Sunday, April 28, 2019

Remnants of a Buddhist civilisation in Nateshwar

Farhana Mirza and Aanila Kishwar Tarannum

                                                    Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited

A bird’s-eye view of Nateshwar shows the archaeological site in its full glory, while a closer look at the ruins, below, reveal intricacies of the ancient stupas. Photo: Collected




The recently excavated Nateshwar archaeological site bears witness to the Bengal region’s thousand-year-old history, with its pyramid-shaped stupas, wide walkways, mandaps and households. Ranging from biological remains of flora and fauna, to terracotta, metal and stone artefacts and unique architecture, the archaeological findings at Nateshwar paint the picture of an ancient civilisation that once dwelled in the country we now call home.
After the remarkable feat of excavating the Wari-Bateshwar ruins, Dr Sufi Mustafizur Rahman, professor of archaeology at Jahangirnagar University, is the director of this project.
“The archaeological site of Nateshwar in Bikrampur has the potential to become a centre of Buddhist culture in South Asia, and earn its place as a world heritage site. From last December to March, we have conducted archaeological survey and excavation, discovering pyramid-shaped structures, and other important artefacts,” said Dr Sufi in a press briefing at Nateshwar excavation site in Munshiganj’s Tongibari upazila recently.




With support from the cultural affairs ministry and government’s archaeology division, this excavation and research project is being supervised by Bikrampur Foundation. The work began in 2010.




Dr Sufi mentioned, “In the years 2013-18, over 5,000 square metres of land was discovered. Last year, we excavated ancient residential structures in Ballalbari.” On the pyramid-like structure, Dr Sufi said, “This is a Buddhist stupa, akin to other stupas of this subcontinent such as Sanchi, Bharhut, Amaravati etc.”
“Preliminary excavation was done in nine sites in the years 2010-13. We discovered six rooms where monks once lived, one mandap (worship pavilion), and pentagonal stupa in Rampal union. In 2013 at Nateshwar’s Deul area, we found a Buddhist temple, octagonal stupas, brick walkway and drains,” he added.
Keeping in mind the huge scale and scope of the preservation work, Bikrampur Foundation partnered up with the Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology in China’s Hunan province. “Through carbon dating, we have determined two timelines for the Buddhist residences – 780-950 AD for the first period and 950-1223 AD for the second,” said Dr Sufi.
There is a temple made of brick, three octagonal stupas with mandap, 51-metre long brick roads, multiple rooms and hall rooms, and entryway. Before the rainy season hits in full swing, the archaeological sites will be specially protected to prevent water from getting in, said Dr Sufi. He also announced the end of this phase of the excavation for the year.
State Minister for Cultural Affairs, KM Khalid said at the briefing, “These archaeological treasures must be preserved. Detailed research efforts will reveal the correct history of this site to enrich Bengali culture.”
Abdul Gani, a local teacher who visited the site, said, “This discovery has the potential to change the face of this area. These valuable artefacts must be protected at any cost.”

Copy from



12:00 AM, April 25, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:35 AM, April 25, 2019



Sunday, April 21, 2019

Growth and Development of BANGLADESH, 2019

Mr.Guy Meldrum, Regional Director of Asia-Pacific and Middle East, British American Tobacco PLC recently visited Bangladesh. In an interview with of The Daily Star he said



" I am firmly of the opinion that Bangladesh is a country with tremendous potential and will go a long way into becoming a powerhouse in the global stage. *******I see a lot of young minds of this country developing and possessing the right skills needed for the future. Hence, the constant economic growth and the government's can-do attitude  to cultivate a better nation, is paving the way towards an optimistic path ahead for this nation******”."


He further said:
"The constant 6%+ economic growth rate for the past few years reflects the country's energy, persistence & agility. Bangladesh has been acknowledged as the 9th fastest growing country by the World Economic Forum and its progress is truly remarkable. The huge investments that are already underway are testaments that Bangladesh is on the right track. With the government also maintaining a positive mindset towards private & international businesses, I believe exciting times lie ahead for the private sector being a part of this dynamic country."


  



Copy from









Rabindra University archaeologists claim to have found ‘King Virat Palace’ in Sirajganj




Virat Raja used to live in the palace around 2,500 years ago according to historical claims


A group of archaeologists from Rabindra University in Sirajganj claims to have found the remains of “King Virat Palace,” locally known as “Vitar Rajar Rajmahal,” and his temple at Khirtala village in Raiganj upazila of the district.

According to Mahabharata, one of the two major Sanskrit epics of the ancient Indian Subcontinent, Raja Virat used to live in the palace around 2,500 years ago. 

A group of teachers and students of the university visited the place on Wednesday to do a theoretical survey, said Rifat Ur Rahman, a teacher of cultural heritage and Bangladesh studies department of the university.

