Derawar Fort: it's big, it's crumbling, and it's locked |
A rampart. Is this a "rampart"? |
Lots of sort of ruined walls outside the fort |
Village outside the fort |
Village between Uch and the Fort |
Just outside the fort is the former residence of a princess of the Abassi family |
It's locked, but I jumped the wall |
Detail of the princess's ceiling |
The princess's wall |
Outside the fort there is a big marble mosque, through this doorway |
The mosque, according to LP, an exact duplicate of Delhi's Moti Masjid |
Across the courtyard from the mosque |
The former royal family has a private burial ground. This building is just outside the enclosed area |
Before we got the caretaker to let us in, I photographed some crypts over the wall |
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Then we got in! There are about seven buildings |
Each meticulously kept |
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The caretaker actually let us into the crypt to see the graves |
The interior |
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The masoleums from across the pond |
The last place we went was the forme palace of the Nawab of Bahalwapur, a job I wish I had |
This spectacular building, seemingly made entire of marble, is rotting in the sun |
Entrance |
A rotting gazebo, also solid marble, in front of the rotting palace |
Side detail |
Entrance way, from the side |
The Nawab had, apparently, a private mosque, also rotting in the desert |
Roof detail of the Nawab's rotting mosque |
Another |
A third |