 
                    - Writer: Ian Talbot
- Category: English
- Pages: 269
- Stock: Sold Out
- Model: STP-11179
- ISBN: 978-0-670-08944-4
Lahore during the Raj was a prosperous and 
cosmopolitan place, where many communities lived together and there was a
 constant flow of goods, people and ideas. In the Mughal era, the city’s
 strategic location at the junction of roads to Kabul, Multan, Kashmir 
and Delhi made it a seat of power and poets, artists and traders flocked
 there for patronage from the royal court. The city expanded under the 
Sikhs as well and with the annexation of Punjab by the British, Lahore 
entered a new phase. 
Lahore’s fabled Raj-era buildings including
 the GPO, the High Court and the Museum—are widely acclaimed examples of
 colonial architecture. The British lived in Civil Lines, the Cantonment
 and the Mall; while in the 1920s, the prestigious Indian suburb of 
Model Town came up which, with its well-ordered streets, parks and 
bungalows, became a template for all subsequent residential colonies in 
the subcontinent. 
The 1930s and 1940s were a time of intense 
cultural and political creativity and writers and artists flourished; 
F.C. College and Government College were celebrated centers of learning 
and there was great engagement between Lahore and the nascent Bollywood 
film industry, which the traumas of Partition ended. 
Memories of that glittering city still linger on both sides of the border.
| Book Attributes | |
| Pages | 269 | 
 
           
            
            
           
            
                                           
                          
           
            
                                           
                          
           
            
            
           
            
            
           
            
            
          