Tower on the Ford
31 March 2013
Though no detailed study has been carried out at the site, the archaeologist and the historian provide a few sketchy details. Pattan Minara was built in two distinct phase. The ground floor with its square plinth and west-facing doorway is a Hindu temple. The building style and the embellishment on the exterior show a clear connection with the Hindu Shahya temples of the Salt Range, the most telling of which is the representation in miniature of the front elevation of the building on the three façades.
Labels: Book of Days 2010, Sights Less Seen
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:19,
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Alexander's Campaign - Episode 5
Labels: Alexander, Documentary, History, Pakistan, Salman Rashid, Sindhia mein Sikander, Travel
posted by Salman Rashid @ 10:57,
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Jamia Masjid Akbari, Rohri
This my favourite image because of the atmosphere it captures.
Labels: Photo Stream, Travel Photography
posted by Salman Rashid @ 00:00,
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The Apricot Road to Yarkand coming in Urdu
30 March 2013
Labels: Books, The Apricot Road to Yarkand, Urdu
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:22,
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Sights Less Seen
Labels: Book of Days 2010, Sights Less Seen
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:18,
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Moving the mountains
29 March 2013
Labels: Pakistan, People, Porters
posted by Salman Rashid @ 13:06,
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Alas, Sindh is now Lost: Indus Valley State Railway
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Pakistan, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:15,
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Honesty and truth in travel writing
28 March 2013
Labels: About, Philosophy of Travel, Research, Travel
posted by Salman Rashid @ 15:32,
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Stealth in Steel: Kandahar State Railway
Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2012, Railway, Sindh, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:22,
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Challenges in travel research
27 March 2013
Labels: About, Pakistan, Travel
posted by Salman Rashid @ 17:05,
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Arrow through Khwaja Amran: Chaman Extension Railway
However, between the garrison and the vague border, there lay the great mass of barren rock called the Khwaja Amran. The clayey topsoil of the range turned to powdery dust when dry and deep mire when it rained. Through this variation did the trail snake around the contours of the mountain to drop down into the arid flat pan of Chaman on the Afghan frontier. Even in the best of times, a military column took three days to journey the one hundred and forty kilometres from Quetta over the Khwaja Amran Pass to Chaman. When it rained, it was nearly impossible to get laden mules and gun carriages through the knee deep muck. A revival of KSR was the answer.
Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2012, Railway, Sindh, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 10:46,
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As Lonely a Line can be: Nushki Extension Railway
26 March 2013
Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:49,
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My next travels through Pakistan
25 March 2013
Travel was indeed a very peaceful, enlightening experience until we became a frontline state. But let's take about two troubled provinces one at a time. That blessed land of Balochistan with its wide open spaces give such a sense of exhilarating freedom that you feel like a bird. Here, in this untrammelled, unexplored land, you make discoveries that educated you beyond your wildest dreams, far more than decades in some university. However, Balochistan did not fall foul because of the frontline misadventure. We abused the province - and this includes all of us, you me and everyone else. We are guilty because when the establishment was misgoverning this wonderful land, we all silently watched. We are guilty because we did not protest. My Baloch friends tell me I can still return to their land and travel with them and if there is trouble, they'll be the first to die for me. I trust them completely. But I joke that in that case there will be two of us dead!Labels: Balochistan, Kashmir, Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa, Pakistan, Travelogue
posted by Salman Rashid @ 20:14,
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Doll House Station: Attock Khurd
In this scenic setting, the doll house railway station of Attock Khurd stands on a low rise a hundred metres east of river’s edge. Its pitched roof with the chimneys and gables, the square pillars from which bell arches spring topped with keystones, and even the gargoyles were clearly designed by someone who valued English country architecture. This comely building, now festooned with bougainvillea, was left here as a lasting monument and a signature of the designer’s Englishness.
