Bala Hissar
Land | Afghanistan | |
---|---|---|
Inom det administrativa området | Kabul | |
Koordinater | 34°30′20″N 69°11′30″E |
Bala Hissar är en fästning belägen söder om Kabul, Afghanistan byggd på 400-talet. Berget Kōh-e Shēr Darwāzah ligger bakom fästningen med Kabuls stadsmurar som sträcker sig ut från sidorna av byggnaden. Enligt legenden har både Babur och Timur Lenk använt fästningen som bostad. Under andra anglo-afghanska kriget mördades Louis Cavagnari inne i fästningen 1879 vilket startade ett nytt brittiskt fälttåg mot Afghanistan.[1]
Referenser
- ^ ”Panorama of the Bala Hissar” (på engelska). World Digital Library. https://www.wdl.org/en/item/11486/. Läst 15 januari 2021.
Externa länkar
- Wikimedia Commons har media som rör Bala Hissar.
Media som används på denna webbplats
Icon of simple gray pencil. An icon for Russian Wikipedia RFAR page.
Upper Bala Hissar from west [Kabul].
Photograph taken by John Burke in 1879, in the period of the Second Afghan War (1878-80), showing the upper ramparts of the Bala Hissar fortress at Kabul in Afghanistan, with a cemetery in the foreground. The views in this album concentrate on the topography of Kabul and military scenes during the British occupation of 1879-80. In 1878 John Burke accompanied the Peshawar Valley Field Force, one of three British Anglo-Indian army columns deployed in the war, despite being rejected for the role of official photographer. He financed his trip by advance sales of his photographs 'illustrating the advance from Attock to Jellalabad'. Burke's Afghanistan photographs produced an important visual document of the region where strategies of the Great Game (concerning the territorial rivalry between Britain and Russia) were played out.
The Bala Hissar or High Fortress was the ancient seat of power at Kabul dating back to the 5th century AD. It was located south of the city overlooking the houses and bazaars from a commanding height. In 1879, when General Roberts and his troops occupied the city in the second campaign of the war, precipitated by the killing of the British Resident Sir Louis Cavagnari and his mission and the sacking of the Residency by the Afghans, the British first stayed in the fortress and later partially destroyed it in punitive action against the Afghans.