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Aerial Views of Lahore Pakistan

Sat, Feb 14, 2009

Amazing Junk

. (Click on images for larger size).
Viewed on climbout the inverted ‘U’ is Lahore’s popular Liberty Market

Aerial Views - Lahore Pakistan - Liberty market


Under the takeoff path, from right, the famous Gaddafi cricket stadium; like a square layered cake the Alhamra Art Gallery; the Alhamra amphiteatre – also
houses a small 300 seat theatre in the basement where I have spent many a good evening in amateur theatricals.

Aerial Views - Lahore Pakistan - Gaddafi Cricket Stadium

Foreground: Hockey and atheletics stadia. Background, left: grounds of Forman Christian College set up in 1865, named after Dr Charles Forman an American Protestant missionary who settled in Lahore in 1849.  The college was nationalised by the government of the late Prime Minister Z. A. Bhutto (father of Benazir Bhutto) and stayed so for over 30 years before being returned to the mission which had run it since inception.

Aerial Views - Lahore Pakistan

An older Lahore locality forming an interesting mosaic. The quaint, higgledy piggledy crowded construction and crooked streets show town planners clearly passed this area by. A raging fire here would be more than a nightmare. Spiky towers are mosque minarets or mobile phone transmission antennae.

Aerial Views - Lahore Pakistan - Dawood Hercules Fertilizer Plant

Passing over the Dawood Hercules fertiliser plant on the way to Sheikhupura

Aerial Views - Lahore Pakistan - Sheikupura Fort

Sheikhupura Fort, Sheikhupura. Built at the centre of a dense forest in 1607 on the orders of Jahangir, the Mughal emperor of India, father of Shah Jehan who built the Taj Mahal. Sheikhupura, initially called Jahangirpura, later Sheikhupura after Jahangir’s nickname ‘Sheikhu’, was a hunting retreat for the emperor who came here frequently from Lahore to relax.   Interestingly, Alexander the Great fought one of his fiercest battles in the vicinity of Sheikhupura around 100 BC

Aerial Views - Lahore - Hiran Minar, Deer Tower

Hiran Minar (‘Deer Tower’), built by Emperor Jahangir as a monument to Mansraj his favourite pet deer. A remarkable structure with many features some being added after Jahangir’s death by his son and successor the Emperor Shah Jehan. Google for details.

Aerial Views - Lahore - Badhshahi Masjid

Close to sunset we flew past the jewel in the crown of mosques the world over, Lahore’s Badshahi (Kingly) Mosque. Clad in red sandstone this breathtakingly beautiful place of worship was built in 1673 by the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb Alamgir, grandson of Jahangir and son of Shah Jehan.

Opposite the mosque the white structure is Alamgiri Gate, the main entrance to Lahore’s historic Shahi Qila (Royal Fort). Structures behind the gate within the fort’s massive walls were royal quarters for various Mughal emperors. According to excavations and historical references the origins of the Lahore Fort date back to before 1000 AD. Most of the existing structures were built in the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar (‘Akbar the Great’) between 1550-1600 AD.

The densely packed houses to the right of the Fort and Mosque form Lahore’s famous Walled City, the original Lahore dating back over 2000 years.

Aerial Views - Lahore - Old Lahore

The pink structure with the tall tower and a playing field in front is Lahore’s famous Government College, now Government College Universtiy.
Established in 1864, ‘GC’ as it is popularly called soon became and continues to be one of the formemost centres of education in Pakistan.
The square structure next to the college is the Quadrangle, the male students’ hostel. Other buildings within the grounds to the right and left were added later to house various academic faculties.

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2 Comments For This Post

  1. Madiha Says:

    Superb n mind blowing photography.

  2. Arsalan Says:

    Great pictures of the great city…

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