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Punjab, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:44,
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Alexander in Taxila - Episode 4
24 March 2013
Labels: Alexander, Documentary, History, Pakistan, Salman Rashid, Sindhia mein Sikander, Travel, Urdu
posted by Salman Rashid @ 16:50,
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Sher Bano Zungle
Labels: Balochistan, Juniper, Ziarat
posted by Salman Rashid @ 00:12,
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Connection between travel writing and photography
23 March 2013
The connection between writing and photography is two-fold. I take photographs to augment and reinforce the diary I write on my travels. Both serve the purpose of preserving memory. As time passes, one tends to lose the details of events and places. The diary reminds me how the event unfolded and the image connects the event to the place. Finally, the image compliments my write-up and takes distant places into the homes of readers, whatever few there may be. Some of the images are uploaded on this blog as well.
Labels: Travel Photography
posted by Salman Rashid @ 14:18,
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Worth its Salt: Sind Sagar Railway
But this was the Sind Sagar Railway that crossed the Jhelum River to skirt the purple loom of the Salt Range to Khushab, Mianwali, Kundian and down south to Darya Khan. Across the Indus from this sleepy town lay Dera Ismail Khan under the shadow of the Suleman Mountains and treading on the toes of Waziristan. As much a flashpoint in the 1880s as it is now, Waziristan needed monitoring and the Durand Line (drawn in 1893) patrolling. And so even the obscure old Sind Sagar was as strategic a line as PNSR or KSR.
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 10:52,
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Stitch in the Crack: Chhappar Rift Line
22 March 2013
Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:30,
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Blizzard Express: Zhob Valley Railway
20 March 2013
As it emerged on the north side of the huge gape of the Chhappar Rift, the line now called Sind Peshin State Railway turned westward to reach Khanai. Thence south it went to Bostan and Quetta. Late in the 19th century, a large quantity of chrome ore was discovered in the hills south of a little village called Hindubagh (renamed Muslimbagh in the 1960s). When First World War rolled around, the demand for chrome in the manufacture of steel armaments rose dramatically and Muslimbagh hit the map in a big way. Virtually within weeks a railway line sprang out of Khanai to snatch away the output from the mines.Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:11,
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Once upon a Line: Metre Gauge Steam
19 March 2013
If the lines west of the Indus River were built to serve a military strategic purpose, one stitch across the Thar Desert east of Hyderabad was laid purely for commercial reasons. This was the line from Mirpur Khas eastward to Jodhpur. It all began when the Karachi Chamber of Commerce represented to the government that a rail connection be established between Jodhpur and Karachi. The reason for this demand was that Rajasthan being connected to Mumbai by the Bombay Baroda and Central India Railway, all exports from Rajasthan ended up at Mumbai port. This was unfair and to the detriment of Karachi’s commercial interest, so her businessmen thought.In response to this demand, a Broad Gauge connection from Hyderabad to the village of Shadipalli, ten kilometres east of Mirpur Khas was completed in 1892. But the Jodhpur Bikaner Railway ran entirely on the Metre Gauge. Now, this entailed trans-shipment of freight at Shadipalli in the outback for onward transmission to Hyderabad.
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 06:55,
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Alexander’s Campaign - Episode 3
18 March 2013
Labels: Alexander, Documentary, Pakistan, Salman Rashid, Sindhia mein Sikander, Urdu
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:49,
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Going Nowhere: Jassar Bridge
An 1856 report on the imperative of laying the railway in Punjab dealt at length with the importance of Amritsar as a commercial entrepot. It highlighted the trade that passed through this city to Europe and Central Asia. Here were wholesalers dealing in Tibetan wool, Kashmiri shawls, Afghan fruit, both dried and fresh, carpets from Turkey and furs and skins from Turkestan, besides European finished goods.
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:28,
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Discovering Sir Vidya Naipaul
Nadira said something rather insightful: ‘Salman, just be yourself and you’ll discover a man you will never be able to forget.’ And so I called VS in his hotel room and he said I could come over for twenty minutes after which he was busy. When I went up to his room, I have to admit that never having seen a picture of VS, I expected a tall, thin hawk-like person. But what I found was a man with a chubby face in which the feature that captivated me was his eyes. They were, and still are, heavy lidded, sad eyes. These are the eyes of a person who is terribly, terribly sensitive and who does not only feel the pain of another human but perceives it without being told of it.
