Tourist Spot
Shat Gambuj Mosque

In mid-15th century, a Muslim colony was founded in the inhospitable mangrove forest of the Sundarbans near the seacoast in the Bagerhat district by an obscure saint-General, named Ulugh Khan Jahan. He was the earliest torch bearer of Islam in the South who laid the nucleus of an affluent city during the reign of Sultan Nasiruddin Mahmud Shah (1442-59), then known as 'Khalifalabad' (present Bagerhat). Khan Jahan aborned his city with numerous mosques, tanks, roads and other public buildings, the spectacular ruins of which are focused around the most imposing and largest multidomed mosques in Bangladesh, known as the Shait-Gumbad Masjid (160'X108'). The stately fabric of the monument, serene and imposing, stands on the eastern bank of an unusually vast sweet-water tank, clustered around by the heavy foliage of a low-laying countryside, characteristic of a sea-coast landscape.
Sundarban

In the south-western part of Bangladesh, in the district of greater Khulna, lies the Sundarbans, the beautiful forest. It is a virgin forest which until recently owed nothing to human endeavor and yet nature has laid it out with as much care as a planned pleasure ground. For miles and miles, the lofty treetops form an unbroken canopy, while nearer the ground, works of high and ebb-tide marked on the soil and tree trunks and the many varieties of the natural mangrove forest have much to offer to an inquisitive visitor. Click here to explore world largest mangrove forest with beauty and so many things.
Mujibnagar
Mujibnagar formerly known as Baidyanathtala is a town in the Meherpur District of Bangladesh. It is a common reference for the government in exile formed by the leaders of the Awami League, who were leading the guerrilla war for the independence of Bangladesh (then East Pakistan) from Pakistan in 1971. Throughout the war with the Pakistan Army, the Mujibnagar government would serve as the nominal head of the pro-independence guerrilla militias, mainly the Mukti Bahini. Although the state gained independence only in December 1971, the Mujibnagar government is recognised as the first official government of Bangladesh.
Lalon Shah Bridge
Lalon Shah
Bridge is a road bridge in Bangladesh over the Padma. It was
completed in 2004 and is one of the larger bridges of the
country.
Hardinge Bridge
Hardinge
Bridge is a steel railway bridge over the Padma located in
western Bangladesh. It is named after Lord Hardinge, who was the
Viceroy of India from 1910 to 1916. The bridge is 1.8 kilometers
(1.
Khulna University of Engineering & Technology
Khulna
University of Engineering & Technology or KUET, formerly known
as BIT, Khulna, is one of the best Engineering Universities in
Bangladesh. About two thousand students are enrolled in
undergraduate and postgraduate engineering and science in this
institution. The total number of teachers is over 130. The
University has continued to expand with the construction of new
academic buildings, auditorium complex, halls of residence,
teachers dormitory, engineering section building etc.
Khulna University
Khulna
University is situated at Gollamari, by the river Moyuree,
beside the Khulna-Satkhira highway. It is one of the divisional
public universities of Bangladesh. Khulna university has 16
disciplines under five school. The university came into being in
1987 in the name of University of Khulna; and the Khulna
University Act was passed in the Bangladesh National Parliament
in July 1990.
Jessore Airport
Jessore
Airport (IATA: JSR - ICAO: VGJR) located in Jessore in
Bangladesh. Only domestic flights leave from Jessore Airport.
Khoksa
Khoksa is a
small town eastern Kushtia District, Bangladesh. It is 24 km
from Kushtia city and 200 km from the capital Dhaka. Unions:
Shomospur & Janipur. Janipur is the house of annual Hindu Kali
Pooja festival in Bangladesh.






