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LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

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  • LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

    ho jaye fer bashao...
    jinney Lahore nahen vekhyaa jamyaa nahen...
    jinney lahore nahen vekhyaa jamyya nahen...
    aaho o aaho o aaho aaho aaho...

    :D: :D: :D: :D: :D:
    O meri jind te meri jaan...chalo fer ser keraye tuwanoon Lahore shehr di...
    aa jao merey naal fer saarey....
    :welcome: :welcome: :welcome:
    :ghug: :ghug: :ghug:
    LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)
    With a population of more than 2.5 million, Lahore is Pakistan's second largest city. It occupies a choice site in the midst of fertile alluvial plains. Ptolemy's "Geographia", written about AD I50, refers to it as "Labokla" and locates it with reference to the Indus, the Ravi, the Jhelum and the Chenab rivers.

    Badshahi Mosque, Lahore
    The city next crops up in literature in connection with the campaigns of the Turkish dynast Mahmud of Ghazni against the Rajas of Lahore between I00I and I008. Around this time it established itself as the capital of the Punjab and thereafter began to play an important and growing role as a centre of Muslim power and influence in the subcontinent. Its heyday was the Mughal era from the early sixteenth century onwards and, as Mughal power began to decline in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Lahore suffered a concomitant period of ignominy and political eclipse. It was here,at the beginning of the nineteenth century, that the Sikh ruler Ranjit Singh declared himself Maharajah of the Punjab and allowed his troops to desecrate many of the city's beautiful Islamic shrines- including the Badshahi Mosque which was, for a while, converted into a powder magazine. By the time British occupied Lahore in I849, one writer moved to describe the city as 'a mere expanse of crumbling ruins'.

    Minar-e-Pakistan, Lahore
    Happily, this was an exaggeration and today the great buildings laid down by the long-vanished
    Mughal emperors may be seen in much of their original splendour. All the adverse influences since
    then seem to have been washed away, like sediment carried off by a flood, leaving behind the
    fundamental character and beauty of this old Islamic settlement. Fittingly, it was here in I940
    that the Muslim League made its first formal demand for the establishment of a Muslim homeland.
    A towering and graceful monument, the Minar-e-Pakistan now stands on the site of the passing of
    the Pakistan Resolution.

    Lahore Fort, Lahore
    Nearby, the massively fortified walls of Lahore Fort speak eloquently of the centuries of passing history that they have witnessed. The fort antedates the coming of Mahmud of Ghazn i in the eleventh century, was ruined by the Mangols in I241, rebuilt in I267, destroyed a gain by Timurlane in I398 and rebuilt once more in I421. The great Mughal emperor Akbar re placed its mud walls with solid brick masonry in I566 and extended it northwards. Later Je hangir, Shah Jehan and Aurangzeb all added the stamps of their widely differing personalit ies to its fortification, gateways and palaces. The fort encloses an area of approximately thirty acres and it is possible to spend many hours wandering there, lost in contemplation of times gone by, trying to reconstruct in your imagination a way of life that the world will never see again. The buildings within its walls are a testament to the gracious style of Mughal rule at its height, in which every man knew his place and courtly behaviour had been refined into an elaborately startified social code. Much of the architecture reflects this code. From a raised balcony in the Diwan-e-Aam, or Hall of Public Audience, built by Shah Jehan in I63I, the emperors looked down on the common people over whom they ruled when they came to present petitions and to request the settlement of disputes. Wealthier citizens and the nobility were allowed to meet their emperors on a level floor in the Diwan-e-Khas, the Hall of Special Audience-which was also built by Shah Jehan, in I633.

    While the Hall of Audience are characterized by their strict functionality, other buildings raised under Shah Jehan's patronage are styled in a more imaginative and fanciful mood. Of these the Shish Mahal, or Palace of Mirrors, which stands on the fort's north side, is by far the most splendid. It consists of a row of high domed rooms, the roofs of which are decked out with hundreds of thousands of tiny mirrors in the fashion of the traditional Punjabi craft of "Shishgari" (designs made from mirror fragments). A fire-brand lit inside any part of the Palace of Mirrors throw back a million reflections that dizzy the eye and seem like a galaxy of far-off stars turning in an ink-blue firmament.

    Shalimar Garden, Lahore

    Another magnificent remnant of the Mughal era, also partially vandalized in the late eighteenth century by the invading Sikhs, is the Shalimar Garden which stands on the Grand Trunk Road about eight kilometers to the east of the old part of Lahore. "Shalimar" means 'House of Joy' and, in truth, the passing centuries have done nothing to detract from the indefinable atmosphere of light-heartedness and laughter that characterizes this green and peaceful walled retreat. A canal runs the entire2,006 foot (6II meters) length of the garden and from it 450 sparkling fountains throw up a skein of fresh water that cools and refreshes the atmosphere, making this a favourite place for afternoon walks for the citizens of modern Lahore.

    Lahore is rightly regarded as the cultural, architectural and artistic center of Pakistan; indeed, the city is so steeped in historical distinction that it would be possible to spend a lifetime studying it without learning everything that there is to learn.






    Visit My Early PS Work
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  • #2
    Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

    sorry I forgot to show u the pictures.... here these are.... enjoy.....salam:
    Attached Files
    Visit My Early PS Work
    You Are Welcome To Comment

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    • #3
      Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

      Buht hee informative and nice post aania..:)

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      • #4
        Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

        Thanks aani bohat achhi info hai
        tumharey bas mein agar ho to bhool jao mujhey
        tumhein bhulaney mein shayid mujhey zamana lagey

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        • #5
          Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

          thanxs for info:)

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          • #6
            Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

            Nice and Informatory post..main nay taqreeban sara Lahore bhi dekha hay...is liye mazeed acha laga yeh post read kar k.bouhat shukriya. :)
            :roseENIGMA:rose

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            • #7
              Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

              Good and nice work u done

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              • #8
                Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

                Thank you great information

                I Have Green Blood In My Veins Because I Am a Pakistani


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                • #9
                  Re: LAHORE (The Province of Punjab)

                  Wah G Nice Place........!
                  Thx For Sharing
                  sigpic

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