Name | Class | Section | Shift | Roll |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aurko | Eight | A | Morning | 57 |
Fahim | Eight | A | Morning | 17 |
Raiyan | Three | A | Morning | 30 |
Mahfuz | Three | A | Morning | 13 |
Risad | Eight | D | Day | 06 |
Sidrat | Nine | A | Morning | 55 |
Siyam | Six | A | Morning | 03 |
Anan | Seven | A | Morning | 56 |
Tonoy | Ten | B | Day | 09 |
Cox's Bazar is a city, fishing port, tourism center, and district headquarters in southeastern Bangladesh. It is famous mostly for its long natural sandy beach, and it is infamous for the largest refugee camp in the world. It is located 150 km (93 mi) south of the divisional headquarter city of Chittagong. Cox's Bazar is also known by the name Panowa, which translates literally as "yellow flower". Another old name was "Palongkee".
Click HereMahasthangarh is one of the earliest urban archaeological sites so far discovered in Bangladesh. The village Mahasthan in Shibganj thana of Bogra District contains the remains of an ancient city which was called Pundranagara or Paundravardhanapura in the Pundravardhana. A limestone slab bearing six lines in Prakrit in Brahmi script recording a land grant, discovered in 1931, dates Mahasthangarh to at least the 3rd century.
Click HereFor long the fort was considered to be a combination of three buildings (the mosque, the tomb of Bibi Pari and the Diwan-i-Aam), with two gateways and a portion of the partly damaged fortification wall. Recent excavations carried out by the Department of Archaeology of Bangladesh have revealed the existence of other structures.The southern fortification wall has a huge bastion in the southwestern corner.
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