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Majestic India: Gold Rolls-Royce With Taxi Number Plate Dazzles Roads in Kerala State

© AP Photo / Steve HelberA Rolls-Royce logo in Prince George, Va.
A Rolls-Royce logo in Prince George, Va. - Sputnik International
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New Delhi (Sputnik): In ancient times, India, which used to be described as the "golden sparrow", was one of the wealthiest lands – but even today it offers a glimpse of its majesty.

Pictures of a Gold Chrome Rolls-Royce Phantom car, complete with a yellow number plate – which indicates a taxi in India – have been bedazzling social media sites in the country.

​The Phantom is Rolls-Royce’s most expensive luxury car, the starting price of which is over $450,000.

According to media reports, a millionaire named Bobby Chemmanur from Kerala purchased the car as an added offering for tourists who visit the Indian state and stay at his resorts.

​Chemmanur’s thought behind being so lavish with the value addition to his hospitality offerings is for people, who otherwise cannot purchase the car, to experience the luxury of Rolls-Royce in their lifetime, the media has reported. One car ride costs approximately $340.

Netizens are in awe of the dreamy vehicle and are posting delighted comments on social media.

​Some people also criticised Rolls-Royce for allowing their most premium car to be used as a taxi.

​However, this is not the first time that someone from India has used the status symbol of Rolls-Royce cars in a way that they were not intended for.

Legend has it that in 1920, Jai Singh Prabhakar – the Maharaja of Alwar from India’s Rajasthan state – visited London and decided to walk around the city disguised as a common man.

Realising that Prabhakar was Indian, the staff at the Rolls-Royce showroom directed him to get out.

Outraged over such bad treatment for being Indian, the king re-visited the showroom in his royal clothes, escorted by a trail of servants. He purchased a fleet of Rolls Royce cars that were on display in the showroom that day and returned to India. But he instructed the civic authorities in New Delhi to use the Rolls-Royce cars to collect garbage from around the city. It went on for a month before Rolls-Royce realised its bad conduct and apologised to him.

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