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Prahladpuri Temple

Prahladpuri Temple (Urdu: پرَہْلادْپُورِی مندر) is a Hindu temple located in Multan city of Punjab province in Pakistan, adjacent to the Shrine of Bahauddin Zakariya. Named after Prahlada, it is dedicated to the Hindu deity Narasimha. In 1992, following the destruction of the Babri Mosque by Hindu extermists in India, the temple was razed to ruin in a retaliatory act of violence by a Muslim extremist mob. The site is currently owned by Evacuee Trust Property Board.

Prahladpuri Temple
پرَہْلادْپُورِی مندر
Ruins of Prahladpuri Temple
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictMultan
DeityPrahlada
FestivalsHoli
Governing bodyPakistan Hindu Council
Location
LocationMultan
Country Pakistan
Shown within Punjab, Pakistan
Prahladpuri Temple (Pakistan)
Prahladpuri Temple (Asia)
Geographic coordinates30°12′01.3″N 71°28′36.6″E / 30.200361°N 71.476833°E / 30.200361; 71.476833

Location edit

The temple is located on top of a raised platform (mandapa) at the southern tip of the Fort of Multan, adjacent to the mausoleum of Baha’ul Haq Zakariya.[1]

History edit

Hindu Folklore edit

According to local folklore, Prahlada — son of Hiranyakashipu, the Asur-king of Multan[a] — built the temple in honor of Narasimha, an incarnation of Vishnu, who had appeared out of a pillar in the royal court to disembowel the oppressive King and reward his devoutness.[1][2] The temple was constructed around the pillar and thus, the festival of Holika Dahan commenced.[3]

Pre-modern India edit

The temple stands on the ruins of pre-Muslim structures.[1] There appear to have been older temples on the site which were subject to cycles of razing and re-construction during the medieval era; however, the precise details are hazy in light of conflicting legends.[1]

Oral legends assert that a temple — with columns and roof made of gold — used to exist at the site c. 15th century before being dismantled by Sher Shah Suri to construct a mosque; the current temple was constructed when this mosque fell.[1][b] Another account published in Calcutta Review (1891) reproduces the same narrative except that the pre-existing temple had sunk of "unknown causes."[4]

Colonial India edit

In 1810, the temple's height was raised (or, was the temple rebuilt - ?), which led to tensions with the Muslim community.[1][5] In 1831, Alexander Burnes noted the temple as a low-height structure, supported by wooden pillars and having Hanuman and Ganesha as the portal guardians; he was denied entrance to what was "the only place of Hindu worship in Multan".[1][6] An annual festival was held on the temple's premises on the anniversary of Narasimha's appearance.[7]

During the Siege of Multan in 1848, a shell fired by forces of the East India Company fell on a gunpowder store within the fort and blew away the temple's roof.[7][8] Post-siege, the East India Company retained total control of the fort and all adjacent areas — including the temple and the mausoleum — for a couple of years before returning the shrines to native communities in July 1852.[1][9] A month later, the Company prohibited approaching the temple via precincts of the mausoleum in lieu of allowing a request from local Hindus to refurbish the temple.[1] In 1854, Alexander Cunningham found the temple to be a roofless "square brick building with some very finely carved wooden pillars", and the only Hindu shrine in Multan alongside Suraj Kund.[1][7]

In 1859, local Hindus and Muslims agreed to not incorporate conspicuous additions to the temple or the mausoleum.[1] In 1861, the Chief Mahant of the temple, Baba Ram Das, had raised about Rs.11,000 by way of public donation to refurbish the temple.[1] In the early 1870s, his successor, Baba Narayan Das, proposed to increase the height of the temple spire to 45 ft — more than that of the mausoleum — but was opposed by local Muslims as a breach of the 1859 agreement, fomenting an acrimonious dispute.[1][c] Eventually, the local administration decided the issue in favor of the Muslims; an agreement enacted on 14 April 1876 restricted the height to 33 ft.[1] However, the Hindus were not content and sought to overturn it.[1]

