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Chamkan Mosque |
Gour
is another city where one finds structures of terracotta. These are different
in the sense that they are of the Islamic kind. Gour is located in the eastern
part of West Bengal and the ruins straddle both India and Bangladesh, though
majority of the ruins fall on the Indian side.
Gour
had its heydays during the middle ages when it was the capital of Bengal. Gour
or Gauda became synonymous with Bengal. In the 13 Century it was captured by
the Delhi Sultanate. I did not know that
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Trellis work |
there was also a Bengal Sultanate of
which Gour was the capital for more than 100-odd years.
Gour was one of the most densely populated
cities of the sub-continent. Portuguese travelers have left detailed accounts
of the riches of the place. They even compared the place with Lisbon. In the
sixteenth century Gour was occupied by Humayun
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Reminds one of Fatehpur Sikri |
who desired a name-change for
the place to Zanntabad. Apparently, this did not work out and the place
continued to be known as Gour or Gauda.
Gour
continued to be an opulent place with its trade and business. The Moguls added
a large number of public buildings. But soon the city was overtaken by plague
and change in the course of the Ganges. The city was thus left as a rubble heap
and ruins of what once were fine pieces of architecture.
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