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Emperor Jahangir First Grave I Mysterious Baghsar Fort I LOC I Habba Khatun I Nightingale of Kashmir 1 год назад


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Emperor Jahangir First Grave I Mysterious Baghsar Fort I LOC I Habba Khatun I Nightingale of Kashmir

#kashmir #mughalempire #historyvlog Emperor Jahangir First Grave I Mysterious Baghsar Fort I LOC I Habba Khatun I Nightingale of Kashmir Videography: Ali Rajpoot Kashmir Paradise Beauty    • Most Beautiful Waterfall in Chaii Sam...   Baghsar Fort Baghsar Fort is an ancient fort built in Samahni Valley near Bhimber, Pakistan, close to a place known as Baghsar. The fort was constructed by Mughal rulers. Some parts of it are currently closed to visitors, due to it being right beside the line of control between Pakistan and India. Very little knowledge is available about the true history of the fort. It is widely believed that fort was built by Mughals but Godfrey Vigne, an English traveler who extensively traveled through Kashmir tells it was built by Dhian Singh, brother of Maharaja Ghulab Singh Dogra. He mentioned it as Amur Gurh castle in his book. Outer perimeter consists of boundary wall and thirty eight small rooms while inner side of the fort consists of darbar hall, a water pond and forty three rooms. There are three entrances to the fort. Northern main entrance, south eastern entrance and the entrance to inner perimeter. Observation point is prominent on the south eastern corner. There is a firing bay on western wall. Fort is surrounded by embrasures in the walls to allow archers to fire and remain under cover. Mughal emperor Jahangir on his way to Lahore from Kashmir died somewhere in between Chingus Sarai, Rajouri and Sarai Saadabad, Bhimber. To preserve his body his entrails were removed and buried in Baghsar fort. Then body was sent to Lahore where it was buried in mausoleum built along the banks of Ravi. Habba Khatoon Habba Khatoon (Habba Khatun), also known by the honorary title The Nightingale of Kashmir, was a Kashmiri poet and ascetic in the 16th century. Her compositions have been sung and recited countless times since their inception in the valley, and she's considered as one of the greatest Kashmiri poets of all time, with unmatched verbal prowess. She was born in a small village in Chandhara, Pampore, Pulwama in Kashmir. Her real name was Zoon or Zun (Kashmiri: زوٗن, romanized: zūn, lit. 'Moon'), a common Kashmiri first name. According to the oral tradition, she was called Zoon because of her great beauty. Although a peasant, she learnt how to read and write from the village moulvi. According to legend, one day Yousuf Shah Chak, the last independent emperor of Kashmir, was out hunting on horseback. He heard Zoon singing under the shade of a chinar tree, and the couple met and fell in love. The oral tradition describes Zoon as Yousuf Shah Chak's queen consort, although there is scholarly debate about whether she was in fact a lower status mistress or member of his harem. She entered the palace in about 1570, and at some point changed her name to become Habba Khatoon (حَبہٕ خوتوٗن). The couple were reportedly very content, and Yousuf Shah became the ruler of Kashmir. However, they were separated in 1579 after the Mughal emperor Akbar had Yousuf Shah arrested and imprisoned in Bihar, never to return. After this, Habba Khatoon became an ascetic, and spent the rest of her life wandering across the valley singing her songs. She has a profound presence in the oral tradition and is hailed as the last independent poet queen of Kashmir. Peer baba The top of Habba Khatoon, around which charming tales exist, is Gurez's most daunting mountain. The majestic, enormous Habba Khatoon is named for the eponymous poetess and peasant queen who is sometimes referred to as the "Nightingale of Kashmir" and who is claimed to have grown up close to the mountain's base. Follow us on: Facebook:   / ​.  . Twitter:   / gilanilogs   Instagram:   / zulfiqargil.  .

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