Multan Riots edit

In August 1880, the Mahant obtained consent from local civil and military authorities to install the 45 ft. spire.[10] Construction continued for about three months before the Mahdoom of the mausoleum petitioned Cordery, the Commissioner of Multan, for a cease order.[10] Upon investigation, Cordery reported to Lt. Governor Egerton, who decided to not only reinstate the 1876 agreement but also ask Hindus to cede possession of the compound well and an adjacent plot.[10] The Hindus appealed before Viceroy Ripon, and c. August 1881, a committee composed of six people each from the Hindu and Muslim community was set up to arrive at a compromise — their proposed solution was to allow the spire but as a compensation, grant the sole possession of the well and ownership of the plot to the Muslims.[10]

Before the solution could be approved by the government and implemented,[d] the town got enmeshed in the communal tensions fomenting across Punjab against the backdrop of Arya Samaj's cow-protectionist movements.[11] The question of transport and sale of beef in Multan town became an affair of competitive communalism.[10] On 20 September 1881, a riot erupted and spanned over two days, resulting in 50,000 rupees worth of damage but no casualties.[12][13] Hindu rioters had burned a mosque in the city's bazaar, attacked the Walli Muhammadi Mosque, and incinerated a Quran; in retaliation, a Muslim mob arsoned the Prahladpuri temple.[14][e]

However, the temple was quickly renovated by the Hindu community.[15] A month later, on 14 October, the government issued its decision — the local authorities lacked jurisdiction to decide on the issue of additions to the temple structure, and hence, the Hindus were to either dismantle the spire or follow the compromise arrived at by the committee.[16] On 29 October, the Hindus decided in favor of the latter.[17] A well for the Hindus was constructed in an adjacent plot and a wall erected between the mausoleum and the temple.[18]

Beyond riots edit

In the early morning of 7 November 1912, miscreants removed an image of Lakshmi from the temple and threw it in a nearby well after stealing the crown; the Hindu devotees blamed local Muslims.[19] On 23 January 1913, a Panchayat (trans. assemblage) of Hindus removed the incumbent Mahant leading to protracted litigation.[20][f]

Independent Pakistan edit

After the creation of Pakistan, most Hindus migrated to India, but the few remaining Hindus of the city continued to manage the temple affairs.[3] Eventually, the image of Narasimha was taken away to a temple in Haridwar in the 70s, and the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) took over the site, in whose hands it fell into a state of neglect; a madrasa got established inside the temple premises sometime in the 80s.[21][22] Despite this, the temple continued to be a prominent landmark in Multan and even had a dharamshala.[1][23]

Destruction and aftermath edit

In 1992, a Muslim mob destroyed the temple and the dharamshala in retaliation for Hindus razing the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya, India; they also targeted local Hindus.[3][1] The temple continues to be in ruins.[1] By 2006, squatters had encroached on the lower levels of the ruined structure, and garbage was regularly dumped at the site.[1]

Proposed Reconstructions edit

In 2009, the Central Government allocated funds to document and preserve the site; the survey determined a risk of an imminent collapse of the temple ruins, but preservation plans were shelved.[1][24] In May 2015, ETPB announced new plans to restore the temple and, in August, granted a fund of 5 million PKR to the Punjab Archeology Department.[25][26] However, the local administration refused to issue a No Objection Certificate, apparently fearing local Muslim fanatics.[27]

In February 2021, the Supreme Court of Pakistan established a one-person commission[g] to interrogate the status of minority religious shrines. It criticized ETPB's handling of Hindu shrines and submitted for the immediate restoration of the temple along with the construction of lodging facilities for potential tourists;[28] the State of Punjab and ETPB were ordered to ensure optimum preparedness of the shrine for the Holi festival.[29][30] Soon, the local "peace committee" — with representatives from the government, civil society, and Ulemas — announced plans to restore the temple to ensure religious harmony.[31][32]

