The fort of          Aurangabad, 
popularly known as the Lalbagh Fort, was built in 1678 AD          by 
the then Viceroy of Bengal Prince Mohammad Azam, son of the Mughal      
    Emperor Aurangazeb. The fort has a three storied structure with 
slender          minarets at the South Gate. It has many hidden passages
 and a mosque of          massive structure. Outstanding among the 
monuments of the Lalbagh Fort          are the Tomb of Pari Bibi (Fairy 
lady) and Audience room and Hummam Khana          (bathing place) of 
Nawab Shaista Khan, now housing a museum.
The
 fort was the scene of bloody battle          during the first war of 
independence (1857) when 260 spays stationed here          backed by the
 people revolted against British forces. It is one of the          great
 historical places of Mughal era. A small museum is there in this       
   fort where you will find the clothes and weapons of the Mughols.
Lalbagh fort is in the old town of Dhaka          at Lalbagh. It is open 10 am-5 pm Sunday to Friday & Saturday is closed.
The
 capital city Dhaka predominantly was          a city of the Mughals. In
 hundred years of their vigorous rule successive          Governors and 
princely Viceroys who ruled the province, adorned it with          many 
noble monuments in the shape of magnificent places, mosques, tombs,     
     fortifications and 'Katras' often surrounded with beautifully laid 
out          gardens and pavilions. Among these, few have survived the 
ravages of time,          aggressive tropical climate of the land and 
vandal hands of man.
But
 the finest specimen of this period          is the Aurangabad Fort 
[commonly known as Lalbagh Fort], which indeed          represents the 
unfulfilled dream of a Mughal Prince. It occupies the southwestern      
    part of the old city, overlooking the Buriganga on whose northern 
bank          it stands as a silent sentinel of the old city.
Rectangular
 in plan, it encloses an area          of 1082' by 800' and in addition 
to its graceful lofty gateways on southeast          and northeast 
corners and a subsidiary small unpretentious gateway on          north, 
it also contains within its fortified perimeter a number of splendid    
      monuments, surrounded by attractive garden. These are a small 
3-domed          mosque, the mausoleum of Bibi Pari the reputed daughter
 of Nawab Shaista          Khan and the Hammam and Audience Hall of the 
Governor. The main purpose          of this fort was to provide a 
defensive enclosure of the palatial edifices          of the interior 
and as such was a type of palace-fortress rather than          a siege 
fort. 

 
Nice Blog..!!
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Aurangabad Tourist Places