Soldier Bazaar

Soldier Bazar (Urdu: سولجر بازار) is a neighborhood in Karachi East district of Karachi, Pakistan. It was previously administered as part of Jamshed Town,[1] which was disbanded in 2011.

Soldier Bazaar

سولجر بازار
Panchmukhi Hanuman temple in Soldier Bazaar
Coordinates: 24°52′31.6″N 67°01′53.6″E
CountryPakistan
ProvinceSindh
CityKarachi

History

The father of former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the Khan of Kalat owned bungalows here.[2] G. M. Syed, who spearheaded the Pakistan Movement in Sindh also owned a bungalow here named Hyder Manzil. According to Syed's family, the Pakistan Resolution of 1943 was written there before its introduction and passage in the Sindh Assembly.[2]

In 1954, the Soldier Bazaar Market was established. The building serves as a marketplace for food items, and was built in a 1950's modernist style.[3]

Location

The market is centered on Clayton Road, and runs from Madina Road in the west near the Holy Family Hospital, to Gurmandir in the east near Mazar-e-Quaid. Several roads run parallel to Clayton Road that form part of the neighborhood. Mukhi Chaitram Street runs parallel to the north of Clayton Road. North of Soldier Bazaar is Cincinnatus Town, established by Goan Catholics with its neo-Mughal St. Lawrence's Church. Rodrigues Road, Tailor Street, and Shahnawaz Bhutto Road run parallel to the south of Clayton Road. To the south of Shahnawaz Bhutto Road is a posh area where Nishtar Park and Parsi Colony are located.

gollark: It's been here for 30 seconds, somehow.
gollark: Zyu in volcano.
gollark: Inverse Desiredness Rule: try for something and you will never get it, randomly AP stuff and you'll get a million cool things.
gollark: (Not really)
gollark: At least 5.

See also

  • Urdu Bazaar
  • Bohri Bazaar

References

  1. Jamshed Town - Government of Karachi Archived 2006-06-13 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Masood, Tooba. "A walk down the heritage lane that was once Karachi's political hub". Scroll.in. Retrieved 2020-04-13.
  3. "City Markets – Soldier Bazaar, Garden East". The Karachi Walla. 2019-02-17. Retrieved 2020-04-13.


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