Architecture edit

 
Temple plan

Prior to being demolished, the temple featured a main hall, and circumlocutory passages adorned with skylights.[1] The hall continued to feature a replica of the idol under a baldachin.[1]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Multan, originally Kashyappur, is believed to have been founded by the Hindu sage Kashyapa.
  2. ^ Publications of the local archaeological department argue that since Jean de Thévenot mentions a temple "on this very site" during his visit in 1665, Suri's mosque must have been put to disuse within about a century of its construction, which is highly unlikely given its royal antecedents.[1] Thus, the authenticity of the narrative is doubtful.[1] However, Thévenot did not provide any such detail on the location; further, his description of the idol ran similar to that of the Multan Sun Temple by medieval Muslim travelogues.
  3. ^ For a rather graphic description, consult Boyle, Frederick (1884). "A Bit of an Old Story". On the Borderland. London: Chapman and Hall Limited. pp. 377–397.
  4. ^ The Amrita Bazar Patrika of 11 August 1881 (p. 1) reports the Government to have informed the Hindus of Multan about their intentions to "shortly issue an order" on the dispute.
  5. ^ The entire contingent of British troops from Multan Cantonment had to be dispatched to control the riot.[13]
  6. ^ This serves as an interesting example of the powers exerted by the community: the Mahant was dismissed on grounds of addiction to charas, refusal to shelter migrant fakirs, inappropriate conduct with women, and inability to maintain a record of temple donations. Ajudhia Das challenged the dismissal before the Magistrate of First Class, arguing the position of Mahant to be hereditary and beyond the powers of Panchayat but failed to get any favorable judgement.
    An appeal was filed at the Lahore High Court in 1917 and the judgement was pronounced on 1 August 1922. Das' dismissal was sustained on rather-technical grounds —he had set up adverse claims to the property in the meanwhile, thus running afoul of Chintaman v. Dhondo— but the Panchayat actions were opined to be unjustifiable irrespective of its legal validity.
  7. ^ Dr. Shoaib Suddle was the only member. However, he was supported by three others.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x . Archived from the original on 2015-01-07. Retrieved 2015-01-07. Survey & Studies for Conservation of Historical Monuments of Multan. Department of Archeology & Museums, Ministry of Culture, Government of Pakistan
  2. ^ Maclagan, Edward (1926). Punjab District Gazetteers: Multan District 1923-24. Vol. VII. The Superintendent Government, Lahore. pp. 276–77.
  3. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 2013-12-11. Retrieved 2012-04-10.
  4. ^ "The Early History of Multam". Calcutta Review. Vol. CLXXXIV. April 1891. p. 241.
  5. ^ Punjab (India) (1976). Extracts from the District & States Gazetteers of the Punjab, Pakistan: Punjab (Pakistan). Research Society of Pakistan, University of the Punjab.
  6. ^ Burnes, Alexander (1834). "Chapter V". Travels into Bokhara. Vol. 3. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street. pp. 115–116.
  7. ^ a b c Cunnngham, Alexander (1875). ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA VOL.5. The Superintendent of Government, Calcutta. pp. 126, 129.
  8. ^ Monuments of Multan 2016-02-01 at the Wayback Machine Survey & Studies for Conservation of Historical Monuments of Multan. Department of Archaeology & Museums, Ministry of Culture, Government of Pakistan
