Digital Rare Book:
Multani Stories
Collected and translated by F.W. Skemp
Printed by the Superintendent, Government Printing, Lahore - 1917
Read Book Online:
http://bit.ly/2efyyzp
Download pdf Book:
http://bit.ly/2eBAQ7E
Image:
Watercolour by Alfred Frederick Pollock Harcourt (1836-1910) of the tomb of Shams-i Tabriz at Multan in the Punjab, Pakistan, dated 30th December 1876. The image is inscribed on the front in pencil: 'Shumuz Tabraez. 30 Dec 76'; and on the back in ink: 'The Shumus Tabraez Musjid Multan, Alfred Harcourt.' This tomb was rebuilt in 1780 and belongs to a celebrated Sufi martyr who was murdered in 1247. The main body of the building is a square surrounded by a verandah. The upper section is octagonal, surmounted by a hemispherical dome and covered in glazed blue tiles. Some parts of the walls are decorated with glazed tiles, mainly blue and white, arranged in geometric patterns.
Text and Image credit:
Copyright © The British Library Board
Not Shams Tabrizi (of Rumi fame) but Pir Shams Sabzwari's tomb at Multan, is the accepted story in Multan today. Not blue anymore, the tomb has been painted green. ( http://thesofism.blogspot.in/2011/08/history-of-hazrat-shams-e-tabrizi.html )
how peaceful beauty
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