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Lalbagh
Fort or Fort Aurangabad, an incomplete
Mughal palace fortress at Dhaka
on the river Buriganga in the southwestern
part of the old city. The river
has now gone further south and flows
at quite a distance from the fort.
D'Oily's painting (1809-11) shows
that more than half of this east-west
oblong fortress touched the water
of the river on its south and southwestern
sides. | |
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The
construction of the fort was commenced
in 1678 AD by prince MUHAMMAD AZAM during
his 15 month long vice-royalty of Bengal,
but before he could complete the work
he was recalled by AURANGZEB. His successor,
SHAISTA KHAN did not continue the work,
though he stayed in Dhaka up to 1688.
His daughter BIBI PARI (Lady Fairy) died
here in 1684 and this led him to consider
the fort to be ominous.
For long the fort was considered to be
a combination of three buildings (the
mosque, the tomb of Bibi Pari and the
Diwan-i-Aam), two gateways and a portion
of the partly damaged fortification wall.
But recent excavations carried out by
the Department of Archaeology of Bangladesh
have revealed the existence of other structures
and it is now possible to guess a more
or less complete picture of the fort.
(see Site Plan). In the present fort area
of 18 acres, excavations have revealed
remains of 26/27 structures with elaborate
arrangements for water supply, sewerage,
roof gardens, and fountains. Renovation
work by the Archaeology Department has
now put Lalbagh Fort in a much-improved
shape and has now become an interesting
spot for tourists and visitors.
Of the three surviving gateways, the southern
one is the most imposing. Seen from the
front it is a three storeyed structure
with a fronton, bordered with slender
minarets. From inside it gives the impression
of a two storeyed structure. The gateway
on the northeast is a much smaller and
simpler structure. It is gathered from
structural evidence that the fort extended
to the eastern side beyond the present
Shaista Khan Road. The third gate, now
in the centre of the northern boundary
wall, was left incomplete. The present
one is a recent construction.
The southern fortification wall, running
westward from the South Gateway went up
to the huge bastion in the southwestern
corner of the fort. Then the fortification
ran northward for a distance and then
it is lost. The boundary wall on the eastern
side connecting the southern and northern
gateways is a modern wall and it is now
assumed that the fort originally embraced
areas further east beyond the present
Shaista Khan Road. On the northern side
of the southern fortification were placed
utility buildings, such as the stable,
the administrative block, and its western
part accommodated a beautiful roof-garden
with arrangements for fountains and a
water reservoir. The residential part
was located on the eastern side of the
western fortification, mainly to the south-west
of the mosque, where the remains of a
sewerage line have been found. The southern
fortification is a twin wall, the outer
one is about 6.10m high and 1.37m thick,
while the inner one is 13.72m high with
same thickness. The two are solid up to
the height of 6.10m and there are regular
openings in the upper part of the inner
wall.
The original fortification wall on the
south had 5 bastions at regular intervals
and the western wall had 2 bastions. Among
the 7 bastions the biggest one is near
the main southern gate at the back of
the stable, which occupies the area to
the west of the gateway. The bastion had
an underground tunnel. Among the five
bastions of the southern fortification
the central one was single storeyed, the
rest are double storeyed structures. The
central one contains an underground room
with veranda on three sides, and it can
be approached either from the riverside
or from its roof. The double-storeyed
bastion at the southwestern corner of
the fort was possibly a Hawakhana, with
a water reservoir on its roof. Two lines
of terracotta pipes have been found, which
connected all establishments of the fort
with this reservoir. An extra-strong terracotta
pipe line made with double pipes, one
inside the other, have been uncovered
in the area between the Hammam and the
tomb of Bibi Pari.
The area westwards from the stable parallel
to the southern fortification once had
a beautiful roof garden with fountain,
rose and star designs marking the flowerbeds,
and a water reservoir. The buildings underneath
contained the administrative blocks and
the residential part on the western side.
The central area of the fort is occupied
by three buildings - the Diwan-i-Aam and
the Hammam on its east, the mosque on
the west and the tomb of Bibi Pari in
between the two - in one line, but not
at equal distance. A water channel with
fountains at regular interval connect
the three buildings from east to west
and two similar channels run from south
to north, one through the middle of the
ground in between the Diwan-i-Aam and
the tomb forming a square tank with fountains
at the intersection with the east-west
channel, and the other from the water
reservoir passing through the bottom of
the tomb. The water channels and the fountains,
a very common feature of Mughal architecture,
set an atmosphere not very unlike north
Indian Mughal forts. A big square (watertank
71.63m each side), placed in front (to
the east) of the Diwan-i-Aam and in between
the southern and northern gateways, adds
to the beauty of the building. There are
four corner stairs to descent into the
tank.
The double storeyed Diwan-i-Aam attached
with a single storeyed Hammam on its west
is an imposing building. The Hmmam complex
includes an open platform, a small kitchen,
an oven, water storage area, a masonry
brick bath-tub, a toilet, a dressing room
and an extra room. The Hammam portion
has an underground room for boiling water
and a passage for sweepers. A long partition
wall runs north-south along the western
facade of the Hammam dividing the whole
fort area into two divisions.
The building in the middle, the tomb of
Bibi Pari, is the most impressive of the
surviving buildings of the fort. Eight
rooms surround a central square room,
containing the mortal remains of Bibi
Pari, which is covered by a false dome,
octagonal in shape, and wrapped by brass
plate. The entire inner wall of the central
room was covered with white marble, while
the fouhttp://dhakacity.dot5hosting.com/admin/Edit_Delete_body.php
Click here to EditUpdate Page Contentr side central rooms had stone
skirting up to a height of one metre.
The wall in the four corner rooms was
skirted with beautiful glazed floral tiles.
The tiles have recently been restored;
two of the original tiles have been retained.
The southeastern corner room contains
a small grave, popularly known to be of
Shamsad Begum, possibly a relative of
Bibi Pari. The Lalbagh Fort Mosque is
a three-domed mosque with awater tank
in front (on the eastern side) for ablution.
The archaeological excavations have revealed
strata of the Sultanate as well as of
the pre-Muslim periods, from where terracotta
heads and plaques have been found. Thus
it is now justified to say that though
the Mughals founded Dhaka, it was definitely
inhabited long before the Muslims came
to Bengal. [Habibur Rahman]
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