  9. ^ "Mussalmans and Hindoos at Multan". The Pioneer. 27 September 1881. p. 3.
  10. ^ a b c d e Hindu Correspondent (7 October 1881). "The Mooltan Riot and its Causes". Times of India. p. 2.
  11. ^ Chatterjee, Arup K. (2016-08-10). "Today's Cow Vigilantism Grew Under Inadvertant [sic] Aegis of the Raj". TheQuint. Retrieved 2021-10-11.
  12. ^ Roseberry, J. Royal (1987). Imperial Rule in Punjab: The Conquest and Administration of Multan, 1818-1881. Manohar. ISBN 978-81-85054-28-5.
  13. ^ a b Ross, David (1883). The Land of the Five Rivers and Sindh: Sketches Historical and Descriptive. Chapman and Hall, limited. p. 100. prahladpuri temple riot -1992 -babri.
  14. ^ Proceedings - Punjab History Conference. Publication Bureau, Punjabi University. 2000. ISBN 9788173807220.
  15. ^ AIR 131 (Lahore High Court 1923).
  16. ^ "The Mooltan Riots". The Civil and Military Gazette. 15 October 1881.
  17. ^ Times of India. 29 October 1881. p. 5. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  18. ^ "Occasional Notes". The Madras Mail. 20 June 1882. p. 2.
  19. ^ Own Correspondent (9 November 1912). "Sacrilegious Budmashes". Times of India. p. 8.
  20. ^ "Prahladpuri Temple Suits: New Administration Ordered". The Tribune. 15 December 1916. p. 4.
  21. ^ Khalid, Haroon. "Both colour and memories of Holi have faded from Pakistan's Multan, where the festival was born". Scroll.in. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  22. ^ Khalid, Haroon. "These temples in Pakistan are now madrasas". Scroll.in. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  23. ^ The Herald. Vol. 24, no. 1. January 1993. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. ^ "52 Multan monuments to be preserved on Moroccan pattern". DAWN.COM. 2009-06-03. Retrieved 2022-05-30.
  25. ^ "ETPB to rebuild historical temple in Multan". www.thenews.com.pk. Retrieved 2021-10-11.
  26. ^ "Grant approved for restoration of Prahladpuri temple". The Balochistan Times. Vol. XXXVIII, no. 216. Quetta: AsiaNet Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd. 7 August 2015.
  27. ^ Reporter, The Newspaper's Staff (2021-02-13). "Hindu council to host festivities at Parlhad Mandir next month". dawn.com. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  28. ^ Reporter, The Newspaper's Staff (2021-01-05). "Commission suggests opening of four temples for tourism". dawn.com. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  29. ^ Mohan, Geeta (February 8, 2021). "Pakistan: Most Hindu worshipping places in country neglected, says SC-appointed commission". India Today. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  30. ^ "Pakistan SC Orders Immediate Reconstruction of Vandalised Hindu Temple". The Wire. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  31. ^ Qureshi, Raiq (2021-02-15). "Multan peace committee takes multiple initiatives for restoration of Holi-origin Prahladpuri temple". Associated Press Of Pakistan. Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  32. ^ Ali, Muhammad (2021-02-16). "A view of ruins of ancient Prahladpuri Temple. The restoration work on ancient Prahladpuri temple is likely to commence in next few days. Holi, the festival of colours, very much popular in Hindus, commenced from this Prahladpuri temple. The temple is located near the shrine of great saint of sub-continent Hazrat Bahauddin Zakariya RA". Associated Press Of Pakistan. Retrieved 2021-02-22.

