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Shahi Hammam

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The Shahi Hammam ( Punjabi : شاہی حمام , romanized:  Shā(h)ī (H)a'mām ; Urdu : شاہی حمام , romanized :  Shāhī Hamām ; lit.   ' Royal Baths ' ), also known as the Wazir Khan Hammam , is a Turkish bath which was built in Lahore , Punjab, Pakistan , in 1635 C.E. during the reign of Emperor Shah Jahan . It was built by chief physician to the Mughal Court, Ilam-ud-din Ansari, who was widely known as Wazir Khan . The baths were built to serve as a waqf , or endowment, for the maintenance of the Wazir Khan Mosque .

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7-528: No longer used as a hammam, the baths were restored between 2013 and 2015 by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture and the Walled City of Lahore Authority , with much of the funding provided by the government of Norway . The restoration project was given an Award of Merit by UNESCO in 2016 for the hammam's successful conservation which returned it to its "former prominence." The Shahi Hammam is located just within

14-556: A water heating structure, drainage systems, and under-floor remains of its hypocausts . Aga Khan Trust for Culture The Aga Khan Trust for Culture ( AKTC ) is an agency of the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), a family of institutions created by Aga Khan IV with distinct but complementary mandates to improve the welfare and prospects of people in the developing world, particularly in Asia and Africa. It focuses on

21-721: The Walled City of Lahore , steps away from the Delhi Gate . The Shahi Hammam is the last remaining Mughal-era hammam in Lahore . During the Mughal era , Persian-style hammams were introduced although they never achieved the same levels of popularity in the Mughal Empire as they did in Persia. The Shahi Hammam was built in 1635 by Ilam-ud-din Ansari, Governor of Lahore, as part of an endowment which included

28-558: The Wazir Khan Mosque . The baths fell into disuse by the 18th century during the decline and fall of the Mughal Empire. From the early British period onwards the building was used for different purposes - as a primary school, dispensary, and recreational centre as well as an office for the local municipality. Additionally, shops were built into the building’s northern, western and southern façades. Excavations as part of restoration works completed in 2015 revealed that substantial parts of

35-416: The bath's ceiling which also aided ventilation. Most of the hammam's interior was preserved intact, and several Mughal era frescoes have been preserved. As the façade had few windows, merchant shops were permitted to operate along the hammam's outer walls. The Aga Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC), with funding from the government of Norway , began restoration works at the baths to conserve the space, restore

42-464: The building had previously been demolished, likely to make way for the reconstruction of Delhi Gate building in the 1860s. The hammam consisted of three parts: the jama khana (dressing area), nim garm (warm baths), and garm (hot baths). The baths were gender segregated, and contained a reception chamber as well as a small prayer room. In keeping with Persian tradition, the baths were illuminated by sunlight which filtered through several openings in

49-520: The original layout of the building, and to uncover and preserve Mughal-era frescoes which decorated the building's walls. Works were completed in 2015, and are the improvements are said to have changed the surroundings "dramatically." In 2016, UNESCO awarded the Shahi Hamam restoration project an Award of Merit for its "high degree of technical proficiency" and "for returning the ornate Shahi Hammam to its former prominence." Excavations have unearthed

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