Sirhind-Fategarh

Sirhind-Fategarh is a town and a municipal council in the Fatehgarh Sahib district in the Indian state of Punjab.

[3] According to Huan Tsang, the Chinese traveller who visited India during the seventh century, Sirhind was the capital of the district of Shitotulo, or Shatadru (the present day River Sutlej).

They managed to capture Sirhind, but the Afghans had already left and moved towards the hills, where many of them were massacred by Jasrat Khokhar and Sikander.

This city is famous to Muslims for Great saint Imām-e-Rabbānī Shaykh Ahmad al-Farūqī al-Sirhindī (R.) (1564–1624).

He was an Indian Islamic scholar of Arab origin, a Hanafi jurist, and a prominent member of the Naqshbandī Sufi order.

Many buildings survive from this period, including Aam Khas Bagh;[8] it is said that in its heyday, the city had 360 mosques, gardens, tombs, caravansarais and wells.

Gurudwara Fatehgarh Sahib
Entrance to the Ramgarh Fort near Sirhind
Ruins of Daulat Khana-E-Khas at Aam Khas Bagh ', built by most probably, Sultan Hafiz Rakhna, during the reign of emperor Akbar