Panam Nagar Boro Sardar Bari Sonargaon | পানাম নগর বড় সরদার বাড়ি | Nobody Tells Hidden History...

10 months ago
13

The Panam Nagar Baro Sardar Bari Sonargaon, Nobody Tells The Original History of This Panam City. The Lost City of Sonargaon Panam Nagar Situated Next to The Loksilpo Museum at Narayanganj, Bangladesh.

Today I am going to get in the “Baro Sardar Bari” a group of fascinating palaces for the “Baro Bhuyans” and let you know the hidden story of Sonargaon the ancient capital of Bengal Sultanate which ruled by many dynasties including Bengal Sultanate, Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Bengal, Baro Bhuyans and British Colonials.

The most important part of the country which bears the history of Bengal's existence, the twelve Sardar Bari has been cleverly distorted and known as Bara Sardar Bari for a long time. Because of which people of the present generation call this historical palaces by that distorted name which is very sad. At the same time, many content creators and news media are promoting it as a creation of some Hindu bankers under the British by removing it from its original history, which is further distorting the history of thousands of years of Bengal.

At present It is called “Boro Sardar Bari” but the original name was “Baro Sardar Bari” and the distortion is created right here.

The Baro-Bhuyans were confederacies of soldier-landowners in Assam and Bengal in the late Middle Ages and the early modern period. The confederacies consisted of loosely independent entities, each led by a warrior chief or a landlord (zamindars). This group of palaces are built by them as the name contains their names in it.

This group of palaces were a part of the most popular and luxurious muslin clothing trading port Sonargaon, the ancient capital of Bengal.

It is located in the boundary of the present Shilpacharya Zainul Folk and Crafts Museum and between two damned ponds about 500 yards from Panam Nagar.

Sonargaon was the capital of Bengal province from 1296 to 1608 during the ancient Muslim rule. After that, when the capital was shifted to Dhaka, the prominence of Sonargaon decreased. A wall inscription in the small entrance part of the two-part Sardarbari suggests that the three surrounding buildings behind this building were built in the early Mughal period. The central red square building was built during the twelve Bhuiyan period of Bengal. The front part was built in 1902. It has 47 rooms on the ground floor and 38 rooms on the second floor.

The structure had been abandoned as it became unlivable and risky like all other buildings in the Panam Nagar.
Those are now renovated by associating with Korean Youngone group and the government of Bangladesh.
After the restoration work ended, the government reopened these heritage sites for the public.

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