The settlement area within the Masjid Street and Hirana Baoli Street, inside the fortified city wall, where Bodle Shah Khirki, the postern to get into the city wall are visible on the map. A grave named Bodle Shah Sahib outside the city wall is also visible. The Bodle Shah Khirki is one among the 13 doors of the city wall of Hyderabad. According to the historians, the city of Hyderabad was a walled city. The city wall was erected during the last days of Subadarship Mubariz Khan Imadul Mulk. Initially, the construction started from Chadarghat Gate to Dabirpura Gate with stone and mortar without turret-parapets. The rest of the wall surmounted by the turret-parapets was done by Asaf Jah I. Later it was extensively repaired by Bahadur Dil Khan Shuja-ud-daula, governor of Hyderabad during the reign of Asaf Jah II. The city wall had 13 Gates (Darwaza) and 13 Khirkis (posterns). These 13 Gates were Chadarghat Darwaza, Delhi Gate, Afzal Ganj Gate, Champa, Old Bridge (Narva) gate, Dudh Bauli Gate, Aliabad Gate, Lal Gate, Gaulipura, Ghazibanda or Fateh, Mir Jumla, Yakutpura, and Dabirpura gates. And, 13 posterns (Khirki) were Borah Khirki, Mir Jumla Khirki, Matha Khirki, Rangeli or Rangali Shah Khirki, Bodla Khirki or Bodle Shah Khirki, Darushshifa Khirki, Kalala Khirki, Dhobi Khirki, Hasan Ali Khirki, Champa gate Khirki, Char Mahal Khirki, Dudh Bauli Khirki, Khirki of Kahar. Next, an extensive area at the center of the map is much of uninhabited in nature, where a drain channel namely Murki Nala is visible. Murki Nala was the major drain channel of the time. Next to this empty land, Chanchalgura Pul Road and to the right side of it, a residential settlement area is also visible on the map.
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