Once a seat of power, Makhiala Fort now in ruins
Around 45 kilometres from Chakwal city, a small road branches out of the Aara-Basharat Road and leads to Makhiala, a sleepy village at the peak of a mountain in the Jnangar Valley of the Salt Range.
The surrounding hilly terrain is covered with kau, also known as wild olive, and phulahi. There are a number of coal mines in these hills, and patches of cultivatable land are highly fertile. The valley itself is mesmerising, echoing with the whistles of partridges and chukars.
The ruins of Makhiala Fort greet visitors to the village itself. Once the seat of power of the Janjua Rajputs, it was from this fort that the sultans of Makhiala ruled the area for at least seven centuries.
The site now resembles wilderness. There is also a crumbled brick and stone wall, two water tanks, a natural entrance carved out between two rocks, a pond and a banyan tree as old as the fort itself.