ANCIENT NOTRH BENGAL
RAJSHAHI, BOGRA , DINAJPUR
Mahasthan
Garh:
It repr esents the
earliest and the largest archaeological site in Bangladesh, consists of the
ruins of the ancient city of Pundranagara. The site is 13 km north of Bogra
town on the Dhaka-Rangpur highway. The ruins measuring 1500m N-S and 1400m E-W
and are enclosed on their four sides by rampart walls that rise to an average
height of 6m from river level. Many isolated mounds occur at various places
outside the city within a radius of 8 km on the north, south and west,
testifying to the existence of suburbs of the ancient provincial capital. After
a series of excavations, Bairagir Bhita, Govinda Bhita, Parasuram Palace,
Khodar Pathar Bhita, Man Kalir Kunda etc. were excavated.
Govinda Bhita:
Govinda Bhita a
high mound traditionally ascribed to be the site of a Govinda temple and is
located outside the northern rampart of Mahasthangarh (Pundranagar) of Bogra
district. On its eastern and northern sides flows the moribund Karatoya. During
the excavation in 1928-29, two temple remains were exposed: one western and the
other eastern. These belong to different periods and are enclosed within a 6-0
thick perimeter wall. The western temple, erected probably in the 6th century,
is larger than the eastern smaller one, built about 11th century, partly on the
ruins of the western temple. The western temple seems to have been built on a
high central shaft, solidly filled with earth, and surrounded by three graded
terraces, each buttressed by a series of blind cells packed with infilling of
earth, intended to strengthen the foundation of a massive superstructure.
Approach to this cellular podium was from the west.
Gokul Medh:
Gokul Medh is located
around 5 km south west of the complex of the village Gokul. This site popularly
known as Behular Bashar Ghar or Lokshminderer Medh is a 13m high podium
consisting of 172 blind cells. On the flat top of this podium a Buddhist
religious stupa or temple was built in 6th century AD. During the rule of Senas
in 11th centuries another temple was built on the ruins of the former Buddhist one.
The substructure appears to have been decorated with ornamental bricks
containing floral and geometrical motif of ornamentation.
Paharpur:
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The Sompur Vihara is a
Buddhist Monastery dating from the late 8th century. It is located in Paharpur,
in the northwest of Bangladesh. It is said to be the second largest single
Buddhist monastery south of the Himalayas. It was made a WHS as a tribute to
the Pala dynasty that ruled Bengal and Bihar for 3.5 centuries from middle of
the 8th century.
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From the 12th century
on, after numerous attacks by invaders, the monks left and the monastery
building suffered decline and disintegration. Paharpur Buddhist Vihara was
included in the World Heritage List in 1985.
Kusumba Mosque:
This stone mosque is
situated in the village Kusumba in the district of Naogaon. According to an inscription,
it was erected by a patron, Sulayman in 1558 during the reign of Ghiyath al din
Bahadur Shah. The Kusumba mosque is one such example in Bengal, which may be
termed as Black Gem of Bengal. Stones used in this mosque are dark black-basalt
that was transported from Rajmahal hill of Bihar through waterways.
It is located on the
west bank of a big tank measuring 381m x 274 m. There is a big courtyard in
front of the mosque surrounded by a low boundary wall. This mosque is still in
a good state as it has been well preserved.
Varendra Museum:
Varendra Museum was
the first museum to be established in erstwhile East Bengal in 1910. The museum
started out as the collection for Varendra Anushandhan Samiti or Varendra
Investigation Society and got its current name in 1919. The Zamindars of
Rajshahi and Natore, notably Kumar Sharat Kumar Ray, donated their personal
collections to Varendra Museum. Varendra refers to an ancient janapada roughly
corresponding to northern Bangladesh.
This museum has a rich
collection of objects of Mohenjodaro and also of 16th to l9th century AD. This
is devoted to the study of ancient history and culture. Its rich collections
contain interesting objects of past Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim heritage. It is
located at the heart of Rajshahi town and maintained by Rajshahi University
authority. The year of its formal establishment is 1910.
Putia:
Putia is an upazila in
Rajshahi district. Putia zamindari created by the Mughals in the early 17th
century is one of the oldest estates of Bengal. The extensive area of the
estate, enclosed within a moat, has a number of elegant temples embellished
with terracotta sculpture, e.g. the Pancharatna GovindaTemple, a beautiful
little do-chala shrine behind the palace, the hut-shaped Jagaddhatri Temple on
the west and the large Shiva Temple at the entrance of the estate.
