To the right of this tomb appear the extensive ruins of a celebrated Mosque, which was built by Shah-Jehan. The Tower in the middle of the distance is Killa-Kazee, and the Fort on the extreme right the residence of Newab Jubbar Khan, brother of Dost Mahommed Khan. Ascending to the upper part of the grove, as seen in the last drawing, is a terrace, about thirty yards square, and nearly in the middle of it, is the tomb erected in honor of the Emperor Baber, in 1650, by Shah-Jehan, after the conquest of Balkh and Budukshan, and is now in good preservation. The Emperor Baber was descended from a tribe of Tartars, and in his Twelfth year (A.D. 1494), became King of Ferghana, a country in the North-East of the Caspian, or as he himself says, ”on the extreme boundary of the habitable world.” After an ambitious career, in which he experienced a variety of successes and discomfitures, he, in 1504, gained possession of Cabul; after several fruitless attempts to invade India, his fifth determination carried him to Delhi and Agra, having on his march slain Sultaun Ibrahim, the Emperor of Hindoostan, and in 1526, he ascended the throne of Delhi. He was undoubtedly one of the most illustrious monarchs of Asiatic history, and at Cabul, where his ashes repose, is held in highest veneration.