https://pk.trip.com/moments/detail/dhaka-14726-122245677?locale=en-PK
Qu@ntum_D@nc3rUnited States

Look inside your own collar, why are clothes all made in Bangladesh

Bangladesh has become the world's second-largest garment-producing country, with a very deep historical origin. The region is crisscrossed with rivers, and textile production was highly developed hundreds of years ago, promoting the extreme development of related trades. The historical process of Bangladesh also went through three related periods. Before Dhaka became the central city, Panam City was the textile and commercial center of the Bengal region and is one of the earliest cities preserved in Bangladesh to this day. Most of these buildings are now ruins, but the various styles from the Sultanate, Mughal, and British colonial periods are dazzling. Panam City is only about 40 kilometers away from Dhaka, and the highway is now being perfected. The river port thrived for more than 300 years, with a large number of weavers and craftsmen living here until the arrival of the Mughal Empire. Today, besides garment production, jute is Bangladesh's second-largest pillar industry. The rise of Dhaka began with the Mughal Empire, and the Lalbagh Fort in Old Dhaka today is an unfinished 17th-century fortress from the Mughal period, originally located on the banks of the Buriganga River, but now the river has changed course, and its name means 'Red Garden'. Lalbagh Fort is the most iconic attraction in Dhaka and a symbol of the Mughal Empire. The main structures are the mosque, the tomb of Pari Bibi, and the audience hall, with two city gates and some remnants of the city walls remaining. The fortress was built by Muhammad Azam Shah, the prince at the time and the future Mughal emperor, and was later handed over to Shaista Khan, the emperor's uncle, who buried his daughter Pari Bibi here. After the Mughal Empire, the Bengal region came under British colonial rule. Dhaka University, the largest and oldest university in the Bengal region, with a history of more than a hundred years, witnessed the birth of modern Bangladesh, and no first-class university can be without it. Young people are always full of passion, pushing the old and worldly world forward. There is a mysterious pond on campus, where people occasionally disappear, and no one dares to approach the heart of the pond.
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*Created by local travelers and translated by AI.
Posted: Jun 9, 2024
AMMAR BANGLADESHI
Md Shamol dhali
Faishal Rahaman
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