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Peshawar derives its name from a
Sanskrit word "Pushpapura", meaning the
city of flowers. Peshawar's flowers were even mentioned in Mughal
Emperor Babur's memoirs.
Peshawar is old, so old that its
origins are lost in antiquity, founded over 2,000 years ago by the
Kushan Kings of Gandhara, it has had almostas many names as rulers.
After the Kushan era,
Peshawar declined into an obscurity not broken until the 16th
century. Mughul emperor Babar came to Pesahwar,
he found a city called Begam and rebuilt the fort there, in 1530.
His grandson, Akber, formally gave the name Peshawar which means
"The Place at the Frontier" and much improved the bazaars
and fortifications. Earlier it had been known as the "City
of Flowers" and the "City of Grain". In the days
of the Kushan King it was called the "Lotus Land".
Sher Shah Suri,
his successor, turned Peshawar renaissance into a boom when he
ran his Dehli-to-Kabul Shahi Road through the Khyber Pass. Thus
Mughals turned Peshawar into "City of Flower" by planting
trees and laying out gardens.
Peshawar was the center
of Buddist Gandhara civilization and an important place of pilgrimage.
As Buddhism declined in international importance, Peshawar also
fell on hard times.
In the 9th century
the provincial capital was shifted by the Hindu Shahi kings to
Hund on the Indus. After the invasion of Mahmood of Ghazni, all
traces of gentle, artistic Gandhara were lost. The great Babur
marched through historic Khyber Pass to conquer South Asia in
1526 and setup the Mughal Empire in the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent
Peshawar not regain any of its former glories until the advent
of the Mughals in the 16th century.
When Marco Polo
visited Peshawar province in 1275 or there about, he found a place
"The people have peculiar language, they worship idols and
have an evil disposition". But these days Pathan hospitality
is legendary, and since conversion to Islam, worshipping idols has
ceased.
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