prahladpuri, temple, urdu, پر, لاد, ور, مندر, hindu, temple, located, multan, city, punjab, province, pakistan, adjacent, shrine, bahauddin, zakariya, named, after, prahlada, dedicated, hindu, deity, narasimha, 1992, following, destruction, babri, mosque, hind. Prahladpuri Temple Urdu پر ہ لاد پ ور ی مندر is a Hindu temple located in Multan city of Punjab province in Pakistan adjacent to the Shrine of Bahauddin Zakariya Named after Prahlada it is dedicated to the Hindu deity Narasimha In 1992 following the destruction of the Babri Mosque by Hindu extermists in India the temple was razed to ruin in a retaliatory act of violence by a Muslim extremist mob The site is currently owned by Evacuee Trust Property Board Prahladpuri Templeپر ہ لاد پ ور ی مندرRuins of Prahladpuri TempleReligionAffiliationHinduismDistrictMultanDeityPrahladaFestivalsHoliGoverning bodyPakistan Hindu CouncilLocationLocationMultanCountryPakistanShown within Punjab PakistanShow map of Punjab PakistanPrahladpuri Temple Pakistan Show map of PakistanPrahladpuri Temple Asia Show map of AsiaGeographic coordinates30 12 01 3 N 71 28 36 6 E 30 200361 N 71 476833 E 30 200361 71 476833 Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Hindu Folklore 2 2 Pre modern India 2 3 Colonial India 2 3 1 Multan Riots 2 3 2 Beyond riots 2 4 Independent Pakistan 2 4 1 Destruction and aftermath 2 4 2 Proposed Reconstructions 3 Architecture 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesLocation editThe temple is located on top of a raised platform mandapa at the southern tip of the Fort of Multan adjacent to the mausoleum of Baha ul Haq Zakariya 1 History editHindu Folklore edit According to local folklore Prahlada son of Hiranyakashipu the Asur king of Multan a built the temple in honor of Narasimha an incarnation of Vishnu who had appeared out of a pillar in the royal court to disembowel the oppressive King and reward his devoutness 1 2 The temple was constructed around the pillar and thus the festival of Holika Dahan commenced 3 Pre modern India edit The temple stands on the ruins of pre Muslim structures 1 There appear to have been older temples on the site which were subject to cycles of razing and re construction during the medieval era however the precise details are hazy in light of conflicting legends 1 Oral legends assert that a temple with columns and roof made of gold used to exist at the site c 15th century before being dismantled by Sher Shah Suri to construct a mosque the current temple was constructed when this mosque fell 1 b Another account published in Calcutta Review 1891 reproduces the same narrative except that the pre existing temple had sunk of unknown causes 4 Colonial India edit In 1810 the temple s height was raised or was the temple rebuilt which led to tensions with the Muslim community 1 5 In 1831 Alexander Burnes noted the temple as a low height structure supported by wooden pillars and having Hanuman and Ganesha as the portal guardians he was denied entrance to what was the only place of Hindu worship in Multan 1 6 An annual festival was held on the temple s premises on the anniversary of Narasimha s appearance 7 During the Siege of Multan in 1848 a shell fired by forces of the East India Company fell on a gunpowder store within the fort and blew away the temple s roof 7 8 Post siege the East India Company retained total control of the fort and all adjacent areas including the temple and the mausoleum for a couple of years before returning the shrines to native communities in July 1852 1 9 A month later the Company prohibited approaching the temple via precincts of the mausoleum in lieu of allowing a request from local Hindus to refurbish the temple 1 In 1854 Alexander Cunningham found the temple to be a roofless square brick building with some very finely carved wooden pillars and the only Hindu shrine in Multan alongside Suraj Kund 1 7 In 1859 local Hindus and Muslims agreed to not incorporate conspicuous additions to the temple or the mausoleum 1 In 1861 the Chief Mahant of the temple Baba Ram Das had raised about Rs 11 000 by way of public donation to refurbish the temple 1 In the early 1870s his successor Baba Narayan Das proposed to increase the height of the temple spire to 45 ft more than that of the mausoleum but was opposed by local Muslims as a breach of the 1859 agreement fomenting an acrimonious dispute 1 c Eventually the local administration decided the issue in favor of the Muslims an agreement enacted on 14 April 1876 restricted the height to 33 ft 1 However the Hindus were not content and sought to overturn it 1 Multan Riots edit In August 1880 the Mahant obtained consent from local civil and military authorities to install the 45 ft spire 10 Construction continued for about three months before the Mahdoom of the mausoleum petitioned Cordery the Commissioner of Multan for a cease order 10 Upon investigation Cordery reported to Lt Governor Egerton who decided to not only reinstate the 1876 agreement but also ask Hindus to cede possession of the compound well and an adjacent plot 10 The Hindus appealed before Viceroy Ripon and c August 1881 a committee composed of six people each from the Hindu