HERITAGE: IF THESE RUINS COULD TALK
On a clear sunny day in winter, I arrived in Thatta, famous for one of the world’s largest graveyards, Makli. In the past, Thatta was considered to be a city of scholars and knowledge, and indeed, it has a lot of history waiting to be explored. When I met Prof Muhammad Ali Manjhi, an eminent historian who has done work on archeological sites of Sindh, he asked me whether I had visited Kalan Kot Fort. I confessed that I hadn’t even heard of it.
The professor briefed me a little about the ancient place and I decided to visit.
Located south of Makli graveyard, about two or three kilometres away from Thatta, lies the Kalan Kot Fort — or Samma Fort or Kalyana Kot — is also called Taghzul Abad after Ameer Taghzul Baig, who also renovated the fort. A broken road leads to the fort, and driving on it will cover your car with dust.
South of the Makli graveyard, the Kalan Kot fort has stood for centuries. Is it a legacy left behind by Feroz Shah Tughlaq and the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb or is it much older?
On arriving at Kalan Kot Fort, I saw a crumbling building; the walls broken and bricks scattered everywhere. At first sight, it appears to have been desolate for centuries. There are no guides or signs installed to offer visitors information about when the fort was built or by whom.
It is also unclear when exactly this fort was built, or how it was destroyed. Some historians trace it back to the 14th century, and say it was occupied until the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb’s rule over the subcontinent. It is also believed that the fort was rebuilt during Jam Tughlaq’s era, in 1427.