The stories are endless, for Lahore is that one ancient city of the sub-continent mentioned in the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. It was the city the Moghals loved most leaving behind there almost half of the historic monuments of that age. It was also the place where the British collected to retake Delhi in the Mutiny of 1857. One outcome of this turmoil was the invention of the Club Sandwich, produced by the thousands in military canteens as men collected to fight it out once and for all. Over time it became a city of culture and learning, of poets, painters and writers, of gardens and tea houses, of cafes and eateries.
That Rama’s wife dwelled on the mound that today houses the Lahore Fort, or in the nearby forest in the hermit Valmiki’s hut, is documented. Her son Lava formally founded the habitation on the mound away from the torrid floods of the Irawati, now called the Ravi, or so it is alleged, and his name stuck to be that of the city itself. On the banks of the river Ravi the Hindu religion also took shape.
Over time Lahore has represented almost every major religion. It was once a Buddhist city, a Jain city, a Hindu city, a Muslim city, a Sikh city, and then the British worked hard to convert it into a city for everyone. It is a city that swings between tranquility and turmoil, with periods of peace and militancy, for both amazingly exist often at the same time.
The flavor of the history of Lahore just cannot be understood without dwelling on the people, lpaces, things and faces of the city. That is why I have collectde, from a fairly large collextion, just 101 short pieces of this fabled city. My purpose is to take you on a journey that will find its own special place in your mind’s eye. Such is the lure of this fabled city.
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