BADSHAHI MASJID
The Badshahi Mosque which can be rightly said as the ‘King of all Mosques’ in Lahore. Every time you will visit this mosque it will mesmerise you with its exquisiteness and everlasting grandeur and I must say that it is a matchless mosque and remained the world’s largest mosque for almost 313 years in history. For the first 70 years after its construction in 1673, the mosque was known simply for its great size, and was visible from almost 10 miles away. Now you can imagine the value, importance and splendor of the mosque!
Completed in 1674 under Aurangzeb as the Mughals' final architectural fling, the sublime Badshahi Mosque, opposite the main gateway to the Lahore Fort, is one of the world's largest mosques. Replete with huge gateways, four tapering minarets of red sandstone, three vast marble domes and an open courtyard said to hold up to 100,000 people, it was damaged by the British and later restored.
In 1991 the mosque grabbed international headlines when hardline mullahs (Muslim religious leaders) protested at the visit of the late Princess of Wales; her skirt was considered too short and the director of the mosque was criticised for presenting (the then) HRH, a non-Muslim, with a copy of the Quran and allowing her into the sacred precincts while immodestly dressed. The case went to court and ended with the litigant mullahs being ordered to stop wasting the judge's time.
In the courtyard stands the Tomb of Allama Mohammed Iqbal, a modest memorial in red sandstone to the philosopher-poet who in the 1930s first postulated the idea of an independent Pakistan.
An autorickshaw/taxi from The Mall is Rs80/Rs200.
After 1947, when Pakistan became an independent Muslim state, the mosque was returned to its original purpose, and extensive repairs were undertaken. Repairs have happened continuously through 2008, and the Badshahi Mosque is now almost restored to its original 17th century condition.
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