Labels: People, Sir Vidya Naipaul, Travel Literature, Travel Writer, Travel Writing
posted by Salman Rashid @ 00:00,
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Travel Writing in Pakistan
17 March 2013
Be assured that travel writing is not even considered a genre of writing in Pakistan. In this country, sadly, only fiction is writing. Moreover, Pakistanis will not deign to read a book on Pakistan. It seems as if they think it an activity below their dignity and status. They might read a newspaper article, but never ever a book. Especially true if the book is written by a Pakistani. The Pakistani travelogue therefore has no future.Labels: About, Pakistan, Travel Writing, Travelogue
posted by Salman Rashid @ 12:26,
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Some Said Scrap: Golra Railway Museum
16 March 2013
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Museum, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:29,
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Deosai: Land of the Giant
At this altitude there are no trees and summer is short and crisp. That is when the grass and sedge grow tall and dozens of different species of wild flowers turn Deosai into a colourful palette. That is when skylarks sing and lammergeyers quarter the cloud-laden skies for animal cadavers. Then the stoat and the Tibetan fox hunt amid the rocks, the brown bear browses in the grass and the wolf and snow leopard prowl the peaks for ibex.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Deosai, Deosai: Land of the Giant, Northern Pakistan, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 00:00,
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Baba Ghundi: the Dragon-Slayer of Chapursan
15 March 2013
Legend has it that there lurked in a lake in Chapursan a dragon that daily feasted on a human sacrifice from among the populace. One day as a young woman, her name having been drawn by lot, sat by the lake waiting to be taken by the monster, the pious Baba came upon her. Having heard her out, he told her to return home and tell the people that they need no longer fear the monster. And when the dragon emerged from the water, the pious man cut it to pieces with his sword.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Gilgit–Baltistan, Northern Pakistan, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:08,
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A Sindhi Trojan Horse
14 March 2013
And so he prepared five hundred camels; each to carry two wooden boxes and each box to conceal a fully accoutred warrior. Sreman Chandio then set out for Kandahar in the guise of dealer of musk. As his convoy of camels drew up outside the walls of that distant city, it was nearing dusk and the customs officials were in a hurry to call it off for the day. In order to verify that Sreman really was a musk-seller, they ran a knife through the narrow slits of random boxes. The far-sighted Sreman had prepared for just such a chance: the warriors within were poised with musk-scented kerchiefs with which they wiped the blade leaving it heavily fragrant.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Chandios, Sindh, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:10,
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Lahore that I grew up in was a great place
13 March 2013
posted by Salman Rashid @ 20:09,
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Wheels of Empire
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 17:06,
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The Temple of Gori and the diamond-studded Statue
The spire of the temple is gone, a victim of the great earthquake of 1898. But the bulbous domes, the finely polished marble pillars of the portico and in the dimly lit interior, the exquisite frescoes adorning the portico and the overall workmanship tell that no expense was spared in the building of the temple. According to the Memoir on the Thurr and Parkur of Stanley Napier Raikes, magistrate of the district in the 1850s, this temple once held a statue of Gorecha.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Sindh, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:06,
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Greeks in Chitral?
