Best place
[Newest] This month's promo code pack
The mansion of the former Dinajpur Tubian king, but abandoned after the partition of India and Pakistan and the abolition of the landlord system, now only a few remnants of the wall broken pillars, only one left is also decorated in colorful like animated castle, full of plastic.
Dinajpur is a dusty border town of more than ten kilometers from the Indian border. There are not many attractions to see in the city, only one is barely worth a visit. As the name implies, this was once the mansion of the Dinajpur Tubang king, but the age of construction is unclear, the most important thing is that after the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947 and the abolition of landlordism in 1951, the owner of the time Maharaja Girijanath fled to India, the mansion was completely abandoned. Today, only a few broken pillars remain, and the only remaining one is decorated in colorful animated castles, full of plastic, and the abandoned areas around the house have been nested, occupied by some Hindu temples and poor families. What is more impressive here is the sense of remoteness. This day is just the most important Gurbang Festival for Muslims. People in the city square are solemn and neatly praying. The streets are a bit deserted. Hospitals, post offices, large lawns, Shaheed Minar, government, schools, The museum is still the exquisite but unfamiliar colonial architecture of the past, giving it a sudden feeling of leaving the familiar environment and the times far away. Walking along the railway in Dinajpur, inadvertently breaking into the local slums, children running bare-backed, girls washing clothes, old women with red teeth, messy tin houses, garbage on the ground, stinky ditches, and suddenly pulling people back to the right background of the times . #Bangladesh #Travel on the road #City Humanities Handbook #Small Discovery Society #One person says go
Best place
The mansion of the former Dinajpur Tubian king, but abandoned after the partition of India and Pakistan and the abolition of the landlord system, now only a few remnants of the wall broken pillars, only one left is also decorated in colorful like animated castle, full of plastic.
Dinajpur is a dusty border town of more than ten kilometers from the Indian border. There are not many attractions to see in the city, only one is barely worth a visit. As the name implies, this was once the mansion of the Dinajpur Tubang king, but the age of construction is unclear, the most important thing is that after the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947 and the abolition of landlordism in 1951, the owner of the time Maharaja Girijanath fled to India, the mansion was completely abandoned. Today, only a few broken pillars remain, and the only remaining one is decorated in colorful animated castles, full of plastic, and the abandoned areas around the house have been nested, occupied by some Hindu temples and poor families. What is more impressive here is the sense of remoteness. This day is just the most important Gurbang Festival for Muslims. People in the city square are solemn and neatly praying. The streets are a bit deserted. Hospitals, post offices, large lawns, Shaheed Minar, government, schools, The museum is still the exquisite but unfamiliar colonial architecture of the past, giving it a sudden feeling of leaving the familiar environment and the times far away. Walking along the railway in Dinajpur, inadvertently breaking into the local slums, children running bare-backed, girls washing clothes, old women with red teeth, messy tin houses, garbage on the ground, stinky ditches, and suddenly pulling people back to the right background of the times . #Bangladesh #Travel on the road #City Humanities Handbook #Small Discovery Society #One person says go