ÿþ<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>AN&#256RKAL&#298</TITLE> <style type="text/css"> .BODY { background-color: #EAF1F7; background-image: url('images/gtbh.jpg'); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-attachment: fixed; background-position: center; color: #0066CC;} .C1{text-align: justify;color: #0066CC;FONT-size: SMALL;FONT-family: Tahoma;} .BIB{text-align: center;color: #000099;FONT-size: SMALL;FONT-family: Tahoma;} .CONT{text-align: right;color: #FF0000;FONT-size: SMALL;FONT-family: Tahoma;} </style><META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="ANRKAL*"> <META http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"></HEAD> <BODY class="BODY" oncontextmenu="return false" ondragstart="return false" onselectstart="return false"> <FONT ALIGN="JUSTIFY" FACE="Tahoma"> <p class="C1">&#65279AN&#256RKAL&#298, the oldest Mu<u>gh</u>al tomb in Lahore, was built between 1605 and 1615 by Emperor Jah&#257&#7749g&#299r for his former favourite dancing girl An&#257rkal&#299. The tomb was surrounded by extensive gardens enclosed within a high protective wall, and several buildings and palaces were erected in the gardens by Mu<u>gh</u>al princes and nobles. In 1799, Mah&#257r&#257j&#257 Ra&#7751j&#299t Si&#7749gh put up his headquarters there while besieging Lahore. Subsequently, he offered An&#257rkal&#299 to his eldest son, the heir-apparent Kha&#7771ak Si&#7749gh.</p> <p class="C1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In 1822, Ra&#7751j&#299t Si&#7749gh gave this monument to his French generals, Allard and Ventura, as their personal residence and headquarters of the Fauj-i-<u>kh</u>&#257s. The generals soon built a new, classical-style residence between An&#257rkal&#299's tomb and a Mu<u>gh</u>al palace which has since disappeared. This new residence was embellished with paintings and mirrors inserted in golden frames, descriptions of which have been left by numerous travellers (Jacquemont, Hugel, Barr, Von Orlich, etc.). The headquarters of Fauj-i-<u>kh</u>&#257s was in a part of this new building. In another wing were the private apartments of General Allard and Bannou P&#257n De&#299, while General Ventura established his flourishing harem in the tomb itself.</p> <p class="C1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Outside the garden, towards the east, was the <i>champ de manoeuvre</i> (operational headquarters) of the Fauj-i-<u>Kh</u>&#257s, and further east were the French Lines, or cantonments, of the troops under Allard and Ventura. It was the most comfortable and modern building of Lahore during the 1830's and 1840's. South of the <i>champ de manoeuvre</i> and the French lines was the small <i>b&#257r&#257dar&#299</i> of Allard and his wife, profusely decorated by Punjabi artists; that was the "country" seat of the Allard family. It is in this latter garden that Allard and his wife buried two of their children, and in the same tomb Allard himself was buried in 1839.</p> <p class="C1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In 1846 Henry Lawrence, the British Resident, moved into the house of Allard and Ventura in An&#257rkal&#299 - hence its present name: the Residence. Lord Dalhousie, the British Governor-General of India, however, refused Ventura's demand to be paid the price of the building. It occupies today a section of the Punjab Government Secretariat, and the tomb of An&#257rkal&#299 has been transformed into the Punjab Records Office with a small, but interesting museum and Library organized by H. L. O. Garrett by the 1930's.</p> </ol><p class="CONT">J. M. Lafont<br></p><BR> </font> <img src="counter.aspx" width="1px" height="1px" alt=""> </HTML></BODY>