12 March 2013
Labels: Alexander, Book of Days 2009, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 07:31,
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Alexander’s Campaign - Episode 2
11 March 2013
Labels: Alexander, Documentary, Pakistan, Salman Rashid, Sindhia mein Sikander, Urdu
posted by Salman Rashid @ 10:53,
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Yusuf Khan and Sher Bano
Yusuf Khan lived with his sister and widowed mother in the village of Turlandi a few kilometres due south of the Kharamar peak. Now, in Pukhtun tradition, acrimony between paternal cousins (turboor), because of the division of a common grandparent’s properties, is as bitter as that of sworn enemies. And so, the orphaned Yusuf Khan and his family were turned out of the ancestral home by his turboors.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:42,
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St Thomas in Taxila
10 March 2013
The ‘proof’ supporting this theory is a manuscript titled The Acts of St Thomas that was discovered in 1822 in Syria. According to this document, St Thomas having been assigned by Jesus to teach the gospel in India, arrived by boat at the seaside capital of King Gondophares. Working miracles, he successfully converted the king and all his subjects to Christianity.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Punjab, Tales Less Told, Taxila
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:52,
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Why I travel
09 March 2013
I travel very much for the same reasons as Professor Santayana: to escape ‘into open solitudes’. I have this rather primordial desire to be where few people have been and where I can be by myself. It was for this reason that for most of my life as a traveller I went alone. The late and much lamented Saneeya Hussain, my friend and first editor at the Star, used to call me Lone Wolf. I have to use the professor’s words again to explain the urge to travel alone: ‘running some pure hazard’. There is a great thrill in it. This is a thrill that tingles up and down the spine. Imagine a walk in pre-dawn darkness in Thar Desert or somewhere in the foothills of the Khirthar Mountains – both places where the infamous krait of the viper family, hardly noticeable because of its sandy colouration – lurks under the bushes and stones. If you are alone and bitten, there is no chance of survival. The poison attacks the nervous system and one dies within minutes.Labels: About, Philosophy of Travel, Travel
posted by Salman Rashid @ 12:20,
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Guru Nanak and the hand print
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Punjab, Sikhs, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:50,
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Raja Paurava and Alexander
08 March 2013
The well-known exchange between the victor and the vanquished concerning how the latter wished to be treated and his response are part of lore that is related as a sign of Alexander’s greatness, not of Paurava’s equanimity in defeat. Paurava simply pales in the presence of Alexander, but history looks at the Punjabi king differently.
Labels: Alexander, Book of Days 2009, Raja Paurava, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:30,
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North Face of Chhogho Ri
07 March 2013
Labels: The Apricot Road to Yarkand
posted by Salman Rashid @ 14:05,
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Bridge over River Soan: Rawalpindi Mianwali Line
Labels: Book of Days 2012, Punjab, Railway, Wheels of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:24,
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The functions of travel literature?
06 March 2013
Labels: Travel Literature
posted by Salman Rashid @ 13:20,
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Mountain of Forty Souls
Elderly Brahuis recount the tale as though it had unfolded but yesterday. Providence, they say, dealt a bizarre hand to an indigent Brahui couple: for long they had remained childless and then bestowed by nature with not one or two, but fully forty infants. Hard put to provide for themselves, the very thought of having to feed forty additional hungry mouths drove the parents to desperation. The only recourse, so they decided, was to keep just one of the babies and abandon the other thirty-nine in a nearby mountain in the hope that other travellers or wood-cutters would rescue them and take them for their own.
Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2009, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:24,
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Sindhi girls
05 March 2013
Labels: Photo Stream, Travel Photography
posted by Salman Rashid @ 16:42,
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Alexander’s Campaign - Episode 1
Labels: Alexander, Documentary, Pakistan, Salman Rashid, Sindhia mein Sikander, Urdu
posted by Salman Rashid @ 14:42,
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The Invisible Saint
It is not told how Bibi Nani came to her end at the bottom of the Bolan where her tomb sits under a bridge by the rocky bank of a seasonal stream. But the nameless saint unable to shake of his tormentors ended up where the gorge forms a dead end. And even as the soldiers approached with bared swords, the saint calmly walked into solid rock. No sooner had he disappeared, when there opened a hole in the rock and out poured a large volume of water. Since the saint disappeared into solid rock, he became Pir Ghaib – the Invisible Saint.
Labels: Balochistan, Book of Days 2009, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:37,
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Prisoner on a Bus
Prisoner on a Bus is an anthology of my newspaper articles published in The Frontier Post (1991-93), The News on Sunday (1993-2001) and Herald (1993-2001).
Labels: Books, Prisoner on a Bus: Travels Through Pakistan
posted by Salman Rashid @ 08:36,
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Tales Less Told
Ever since humans acquired the gift of speech, they have been telling tales. Originally these stories were no more than details of the last great hunt or the location of a bountiful hunting ground and the prowess of the one exceptional huntsman who successfully brought down a large animal that fed the clan for days on end.
