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Thatto

Thatta
ٺٽو
ٹھٹہ
City
Clockwise from top: View of the Makli Necropolis, Tomb of Isa Khan Hussain at the necropolis, exterior and interior views of the Shah Jahan Mosque
Clockwise from top: View of the Makli Necropolis, Tomb of Isa Khan Hussain at the necropolis, exterior and interior views of the Shah Jahan Mosque
Nickname(s): The City of Silence
Thatta  ٺٽو  ٹھٹہ is located in Sindh
Thatta  ٺٽو  ٹھٹہ
Thatta
ٺٽو
ٹھٹہ
Thatta  ٺٽو  ٹھٹہ is located in Pakistan
Thatta  ٺٽو  ٹھٹہ
Thatta
ٺٽو
ٹھٹہ
Location in Sindh, Pakistan
Coordinates: 24°44′46″N 67°55′28″E / 24.74611°N 67.92444°E / 24.74611; 67.92444Coordinates: 24°44′46″N 67°55′28″E / 24.74611°N 67.92444°E / 24.74611; 67.92444
Country Pakistan
Province Sindh
District Thatta District
Population
 • Total 220,000
Time zone PST (UTC+5)
Highways N-5

Thatta (Sindhi: ٺٽو‎; Urdu: ٹھٹہ‎) is a city in the Pakistani province of Sindh. Thatta was the medieval capital of Sindh, and served as the seat of power for three successive dynasties. Thatta's historic significance has yielded several monuments in and around the city. Thatta's Makli Necropolis, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is site of one of the world's largest cemeteries and has numerous monumental tombs built between the 14th and 18th centuries designed in a syncretic funerary style characteristic of lower Sindh. The city's 17th century Shah Jahan Mosque is richly embellished with decorative tiles, and is considered to have the most elaborate display of tile work in South Asia.

Thatta is located in lower Sindh, on the N-5 National Highway, about 100 km (62 mi) east of the provincial capital of Sindh, Karachi. The historic town of 220,000 inhabitants is also located near the Indus River, and the Keenjhar Lake, the largest freshwater lake in Pakistan.

Some suggested the name derived from the word Thab implying closeness of population, while others find its origin in the common word Thatta, a crowd or assembly of people.

Thatta may be the site of ancient Patala (Πάταλα in Greek), the main port on the Indus in the time of Alexander the Great. The site of Patala has been subject to much debate. According to historian Ahmad Hasan Dani, director of the Taxila Institute of Asian Civilizations in Islamabad, Patala may refer to ancient Thatta based on Greek descriptions of the ancient city.

Muhammad Bin Qasim captured the region in 711 CE after the defeating the local Raja in a battle north of Thatta. Thatta is reported by some historians to have been the ancient seaport of Debal that was mentioned by the Arab conquerors, though others place the seaport at the site of modern Karachi. At the time of the Umayyad conquests, small semi-nomadic tribes were living in the Sindh region. The Umayyad conquest introduced the religion of Islam into the hitherto mostly Hindu and Buddhist region.


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