Outside the rampart, at a distance of less than two furlongs from the mosque of Akhun Mullah Shah, is the cemetery of Baha-ud-din Sahid. It contains numerous Hindu remains, amongst them are the ruins of a massive gateway standing near the entrance, which is traditionally believed to be a part of the “Pravaresa '' temple built by Pravaresena II. It also contains the graves of some of the most prominent personages of Muslim Kashmir. One of the tombstones bears a bilingual Sanskrit and Arabic inscription which mentions the name of Muhammad Shah, the puppet ruler who was made king and dethroned no less than four times1.
1 R.C.Kak, Ancient Monuments of Kashmir (Kashmir: Ali Mohammad & Sons, 2005), 91.