Machine summary:
Almost all these courtiers of Shahjahan had enriched the beauty of Lahore by the erection of grand buildings which even to-day can easily be located in different parts of the city, with the exception of Afzal Khan's Afzal M anzil-«home of exaltation-to the location of which no-one has ever devoted attention thouzh it is really a matter of great importance, specially in connection with our problem of the so-called garden and tomb of Z~b• un-Nisa at Nawan Kot. Chandar Bhan was the pupil of Mulla 'Abdul Hakim of Sialkot.
The citizens of Lahore should recall their observations of 'some of the Lahore tombs of the Mughal period-for instance that of Nur Jahan, of 'Ali Mardan Khan's mother in the North-Western Railway premises in which he himself later on was buried by his sons, that of Dai Angah inside the Gulabi Bagh, that of Anarkali, Rustam Ghazi's wife's near Nawan Kot built in 1046 A.
Under these circumstances I am sure that the reader will agree with me that the so-called tomb of Zeb-un-Nisa can neither be that of Zeb-un-Nisa nor of any woman, and it is clearly the tomb of Afzal Khan built in the premises of his own buildings in Na wan Kot. Sakinatu'l-Auliya, one of the many compilations of Prince Dara Shikoh the eldest son of Shahjahan, a clever writer on mysticism, bears a special chapter on the public haunts of Lahore of Shahjahan's days, where usually, his spiritual leader Shah Mian Mir Sahib lying buried at Lahore, used to go in the company of his disciples.