Ranikot Fort – the Great Wall of Sindh
The Ranikot Fort also known as Dewar-e-Sindh (Great Wall of Sindh), with a circumference of about 26 km or 16 miles, is reputed to be the largest unexplored fort in the world. Since
1993, it has been on the list of tentative UNESCO World Heritage
Sites. It is located in the Kirthar Range, about 30 km southwest of
Sann, in Jamshoro District, Sindh, Pakistan.
Ranikot is the most talismanic wonder of Sindh. Visible from five
kilometers away its massive undulating walls twist and dip over the
hills. Its walls, are built with dressed sandstone and reinforced with
45 bastions along the outer wall, of which 7 are rectangular and the
remaining are round. All modified through the ages to accommodate the
use of gunpowder, this perhaps makes it the largest fort in the world.
The original purpose and architects of Ranikot Fort are unknown. Some
archaeologists attribute it to Arabs, or possibly built by a Persian
noble under the Abbasids by Imran Bin Musa Barmaki who was
the Governor of Sindh in 836. Others have suggested a much earlier
period of construction attributing to at times
the Sassanians Persians and at times to the Greeks. Despite the fact
that a prehistoric site of Amri is nearby, there is no trace of any old
city inside the fort and the present structure has little evidence of
prehistoric origins.
"Archaeologists point to 17th century as its time of first
construction but now Sindh archaeologists agree that some of the present
structure was reconstructed by Mir Karam Ali Khan Talpur and his
brother Mir Murad Ali in 1812 at a cost of 1.2 million rupees
(SindhGazetteer, 677)."
"The size of Ranikot defies all reasons. It stands in the middle of
nowhere, defending nothing” writes Isobel Shaw. So why was this fort
built here in the desolate terrain of the Kirthar range? Many theories
have been developed to answer this question. According to Ishtiaq
Ansari, the Talpurs had sent their families to Thar and Kachchh
when Afsharids attacked Sindh during the times of Kalhoras. However,
after acquiring the rule of Sindh, they wanted a safe and secure place
where they can send their families during the troubled times. This might
have prompted them to rebuild this fort to their needs. Rahimdad Khan
Molai Sheedai holds view that its location in Kohistan on the western
frontiers of Sindh gave it its strategic value. Whereas Mazher Ansari is
of the opinion that, it was first constructed in the Achaemenid Dynasty
of the Persian Empire (550 – 330 BC). As this empire stretched from
Turkey in the west, where a similar wall is constructed near the Caspian
Sea called The Great Wall of Gorgan, which is 155 km in length and to
the east up to River Indus in Sindh, where this majestic fort is
located.
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