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4.3 Based on 665 reviews
ツArka – a month ago

I was a great experience. I have never seen a canon before my eyes. And it was 17'8" long. Once in a lifetime opportunity to visit such a place.

Suddhasatya Samanta – 2 weeks ago

Visit this place just to see this wonderful cannon. Not known to many, but this cannon is part of a twin, the other cannon being at Bishnupur. No entry tickets.

Surajit Ghosal – 3 weeks ago

Jahan Kosha Cannon one of the famous oldest cannon. Jahan Kosha Cannon (also known as the Great Gun) literally means the Destroyer of the World. It is placed in the Topekhana a quarter of mile to the south east of the Katra Mosque, in the town of Murshidabad, West Bengal, India. Topekhana was the Nawab's Artillery Park and the entrance gate of the old capital of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa, the city of Jahangir Nagar. It is protected on the east by the Gobra Nala, locally known as the Katra Jheel. Here, the Jahan Kosha Cannon is laid to rest. Before being placed at its current location, it rested on a carriage with wheels and was surrounded by the roots of a Peepal tree.[1] The growth of the tree roots gradually lifted the gun four feet above the ground. The wheels of the gun carriage have disappeared, but the iron-work of the carriage and the trunions are still visible. The cannon is made of ashtadhatu or 8 metals, namely silver, gold, lead, copper, zinc, tin, iron and mercury. The cannon is more than 7 tons in weight. It is 17 feet and 6 inches in length and 3 feet in width. It has a girth of 5 feet at the touch hole end. The circumference of its mouth is more than one foot. The radius of the touch hole is one and a half inches. In order to fire this cannon once, 17 kilograms of gunpowder was needed. The bore is approximately 6 inches. The cannon was made in 1637 by Janardan Karmakar, a blacksmith and gunsmith, under the instructions of Daroga Shere Mohammad and under the supervision of Hara Ballav Das. The cannon was made in Dacca, when Shah Jahan was the Mughal emperor, at the instance of Islam Khan, who was the Subedar of Bengal. This is confirmed by an inscription engraved on it. However, the cannon has several other names like the "Great Gun", the "Destroyer of the world", the "Conqueror of the universe", the "World Subduer" and so on.

Abul Rizvi – 2 months ago

This cannon maintain by ASI Archaeological Survey of India Nearby off Hazarduari Palace Museum Murshidabad

Dibyendu Dutta – a month ago

Very nice ,very big and well maintain.Good experienced for vitis this place. This cannon is maintained by Archaeological survey of india. Great historic place.