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Images | Pakistan in the Mirror of History.

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Four Ruppees Stamp Paper of Khairpur when it used to be independent State and later became the part of Pakistan

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17th Nov. 1935 - The foundation stone ceremony of punjab assembly Lahore is being held by Sir Jogindar Singh, Minister of Agriculture.
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Lahore in 1946
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Pakistan's first premier Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan with his wife Ra'na Liaquat Ali in year 1950
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PM Liaquat Ali Khan's grave, Karachi 1951

Nawabzada Liaquat Ali Khan was unfortunately assassinated on October 16, 1951 while making a public address in Rawalpindi. Breathing his last, he whispered: ?O Allah, Please Save Pakistan?.

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Empress market, Saddar, Church on A.H. Road is visible. Karachi - c.1910s

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Drawing Room Plaque in Quaid-e-Azam House Museum, Karachi




Drawing Room in Quaid-e-Azam House Museum



Plaque Outside the Dining Room in Quaid-e-Azam House Museum



Dining Room in Quaid-e-Azam House Museum



Another Photo of Dining Room in Quaid-e-Azam House Museum



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Jinnah’s possessions shifted to Flagstaff House


KARACHI: Many personal belongings of the nation’s founder, Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, have been acquired from the locker of his sister, Fatima Jinnah, on the court’s order, and shifted to Flagstaff House in Karachi.

Sources told The Express Tribune that these items — including a medal, a knife, pocket and wristwatches, glasses, etc — belonged to Jinnah and/or his sister.

These items were kept in a bank locker by Fatima Jinnah, whose assets are currently part of a litigation that would decide their fate.

In 1971, Jinnah’s sister Shireen had moved the Sindh High Court for issuing her a succession certificate in respect of moveable and immovable properties left by Fatima Jinnah after her death in 1969.

Her claim was contested by Jinnah’s grandnephew, Advocate Liaquat Merchant, who claims to be a legal heir of Fatima Jinnah. Therefore, the proceedings are pending to date.

The disputed properties include vehicles, the Mohatta Palace (Qasr-e-Fatima), bank accounts, investments and shares purchased by Fatima Jinnah.

“On December 18, 1996, the high court had passed an order to break open a locker of the Habib Safe Deposit Vault (Private) Limited belonging to Mohtarma Fatima Jinnah in order to document the items she had kept there before her death in 1969,” a court official privy to the litigation told The Express Tribune.

The locker was broken open on the same day in the presence of the representatives of the litigating parties and again locked after preparing an inventory of the articles kept there.

As the litigation remained pending, it took almost two decades before these personal effects were finally acquired from the bank.

59 most powerful images in Pakistan’s history

Two weeks ago, the locker was opened again in the presence of both the parties, as well as the branch manager of the bank.

“The locker contained five small boxes, which included the belongings of a man and a woman, believed to have been used by Muhammad Ali Jinnah and his sister Fatima Jinnah,” an official explained.

Sources said these belongings were shifted to the Quaid-e-Azam Museum, also known as Flagstaff House.

Miscellaneous:

Items acquired from the locker

A pocket watch, without chain (manufactured by Cooke and Kelvey, Calcutta)

A pocket watch, without chain

A woman’s wrist watch, with belt

A pocket watch, with cover

A folding pocket knife, small

Two chains for pocket watches

A medal inscribed with Kalma, in golden cover

A one-rupee coin, dated 1901

A small magnifying glass, with cover

Small threads in different sizes and colours

Kipling to Jinnah: Mumbai’s crumbling colonial homes

A black box containing seven buttons with six hooks

A cigarette case in golden and silver colour, in butter paper

A sword sheath appearing to be of golden colour, small

Four buttons with black stone

Ten pairs of cufflinks in different colours

Three pieces of cufflinks with black stone

Two buttons with white stone

Four small, broken pieces of cufflinks

Fifteen buttons of different sizes in golden colour

A chain with two small, broken bulbs in golden colour

A tiepin in golden colour

A safety pin

Twelve buttons of different sizes and colours

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Leaders from the 70s. Shah Ahmad Noorani, Atta Mohammad Marri, ,Sardar Sherbaz Mazari,Ghos Baksh Bizenjo,Nawabzada Nasrullah Khan, Pir Sahab Pagara,Professor Ghafoor, Shah Farid Ul Haq & Makhdoomzada Hassan Mahmood

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Quaid’s School, Sindh Madrasa-tul-Islam, Karachi. Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah attended his early schooling in Sindh Madrasa-tul-Islam. In 1882, when Jinnah was six, he was enrolled in the Sindh Madrasa-tul-Islam. Jinnah was indifferent to his studies and preferred to play outdoors with his friends. In 1887, Jinnah Poonja bhai’s only sister came to visit from Bombay and took her nephew to Bombay where he joined Gokal Das TejPal Primary School. He remained in Bombay for only six months and returned to Karachi upon his mother’s insistence and again joined the Sind Madrassa-tul-Islam. But his name was struck off as he frequently cut classes in order to ride his father’s horses.




Quaid’s School, Christian Missionary Society High School, Karachi. After his name was struck off from the Sindh Madrasa-tul-Islam, Jinnah then joined the Christian Missionary Society High School, Karachi.



Quaid’s School, Lincoln’s Inn, London. The Honourable Society of Lincoln’s Inn is one of four Inns of Court in London to which barristers of England and Wales belong and where they are called to the Bar. Jinnah studied here from 1893 to 1896.



The Gate House, Lincoln’s Inn, London. The Gate House is the oldest existing part of Lincoln’s Inn, and was built between 1518 and 1521.


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President of Pakistan, Field Marshal Muhammad Ayub Khan unveiling the inauguration plaque of the Pakistan Forest Institute Peshawar in 1960s. The Director & two provincial governors are standing beside him.





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The Viceroy of India Charles Hardinge visits Lahore in 1911....................


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