In mid-15th century, a Muslim colony was
founded in the inhospitable mangrove forest of the Sundarbans near the seacoast
in the Bagerhat district by an obscure saint-general, named Ulugh Khan Jahan. He
was the earliest torchbearer of Islam in the South who laid the nucleus of an
affluent city during the reign of Sultan Nasiruddin Mahmud Shah (1442-59), the
city was known as 'Khalifatabad' (present Bagerhat). Khan Jahan built numberous
mosques, tanks, roads and other public buildings, the spectacular ruins of which
are focused around the most imposing and largest multidomed mosques in
Bangladesh, known as the Shait-Gambuj Masjid (160'x108'). The serene and
imposing monument, stands on the eastern bank of a vast sweet-water tank,
clustered around by the heavy foliage of a low-lying countryside. The mosque
roofed over with 77 squat domes, including 7 chauchala or four-sided pitched
Bengali domes in the middle row. The vast prayer hall, although provided with 11
arched doorways on east and 7 each on north and south for ventilation and light,
presents a dark and sombre appearance inside. It is divided into 7 longitudinal
aisles and 11 deep rows by a forest of slender stone columns, from which spring
rows of endless arches, supporting the domes. Six feet thick, slightly tapering
walls and hollow and round, almost detached corner towers, resembling the
bastions of fortress, each capped by small rounded cupolas, recall the Tughlaq
architecture of Delhi.
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