He, along with one of his colleagues, Farhana Yasmin, at a press briefing revealed details about their initial findings.

The teacher said: “Khirtala village was a prosperous city around 800 to 1000 AD. There are at least 50 small hillocks in the village and its surrounding areas. The remnants of a temple built with ancient bricks remain here. Locals call it ‘Virat Rajar Mandir’ (temple of King Virat). Fragments of ancient brick remains are still visible here. A lot of pottery shards are also found in the farmlands here.”

Moreover, it can easily be said that the terracotta figurines found in the village are from the Gupta Dynasty, said Farhana Yasmin, adding: “Locals also found coins of the dynasty here. From this finding, it is assumed that this place was a prosperous township in Gupta or Pala period. The ruins of temples and the palace are hidden beneath the ground here.”

They also informed that Bangladesh District Gazetteer Pabna, published in 1990, also mentioned that the most ancient and prosperous township of that time was buried under the soil of this area. 

It is also mentioned in the gazetteer that the city of the great king was also described in the “Mahabharata”. 

There is still a chance of doing theoretical research in nearby areas, they said, adding that several pieces of pottery and brick samples have been collected during their initial survey.

When contacted, Assistant Director Mujibur Rahman of Department of Archaeology (Bogra and Rajshahi zone), said: “We have visited Khirtala village. There are several ancient trace marks here. But those were not properly tested. The time (period) can only be determined by digging properly and using chemical tests.”

Virat Raja in the Hindu epic “Mahabharata” was a Matsya king who ruled Virata Kingdom and in whose court the Pandavas (Panchapandav) spent a year in hiding during their exile.


Articles by: Aminul Islam Khan Rana, Sirajganj                     Published at 01:07 am April 11th, 2019

Copy from





Thursday, April 18, 2019

Bibi Chini historical Shahi Mosque





Bibi Chini historic Shahi Masjid located in Sadar Upazila of Barguna district in betagi about 10 km away from the mosque is located bibichini Union. About 5 feet high mosques House. 3 is buried next to the mosque. The exception is heterogeneous.

Although the common grave of a long buried 3 15/16 hands. According to the founder of the whole person eventually goes to sleep lying down in the mosque of Hazrat Shah Blessings ullah (A :) and her daughter cinibibi and isabibi. The more, the reign of Emperor Aorangajeb 1700 AD Hazrat Shah Nayamat ullah(R :) died the mosque beside him, and is buried.

Bibi Chini Shahi Mosque, is one of the historical places in our country. In 1659, A Muslim saint named Hazrat Shah Neyamat Ullah (Rah.) came here from Persia for Perching Islam in this region. The village and the mosque named after the name of his daughter 'Hayache Bibi Chini'. The mosque is 33 ft long, 33 ft width and the wall of the mosque are 6 ft wide.



Three graves are located beside the mosque which is completely exclusion. Those graves are 40-45 ft. long. According to the local people, those graves are Hazrat Shah Naimat Ullah and his two daughters Chini Bibi and Isa Bibi. In 1700, this great Muslim Saint Hazrat Shah Neyamat Ullah (Rah.) was died and buried him beside the mosque.


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copy from

Source Link

Published: 12:01 AM, 13 April 2019

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Saturday, April 13, 2019

Grey Francolin


                                                 Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited

003. Francolinus pondicerianus(Gmelin,1789)Synonym :Tetrao pondicerianus Gmelin, 1789

English name: Grey Francolin (Grey Partridge,Indian Grey Partridge)
Bangla name: Metey Titir

Description:
The Grey Francolin is a grey,ground-dwelling bird with round body,short legsand stub-tail(length 33 cm,weight 275 g,wing14.6 cm,bill 2.5 cm,tarsus 4 cm,tail 8.5 cm).Ithas buff,chestnut,grey-brown and dark brownbarring on its upperpart and fine blackish-brownbarring on the underparts,except for the creamy-white throat with thin black georgette.Its face is dull orange with a prominent black eye-stripe.Ithas creamy vent and chestnut edge to the outer tailfeathers, visible in flight. Its irises are hazel-brown. It has a silver bill with darker lowermandible and dull red legs and feet. The male andthe female look alike.Of the 3 known sub-species,F.p.interpositus occured in Bangladesh.

Habit :
It inhabits the dry grasslands. scrubs. farmlands and sand dunes. It is usually seen in pairs or family parties of 4-8 birds. It forages by digging and scratching the ground with its bill anel feet.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copy from
Encyclopedia of flora and fauna of  Bangladesh -BIRDS-Volume 26- Page: 02-03.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Monday, April 8, 2019

Crocodile skeleton found in ancient pond

The ncient pond in Bagerhat's Morrelganj upazila where partial skeleton of a crocodile head.

 Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited


Our Correspondent, Bagerhat

Partial skeleton of a crocodile's head was found 14 feet below ground level in Morrelganj upazila of Bagerhat yesterday.
Workers found the skeleton while excavating an ancient pond named Dibraj Dighi in Panchakaron village of the upazila.
According to locals, the dighi (large pond) is one of the around 360 such ponds built in Bagerhat during the reign of Muslim ruler and preacher Khan Jahan Ali, who was known to have released crocodiles in the ponds.
The skeleton unearthed yesterday might be of a crocodile from that period, they also said.      
Confirming the unearthing of the skeleton by workers, Panchakaron Union Parishad Chairman Abdur Razzak said it was handed over to the upazila nirbahi officer (UNO), who will send it to archaeology department.


Copy from

12:00 AM, April 08, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:27 AM, April 08, 2019

Saturday, April 6, 2019

The Joy of Cropping

                                                 Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited

Many years ago I took a photography class with the great fine-art photographer Michael Kenna, whose exquisite black-and-white photographs of landscapes, especially at night, are still considered classics. Every week, before class started, the students would hang their photographs (or “work” as we called them) on the wall. Kenna walked into class holding two L-shaped pieces of cardboard and immediately went to work on the photographs. He used the L's to crop each photograph in a variety of ways until he coaxed a much stronger image from the photograph.

Cropping, the removal of unwanted areas of an image, is probably the most basic photographic manipulation. In film days it was done in the darkroom or even by trimming the photograph itself. Today it is a basic function of photo-editing software.
I must admit, though, I took Kenna's cropping lessons with a pinch of salt. That's because I was grounded in traditional photographic discipline which strongly discouraged cropping. Following the French great Henri Cartier-Bresson, many black-and-white photographers eschewed cropping. To prove this they printed their negatives to include a thin edge around the image corresponding to negative rebate. So their photographic prints contained a thin black border around the image. If you look carefully at any of Cartier-Bresson's images, you will see black borders, proving it was an uncropped image.
I should explain the reason for this belief. Photographers strongly felt that the image should be “composed” or arranged within the viewfinder. When taking the picture, if you thought “Oh, I can fix that photo later with cropping,” you would not strive for the strongest possible image and become a lazy photographer.
I certainly believe this for most types of photographic subjects, such as people, landscapes, buildings, streets, etc and try to compose in the viewfinder without having to resort to cropping.
But since I started photographing birds and wildlife, I have come to embrace cropping as a creative tool. A bird or an animal is usually a small part of the entire frame because it is far away. Presenting this picture to the viewer without cropping is of little value. Cropping the picture magnifies the subject and brings it to the centre of attention. Unlike the limited freedom of cropping in the film darkroom, the vast megapixels of the digital camera allow me great flexibility in cropping.
Good cropping is very much an intuitive exercise. The photographer must have a sense of the geometry of the image; the crop should reinforce this geometry and not fight it. Many photographs have a direction associated with them and the crop must respect that. It goes without saying that the crop should not remove important parts of an image, such as a person's legs or a bird's tail.
An example of good and bad cropping is shown above. The original image is shown on top. In the crop on the left side, the tail is cut off and the bird's head, facing left, needs more space for the eyes to “look into.” A better crop on the right solves both issues.
So give creative cropping a try. Look at the proportion and overall balance of the image. Avoid placing the subject in the middle of the frame to avoid monotony. With practice, cropping will become another creative tool in your photographer's toolbox.
Copy from

12:00 AM, September 09, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:57 AM, September 09, 2017
Link

Uncropped photo and two ways to crop. Photo: Ihtisham Kabir
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ihtisham Kabir
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Thursday, April 4, 2019

Black Francolin

                                                 Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited

001. Francolinus francolinus (Linnaeus, 1766) Synonym: Tetrio francolinus Linnaeus, 1766
English name: Black Francolin (Black Partridge) Bangla name: Kala Titir

Description: The Black Francolin is a dark brown, terrestrial bird (length 34 cm, weight 430 g, wing 5 cm, bill 2.4 cm, tarsus 4.8 cm, tail 10 cm). The male differs from the female. The male has jet-lack upperparts  spotted  and bared  with  white  and fulvous. Its face is black and cheek is white. It has a rufous collar, black upper mantle spotted with white and jet-black underparts.  Its  flanks  are boldly spotted with white. The female  has paler and browner upperparts, rufous hind-neck, pale buff 
supercilium and ear-covert and a dark eye-stripe. Its mantle and back are streaked with buff and its chin and throat are buffy-white. The rest of its underparts and flanks are heavily barred and scalloped with black and white. It has chestnut undertail-coverts. Both sexes have brown or hazel-brown irises and a black bill. The legs and feet are bright deep red in the breeding season. The juvenile looks like the female except for its black supercilium and white spotted black breast. Of the 6 known sub-species, F f melanonows occurs in Bangladesh.