and Muslim community was set up to arrive at a compromise their proposed solution was to allow the spire but as a compensation grant the sole possession of the well and ownership of the plot to the Muslims 10 Before the solution could be approved by the government and implemented d the town got enmeshed in the communal tensions fomenting across Punjab against the backdrop of Arya Samaj s cow protectionist movements 11 The question of transport and sale of beef in Multan town became an affair of competitive communalism 10 On 20 September 1881 a riot erupted and spanned over two days resulting in 50 000 rupees worth of damage but no casualties 12 13 Hindu rioters had burned a mosque in the city s bazaar attacked the Walli Muhammadi Mosque and incinerated a Quran in retaliation a Muslim mob arsoned the Prahladpuri temple 14 e However the temple was quickly renovated by the Hindu community 15 A month later on 14 October the government issued its decision the local authorities lacked jurisdiction to decide on the issue of additions to the temple structure and hence the Hindus were to either dismantle the spire or follow the compromise arrived at by the committee 16 On 29 October the Hindus decided in favor of the latter 17 A well for the Hindus was constructed in an adjacent plot and a wall erected between the mausoleum and the temple 18 Beyond riots edit In the early morning of 7 November 1912 miscreants removed an image of Lakshmi from the temple and threw it in a nearby well after stealing the crown the Hindu devotees blamed local Muslims 19 On 23 January 1913 a Panchayat trans assemblage of Hindus removed the incumbent Mahant leading to protracted litigation 20 f Independent Pakistan edit After the creation of Pakistan most Hindus migrated to India but the few remaining Hindus of the city continued to manage the temple affairs 3 Eventually the image of Narasimha was taken away to a temple in Haridwar in the 70s and the Evacuee Trust Property Board ETPB took over the site in whose hands it fell into a state of neglect a madrasa got established inside the temple premises sometime in the 80s 21 22 Despite this the temple continued to be a prominent landmark in Multan and even had a dharamshala 1 23 Destruction and aftermath edit In 1992 a Muslim mob destroyed the temple and the dharamshala in retaliation for Hindus razing the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya India they also targeted local Hindus 3 1 The temple continues to be in ruins 1 By 2006 squatters had encroached on the lower levels of the ruined structure and garbage was regularly dumped at the site 1 Proposed Reconstructions edit In 2009 the Central Government allocated funds to document and preserve the site the survey determined a risk of an imminent collapse of the temple ruins but preservation plans were shelved 1 24 In May 2015 ETPB announced new plans to restore the temple and in August granted a fund of 5 million PKR to the Punjab Archeology Department 25 26 However the local administration refused to issue a No Objection Certificate apparently fearing local Muslim fanatics 27 In February 2021 the Supreme Court of Pakistan established a one person commission g to interrogate the status of minority religious shrines It criticized ETPB s handling of Hindu shrines and submitted for the immediate restoration of the temple along with the construction of lodging facilities for potential tourists 28 the State of Punjab and ETPB were ordered to ensure optimum preparedness of the shrine for the Holi festival 29 30 Soon the local peace committee with representatives from the government civil society and Ulemas announced plans to restore the temple to ensure religious harmony 31 32 Architecture edit nbsp Temple planPrior to being demolished the temple featured a main hall and circumlocutory passages adorned with skylights 1 The hall continued to feature a replica of the idol under a baldachin 1 See also editMultan Sun Temple Hinduism in Pakistan Evacuee Trust Property Board Mankiala stupa Hinglaj Mata Kalat Kali Temple Katasraj temple Multan Sun Temple Sadh Belo Shivaharkaray Shiv Mandir Umerkot Shri Varun Dev Mandir Tilla JogianNotes edit Multan originally Kashyappur is believed to have been founded by the Hindu sage Kashyapa Publications of the local archaeological department argue that since Jean de Thevenot mentions a temple on this very site during his visit in 1665 Suri s mosque must have been put to disuse within about a century of its construction which is highly unlikely given its royal antecedents 1 Thus the authenticity of the narrative is doubtful 1 However Thevenot did not provide any such detail on the location further his description of the idol ran similar to that of the Multan Sun Temple by medieval Muslim travelogues For a rather graphic description consult Boyle Frederick 1884 A Bit of an Old Story On the Borderland London Chapman and Hall Limited pp 377 397 The Amrita Bazar Patrika of 11 August 1881 p 1 reports the Government to have informed the Hindus of Multan about their intentions to shortly issue an order on the dispute The entire contingent of British troops from Multan Cantonment had to be