Govinda Temple:
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Shiva Temple:
The ShivaTemple, a
19.81m square building, was erected by Rani Bhuvan Mohini Devi in 1823 AD on a
high plinth and plastered all over. It is decorated with numerous miniature
ratnas on the main tower and on the four smaller towers on the roof of the
ground floor.
Putia Rajbari:
The two-storied Putia
Rajbari, which is the most notable structure in the area faces a
four-storied large pyramidal dol mancha on the north, across an open ground and
presents an imposing 60.96m frontage. It has two symmetrical projected wings at
the east and west ends while its central part, about 15.24m wide, accommodates
a grand portal. This grand palace was constructed by Rani Hemanta Kumari Devi
in 1895 AD in honor of her mother-in-law Maharani Sarat Sundari Devi.
Bagha Mosque:
Bagha Mosque was built
in 1523 A.D. by Sultan Nusrat Shah, son of Hussain Shah. It is a richly
decorated monument originally roofed over with 10 domes which collapsed long
ago but recently rebuilt carefully to their original form. The superb
terracotta decoration on the central mihrab represents floral frame work and
jali rosettes. The whole outer surface of the mosque is beautifully embellished
with fine terracotta art motifs.
Natore Rajbari:
Natore Rajbari is situated
in Natore, a district town about 48 km east of Rajshahi, was
the zamindari headquarters of the Natore Raj. Like most of the feudal palaces
in Bangladesh the palace ruins of Natore are approached through a long avenue,
fringed on either side with carefully planted rows of bottle palms.
Ramjivan, the real
founder of the Raj family, made his headquarters at Natore and built most of
the Rajbari complex, the tanks, temples, orchards and flower gardens.
Originally Natore was a small settlement under Taraf Kanaikhali in Lashkarpur
Pargana.
Choto Sona Masjid:
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Tahkhana:
Literally Tahkhana
(Persian) means a cold building or palace. A structure built on the west bank
of a large tank situated in the Firuzpur quarters of the city of Gaur-Lakhnauti
is traditionally known as the Tahkhana.
Mughal Subahdar Shah
Shuja(1639- 1660 AD) occasionally used to visit and stay in Gaur-Lakhnauti to
honour his patron saint Shah Niamatullah Wali point to this great Mughal
governor as the builder. Shah Shuja held his court at Rajmahal, not very far
from Gaur. It is very likely that Shah Shuja built this small palace as a
khanqah (resting, meditating and preaching place) of the saint, and the mosque
and the tombs as its adjuncts.
Darasbari Mosque:
Darasbari Mosqueis the
largest mosque in the Bangladesh part of Gaur-Lakhnauti, now in ruins. It is
situated in the Darasbari quarter of the mediaeval city on the west side of the
Chhota Sona-Kotwali Darwaza Road, at present a desolated area near the Indian
border. The name Darasbari is derived from its being located within a darsbari
(place of lesson or learning), pointing to the madrasa to the east of the
mosque, separated by a large tank, forming a typical Muslim educational
complex. According to its inscription, which is now preserved in the Indian
Museum at Calcutta, the mosque was built in 1479 AD by Shamsuddin Abul Muzaffar
Yusuf Shah.
Kantajee Temple:
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Maharaja Prannath of
Dinajpur began its construction about 1722. It was completed by his adopted son
Maharaja Ramnath, in Shaka era 1674 (1752 AD. This magnificent pyramidal temple
rose in three receding terraces and was crowned with nine ornamental spires or
ratnas (jewels) on the corner of the three terraces which imparted to it an
appearance of a huge rathaor an ornate chariot resting on a high plinth. It was
provided with arched openings on all four sides in order to enable devotees to
see the deity enshrined inside from all directions.
Dinajpur Rajbari:
Dinajpur Rajbari now
in ruins, is situated on the north-east outskirts of the present
town. Originally enclosed within defensive moats and high rampart, the derelict
remains of the Dinajpur Rajbari, can now be approached through a tall arched
gate facing west. Inside the palace precinct near the gateway on left is a
painted Krishna temple and on right, some ruined outhouses and another inner
gateway that provides access to an inner square court. Facing the courtyard on
the east is a flat-roofed temple, the front verandah of which is supported on
four semi-Corinthian pillars and another set of columns carry the roof of the
main hall.
North
Bengal
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Bengal Tour ( 3 days / 2 Nights
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Bengal Tour (2 days / 1
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