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Words near each other
・ Kot Pir Abdul Aziz Halt railway station
・ Kot pri Damlju
・ Kot pri Prevaljah
・ Kot pri Rakitnici
・ Kot pri Ribnici
・ Kot pri Veliki Slevici
・ Kot Qaim Khan
・ Kot Qaisrani
・ Kot Qazi
・ Kot Radha Kishan
・ Kot Radha Kishan railway station
・ Kot Radha Kishan Tehsil
・ Kot Rahim Shah
・ Kot Rajput
・ Kot Ram Chand
Kot Sabzal
・ Kot Salim Shahid railway station
・ Kot Samaba railway station
・ Kot Sarang
・ Kot Sarfraz Khan
・ Kot Sarwar
・ Kot Solankiyan
・ Kot Suleman
・ Kot Sultan railway station
・ Kot Sundki, Attock, Pakistan
・ Kot Waris
・ Kot, Fatehpur
・ Kot, Ig
・ Kot, Karnataka
・ Kot, Lendava


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Kot Sabzal : ウィキペディア英語版
Kot Sabzal


Kot Sabzal ((ウルドゥー語: کوٹ سبزال )) is a town in Rahim Yar Khan District, Punjab, Pakistan. Kot Sabzal (sometimes referred to as Sabzal Kot) is a small town that lies on the edge of Punjab, near provincial borderline of Punjab and Sindh in Pakistan. Usually accessible via the N-5 National Highway, this town is overshadowed by the presence of other larger towns like Ghotki, Jacobabad and Bahawalpur around it. It appears on the 612 km marker on the N5 and lies in the vicinity of the Sadiqabad town under the administration of the Rahim Yar Khan District.
The ruling and prominent tribes living in the region are Awan (Malik), Chohan, Arain and Rana.
==History==
Kot Sabzal used to be ruled by the parganas that administered the city under the princely state of Bahawalpur until they lost it to the Mirs of Sindh in 1807. After the British took over much of the province of Sindh, they restored the rule to the state of Bahawalpur over Kot Sabzal in 1847 so that the Amir of Bahawalpur would help them in the Battle of Multan. In 1848, Bahawalpur-British alliance laid siege on Multan and the city fell and was made part of the British Indian territory. From thence there always remained a bias over which province Kot Sabzal fits into.
In the early 1830s, Kot Sabzal stood larger and stronger than either Gotki or Khairpur, and was surrounded by a thin wall levelled in some places to the ground. The hustle and bustle of the town was due to the four main bazaars facing each other in the centre. The architecture showed a transition from the mud house to house made of unburnt bricks and then those of burnt bricks which wouldn't exceed stories higher than two. As the historian Mohan Lal tries to remember in his travelogues, the city had gates, that had perished through want of repair and that one had a gun, which was kept towards the Bahawalpur country.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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