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Bathinda
(also
known
as
Tabar-e-Hind
or
Tabarhindh
meaning
the
Gateway
to
India)
is
one
of
the
oldest
cities
in
Punjab,
India
and
the
current
administrative
headquarters
of
Bathinda
District.
It
is
in
northwestern
India
in
the
Malwa
Region,
227
km
west
of
the
capital
city
of
Chandigarh
and
is
the
fifth
largest
city
of
Punjab.
Bathinda's
nicknamed
the
'City
of
Lakes',
courtesy
of
the
artificial
lakes
in
the
city.
The
first
empress
of
India,
Razia
Sultan
was
imprisoned
in
the
Qila
Mubarak
fort
in
Bathinda.
The
gurudwara
and
mazaar
of
Haji
Rattan
is
a
popular
tourist
centre
of
Bathinda
having
connections
with
popular
legends.
Bathinda
is
a
home
of
Central
University
of
Punjab
and
upcoming
AIIMS.
Bathinda
is
home
to
two
modern
thermal
power
plants,
Guru
Nanak
Dev
Thermal
Plant
and
Guru
Hargobind
Thermal
Plant
at
Lehra
Mohabbat.
The
city
has
a
fertilizer
plant,
a
large
oil
refinery,
Bathinda
is
home
of
two
cement
plants,
Ambuja
Cements
and
UltraTech
Cement
Limited.
A
zoo,
and
a
historic
Qila
Mubarak
fort.
Bathinda
is
one
of
the
largest
food
grain
and
cotton
markets
in
northern
India;
the
area
around
Bathinda
is
a
prolific
grape
growing
area.
It
is
one
of
the
leading
cities
in
education
in
Punjab.
Bhatinda
was
changed
to
Bathinda
to
conform
to
the
phonetical
expression
as
locally
pronounced.
According
to
Henry
George
Raverty,
Bathinda
was
known
as
Tabarhindh
(Labb-ut-Twarikh).
The
earliest
mention
of
Tabarhindh
occurs
in
the
Jami-Ul-Hakayat
written
about
607
Hijri
or
1211
AD.
In
1004,
Mahmud
of
Ghazni
besieged
the
local
fort,
which
was
located
on
the
route
from
the
northwest
into
the
rich
Ganges
valley.
In
1189,
Muhammad
Ghori
attacked
and
occupied
the
fort
of
Bathinda.
Prithvi
Raj
Chauhan,
the
ruler
of
this
region,
managed
to
recover
possession
of
the
fort
thirteen
months
later
in
1191
after
the
first
battle
of
Tarain.
In
1634,
a
battle
named
Battle
of
Lahira
(at
Lahira
in
Bathinda)
was
fought
between
Guru
Hargobind
and
Mughals.
In
circa
1754,
the
town
was
conquered
by
Maharaja
Ala
Singh,
the
Maharaja
of
Patiala
and
since
then
it
followed
the
history
of
erstwhile
princely
state
of
Patiala.
With
the
dawn
of
independence
and
merger
of
Patiala
and
East
Punjab
States
into
a
division
called
PEPSU,
Bathinda
become
a
full-fledged
district
with
headquarters
at
Bathinda
city.
Bathinda
(also
known
as
Tabar-e-Hind
or
Tabarhindh
meaning
the
Gateway
to
India)
is
one
of
the
oldest
cities
in
Punjab,
India
and
the
current
administrative
headquarters
of
Bathinda
District.
It
is
in
northwestern
India
in
the
Malwa
Region,
227
km
west
of
the
capital
city
of
Chandigarh
and
is
the
fifth
largest
city
of
Punjab.
Bathinda's
nicknamed
the
'City
of
Lakes',
courtesy
of
the
artificial
lakes
in
the
city.
The