dispatched to control the riot 13 This serves as an interesting example of the powers exerted by the community the Mahant was dismissed on grounds of addiction to charas refusal to shelter migrant fakirs inappropriate conduct with women and inability to maintain a record of temple donations Ajudhia Das challenged the dismissal before the Magistrate of First Class arguing the position of Mahant to be hereditary and beyond the powers of Panchayat but failed to get any favorable judgement An appeal was filed at the Lahore High Court in 1917 and the judgement was pronounced on 1 August 1922 Das dismissal was sustained on rather technical grounds he had set up adverse claims to the property in the meanwhile thus running afoul of Chintaman v Dhondo but the Panchayat actions were opined to be unjustifiable irrespective of its legal validity Dr Shoaib Suddle was the only member However he was supported by three others References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Home Archived from the original on 2015 01 07 Retrieved 2015 01 07 Survey amp Studies for Conservation of Historical Monuments of Multan Department of Archeology amp Museums Ministry of Culture Government of Pakistan Maclagan Edward 1926 Punjab District Gazetteers Multan District 1923 24 Vol VII The Superintendent Government Lahore pp 276 77 a b c The Friday Times Holi s home by heritage Archived from the original on 2013 12 11 Retrieved 2012 04 10 The Early History of Multam Calcutta Review Vol CLXXXIV April 1891 p 241 Punjab India 1976 Extracts from the District amp States Gazetteers of the Punjab Pakistan Punjab Pakistan Research Society of Pakistan University of the Punjab Burnes Alexander 1834 Chapter V Travels into Bokhara Vol 3 London John Murray Albemarle Street pp 115 116 a b c Cunnngham Alexander 1875 ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA VOL 5 The Superintendent of Government Calcutta pp 126 129 Monuments of Multan Archived 2016 02 01 at the Wayback Machine Survey amp Studies for Conservation of Historical Monuments of Multan Department of Archaeology amp Museums Ministry of Culture Government of Pakistan Mussalmans and Hindoos at Multan The Pioneer 27 September 1881 p 3 a b c d e Hindu Correspondent 7 October 1881 The Mooltan Riot and its Causes Times of India p 2 Chatterjee Arup K 2016 08 10 Today s Cow Vigilantism Grew Under Inadvertant sic Aegis of the Raj TheQuint Retrieved 2021 10 11 Roseberry J Royal 1987 Imperial Rule in Punjab The Conquest and Administration of Multan 1818 1881 Manohar ISBN 978 81 85054 28 5 a b Ross David 1883 The Land of the Five Rivers and Sindh Sketches Historical and Descriptive Chapman and Hall limited p 100 prahladpuri temple riot 1992 babri Proceedings Punjab History Conference Publication Bureau Punjabi University 2000 ISBN 9788173807220 AIR 131 Lahore High Court 1923 The Mooltan Riots The Civil and Military Gazette 15 October 1881 Times of India 29 October 1881 p 5 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Missing or empty title help Occasional Notes The Madras Mail 20 June 1882 p 2 Own Correspondent 9 November 1912 Sacrilegious Budmashes Times of India p 8 Prahladpuri Temple Suits New Administration Ordered The Tribune 15 December 1916 p 4 Khalid Haroon Both colour and memories of Holi have faded from Pakistan s Multan where the festival was born Scroll in Retrieved 2021 02 22 Khalid Haroon These temples in Pakistan are now madrasas Scroll in Retrieved 2021 02 22 The Herald Vol 24 no 1 January 1993 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Missing or empty title help 52 Multan monuments to be preserved on Moroccan pattern DAWN COM 2009 06 03 Retrieved 2022 05 30 ETPB to rebuild historical temple in Multan www thenews com pk Retrieved 2021 10 11 Grant approved for restoration of Prahladpuri temple The Balochistan Times Vol XXXVIII no 216 Quetta AsiaNet Pakistan Pvt Ltd 7 August 2015 Reporter The Newspaper s Staff 2021 02 13 Hindu council to host festivities at Parlhad Mandir next month dawn com Retrieved 2021 02 22 Reporter The Newspaper s Staff 2021 01 05 Commission suggests opening of four temples for tourism dawn com Retrieved 2021 02 22 Mohan Geeta February 8 2021 Pakistan Most Hindu worshipping places in country neglected says SC appointed commission India Today Retrieved 2021 02 22 Pakistan SC Orders Immediate Reconstruction of Vandalised Hindu Temple The Wire Retrieved 2021 02 22 Qureshi Raiq 2021 02 15 Multan peace committee takes multiple initiatives for restoration of Holi origin Prahladpuri temple Associated Press Of Pakistan Retrieved 2021 02 22 Ali Muhammad 2021 02 16 A view of ruins of ancient Prahladpuri Temple The restoration work on ancient Prahladpuri temple is likely to commence in next few days Holi the festival of colours very much popular in Hindus commenced from this Prahladpuri temple The temple is located near the shrine of great saint of sub continent Hazrat Bahauddin Zakariya RA Associated Press Of Pakistan Retrieved 2021 02 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prahladpuri Temple amp oldid 1212777252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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