Ranchi
The busy streets of Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
Dassam Falls, one of the several waterfalls that ring Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
The share-rickshaw is the most ubiquitous form of public transport in Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
Statues of brothers Nilamber and Pitamber, rebels who were hanged by the British•Alamy Stock Photo
Cycle rickshaws are another popular way of getting around the city•Alamy Stock Photo
Lush green paddy fields at Hundru, on the outskirts of Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
Boys at a telephone booth in Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
Children walk to school from the outskirts of Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
A woman dries corn on the outskirts of the city•Alamy Stock Photo
Roadside stalls sell colourful decorations for cars and trucks•Alamy Stock Photo
Children dive from a bridge into a river to cool off•Alamy Stock Photo
Colourful shirts lined up for sale outside the Gossner Evangelical Lutheran Church•Alamy Stock Photo
Tribal children play with a toy made out of cycle wheels•Alamy Stock Photo
Hundru waterfalls, one of the five that give Ranchi the moniker "City of waterfalls"•Alamy Stock Photo
A woman from the Oraon tribe, the original inhabitants of the region, dries rice on the road•Alamy Stock Photo
A woman carries bananas to market•Alamy Stock Photo
Tagore Hill offers sweeping views of the countryside•Alamy Stock Photo
The Tribal Museum at the Ram Dayal Munda Tribal Welfare Research Institute•Alamy Stock Photo
A tribal house of the Munda tribe in Ranchi•Alamy Stock Photo
Litti-chokha, spiced gram flour-stuffed wheat balls tossed in ghee, make a full meal•Alamy Stock Photo
A potter makes clay lamps on a pottery wheel•Alamy Stock Photo
A local fish market with the day's catch•Alamy Stock Photo