Habit: It inhabits the tall grasses, farmlands, tea gardens and scrubs near water. It is usually seen alone  or in  scattered pairs. It  forages on the ground, low shrubs and grasses. feeding on seeds of grass and  weed,  grains,  shoots, fruits  and insects. It is more active at dawn and dusk. Its usual  call  is a  series of high-pitched notes: chik...cheek..cheek-keraykek. It breeds in March-October. The male calls with the neck outstretched and waggles its t ail up and down. It nests on the ground at the base of tall grasses and among thick bushes. The nest is a depression in the ground lined with grass. The female lays 6-9 eggs, 3,8 x 3.1 cm each. The eggs are yellowish-olive to warm olive-brown. The female alone incubates. ncubation takes 18-19 days.

Distribution: It is a rare resident of Bangladesh. It occurs in the deciduous forests and villages of Chittagong and Dhaka Divisions and the far north of Rajshahi  Division. it also occurred in  Sylhet Division. Its global range extends from Turkey eastwards   to   Afghanistan   and   the   Indian 
subcontinent except Sri Lanka and Bhutan.

Status: It is not a globally threatened bird. It is. however. considered Critically Endangered in Bangladesh. It is protected by the Bangladesh Wildlife Preservation Act. 

Miscellaneous: The scientific name francolintts means little hen (Italian: francolino = a little hen). lEnam U I Hague and tat Shahri. Mahmud) 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copy from
Encyclopedia of flora and fauna of  Bangladesh -BIRDS-Volume 26- Page: 01-02.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Grave of LutfullaBeg

Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited

Khaje Dewan 1st Lane Shahi Jame Masjid in Dhaka old town is an ancient mosque of Dhaka. There is a plaque in Persian language (photo taken on 29 Mar 2019).

There two graves just out side the mosque. One of the graves carries a tombstone showing it as the grave of Lutfulla Beg and year of death as 1757 AD. This is the year when the Battle of Plassey between Nabab Serajuddowla and the British East India Company had taken place. The latter led by Clive had won it with the support of treacherous and infamous MirZafar which changed the political and eventually economic landscape of the whole of India.   

Monday, April 1, 2019

Phayre's Langur

                                                 Copyright: Tiger Tours Limited

The monkey was high up on the jackfruit tree. It was all black except for circles of white around its eyes and mouth. It held something close to its breast, covering it with both arms.  Moments later, the baby, a pale orange colour, peeked out from its mother's breast. It was startled to see me and my camera and turned back to its mother again. Several other monkeys in the group now huddled together on the branch. The father reached out several times to take the baby. Eventually the mother handed it over and the father held it close to its chest.

Bangladesh is home to ten species of primates; among them these monkeys, known as Phayre's Langur, are - quite literally - the most spectacular. The adults are black except for a white patch around the mouth and white rings around their eyes which look like spectacles. Hence their Bangla name choshma bandor.

Phayre's Langurs are found only in Southeast Asia, including Bangladesh, eastern India, Vietnam, Thailand, Laos and Myanmar. The IUCN considers it an endangered species because of its utter and total dependence on forests which are rapidly disappearing.  In Bangladesh they can be found in the forests of Sylhet – for example, Satchori and Lawacherra - and in the hills of Chittagong.

Above my head, the troop was on the move. The baby was back with the mother who used one hand to hold it tight as she moved from branch to branch.  From the jackfruit tree they transported themselves to a koroi tree where they joyfully chomped on young leaves. There was one alpha male, two females and two children (the orange one and an older child.) The male was fully engaged with the females in taking care of the young.

Then a bout of sibling rivalry broke out. To attract its mother's attention the older child tried to push away the infant. But the mother, altogether focused on her infant, paid it scant attention. The child then tried a different tack: it moved away and started leaping from branch to branch, as if showing off. When it returned, its mother continued ignoring it.

I spoke with Hasan Al Razi Chayan who studied Phayre's Langurs in the forest for two years (2016-17) for his Masters in Zoology from Jagannath University. Chayan said that a group includes one alpha male and multiple females (a harem.) There is considerable affection among the adults. All the adults care for babies, for example. Agreeing with my observations, Chayan said that he never saw them fight and found them to be peaceful.

I asked him about the striking orange colour I had seen. Chayan said that infants are born with this colour. During their first year, they gradually change to black.

How large were the groups? Chayan mentioned typical groups of 4-12, but recently a group of 41 headed by one alpha male was reported in China.

Back under the koroi tree, the langurs had their fill of leaves. In less than a minute they had jumped, leaped and swung several trees away, leaving behind an empty tree standing silently over my head.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ihtisham Kabir 
Photographer,Writer,Planter and Software Engineer.

Home > City
12:00 AM, March 30, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:06 AM, March 30, 2019
Source Link
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------