Labels: Book of Days 2009, Tales Less Told
posted by Salman Rashid @ 00:00,
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Renaissance in the Punjab, Mahal Nagar Mal, Minchinabad
04 March 2013
As early as the middle years of the 19th century, when British rulers had just started to raise their first edifices in northern India, the moneyed class of the Punjab had become deeply enamoured of this new building tradition. It is known that elite families who retained their own mistri would instruct him to visit upcoming cantonments to study new and upcoming buildings. The design would then be duplicated for the homes of the rich.Labels: Book of Days 2013, Minchinabad, Punjab, Stones of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 10:58,
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Sense and Sensibility, Islamia College, Peshawar
03 March 2013
In Peshawar, this shift had already occurred in the classrooms of Edwardes High School founded by the Church Missionary Society in 1855. In order to take education a notch higher, Sir George Roos-Keppel, chief commissioner of the province, floated the idea of a college for Muslims. This was around the end of the first decade of the 20th century, when there was no institution of higher education anywhere in the newly established North West Frontier Province.
Labels: Book of Days 2013, Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa, Peshawar, Stones of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 11:58,
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Sentinel Watch, Police Office Building, Jacobabad
More than half a century after Jacob had brought order to the region, the men of the Raj thought it necessary to raise a new building to house the offices of the Superintendent of Police. The 20th century had dawned and mixing local and European architectural forms was widely acceptable. Completed in 1910, the Police Office Building in Jacobabad became yet another remarkable example of the amalgam.
Labels: Book of Days 2013, Jacobabad, Sindh, Stones of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 00:00,
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Sindhia mein Sikander
02 March 2013
Sindhia mein Sikander - the documentary - spread over thirteen episodes each of 30 minutes was about Alexander’s Indian Campaign. We joined Alexander at Nawagai (Bajaur), and followed him through Pakistan to Makran where he left the country. The original idea to write a book germinated when I was researching for my book The Salt Range and the Potohar Plateau during the mid-1990s. I tried to get funding from National Fund for Culture and Heritage but at that time Dani was heading the fund and he was like the proverbial snake in the treasure-house - repugnant to the idea of spending the money. But after the success of Nagri, Nagri Ghoom Musafir, Muneeza Hashmi who was then GM PTV Lahore asked for another idea. I suggested Alexander and she fought very hard with the MD Yusuf Baig Mirza for financing for the project. The rest, as they say, is history. Labels: Alexander, Documentary, Sindhia mein Sikander
posted by Salman Rashid @ 20:30,
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Place of Penance, Gurdwara Rori Sahib, Eminabad
When the gateway was raised in the first decade of the 20th century, Antoni Gaudi, the Spanish architect was well-known and his inventive use of curvilinear art nouveau ornamentation was viewed with admiration throughout Europe. If the now forgotten architect of the Eminabad gateway was trained under the tutelage of Lockwood Kipling of the Mayo School of Arts in Lahore, it is possible he drew inspiration for this assignment from Gaudi’s work. On the other hand, if he was a traditional mistri – which seems more likely to be the case – he had an admirably original and innovative mind. Since this sort of work was not the norm, the originality was coupled with a boldness that came from a mastery of tradition architecture.
Labels: Book of Days 2013, Gujranwala: The Glory That Was, Punjab, Stones of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:00,
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Wish I was there
01 March 2013
Labels: Balochistan, Moola Valley
posted by Salman Rashid @ 17:54,
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Truthful inaccuracy
Labels: Pakistan
posted by Salman Rashid @ 17:53,
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The Salt Range and the Potohar Plateau
Neither is The Salt Range and the Potohar Plateau a book of archaeology nor is it a treatise on classic architecture. The Salt Range and the Potohar Plateau is simply a book of fascinating stories known commonly to only a select club of archeologists and historians. It attempts to tell the common reader of the colourful unfolding of history in the Salt Range and the Potohar Plateau not just through the description of ruined monuments but through the folklore.Now in circulation is the second edition of the book first published in 2001.
Labels: Books, The Salt Range and the Potohar Plateau
posted by Salman Rashid @ 15:10,
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Facets of Fusion, Collectorate Building, Larkana
In keeping with the promise of a large levy, the administrators thought it appropriate that there be a building of impressive proportions where the proceeds be held in transit on their way to the central treasury. With its crenulated towers that come straight from a castle in Britain, its Greek columns and pediments and its Indian domes, the Collectorate Building in Larkana becomes just the fulfilment of this need.
Labels: Book of Days 2013, Sindh, Stones of Empire
posted by Salman Rashid @ 09:22,
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