constituted in 1949 by the merger of 22 princely states.