Rajasthan is the India that the imagination constructs before experience corrects it — and on this occasion, the imagination is substantially accurate. The pink sandstone of Jaipur's old city, the blue-painted houses of Jodhpur below the Mehrangarh Fort, the white marble pavilions of Udaipur reflected in the waters of Lake Pichola: these are images that have been circulating in European consciousness since the British arrived in the eighteenth century and found a civilisation that had been building palaces longer than most European nations had existed as coherent political entities. The Mughal and Rajput traditions of royal architecture — the forts, the palaces, the step-wells, the garden tombs — represent an extraordinary accumulation of aesthetic intelligence concentrated in a relatively compact geographical area.
The Maharajas' Express — operated by IRCTC in association with Cox & Kings — is the most awarded luxury train in Asia and one of the finest in the world. Named after the Maharajas of Rajasthan whose palaces the route visits, it carries 84 guests across 23 cabins and 2 presidential suites in interiors that draw on the decorative traditions of the royal courts: inlaid woodwork, hand-woven fabrics, gilded mirrors. The train is a palace in motion — and the logic is deliberate, since several of the stations at which it stops are the forecourts of actual palaces.
This seven-day itinerary frames the train journey between Delhi and Agra. One night at The Oberoi New Delhi — the hotel that has set the standard for luxury in the Indian capital since 1965 — provides the prelude. Three nights aboard the Maharajas' Express cover Rajasthan from Jaipur to Jodhpur to Udaipur. And one night at The Oberoi Amarvilas in Agra — the only hotel in the world built to face the Taj Mahal, every room positioned with a view of the monument — provides the conclusion that no journey to northern India can honestly avoid.
The Maharajas' Express is a palace in motion — and the logic is deliberate, since several of the stations at which it stops are the forecourts of actual palaces.
Rajasthan operates best between October and March — when the temperature is manageable and the light is at its most extraordinary. November for the post-monsoon clarity; January for the coolest temperatures and the Jaipur Literature Festival; February for the Jodhpur RIFF music festival. Summer is available for those who understand that 45°C provides its own understanding of why the palaces were built with such thick walls.
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Every detail — from your first evening in Delhi to your final dawn above the Taj Mahal — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.
From USD 15,000+ per person
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