NEW - Vedic/Hindu Calendar for 2013

NEW - Vedic/Hindu Calendar for 2013
Shri Ramapir Mandir/Temple in Islamic Republic of Pakistan

Monday, February 1, 2010

By Pakistan Hindu Post (PHP)
 
Multan City,Punjab,Pakistan 

Remains of a Hindu temple and Muslim shrine, in the citadel of Multan. Photo Marco Prins.
Remains of a Hindu temple and Muslim shrine, in the citadel of Multan
Multan: town in the southern Punjab, probably the capital of the ancient Mallians, who nearly managed to kill Alexander the Great. In the spring of 325 BCE, Alexander the Great was advancing from the eastern Punjab, where he had defeated Porus, to the south, to the Indian Ocean. He was worried about the nation of the Mallians (Indian Malava), which had not yet surrendered. The Macedonian king decided to attack them first. He terrorized the rural population between the Acesines and Hydraotes, and sacked a Brahman town.




Remains of a Hindu temple, in the citadel of Multan. Photo Marco Prins.
Remains of a Hindu temple, in the citadel of Multan

After crossing a river that is called Hydraotes by the historian Arrian of Nicomedia but must in fact have been the Acesines, the Macedonian army approached a large city, which is probably identical to modern Multan, a city known today for "its graveyards, heat and dust" - although it is also a lively city that surprised the dusty visitor with the splendor of its colors.

In Antiquity, it was famous for a Hindu shrine called Prahladpuri, dedicated to the man-lion manifestation of the god Vishnu. The remains of the last, twentieth-century building phase of this Hindu sanctuary, are still visible near the muslim shrine of Hazrat Bahauddin Zakaria.

Remains of the southeast wall of the citadel of Multan. Photo Marco Prins.
Remains of the southeast wall

Multan boasted another ancient temple, which was dedicated to the Sun god. The area of the two shrines is described by visitors as a park with several water basins. Later, the temple complex became the citadel of Multan, and the buildings were surrounded by a wall. It is possible that the modern walls surrounding the modern citadel of Multan occupy the fortifications of an older city, which may or may not be identical to the city attacked by Alexander. Perhaps archaeological research will one day settle this issue.

Remains of the southwest wall of the citadel of Multan. Photo Marco Prins.
Remains of the southwest wall

Very ancient remains of a wall can be seen in the southwest of the citadel of Multan. During the attack of the city of the Mallians, Alexander was almost mortally wounded. However, his men captured the town. The Macedonian king was brought to the south, where he recovered in a newly founded city, Alexandria, modern Uch. Here is a satellite photo of the citadel of Multan.

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