Mitthe Shah dargah — the Sufi urs that bookends the Rajput jal-durg.
Most UNESCO-fort visitors come for the 1444 Khilji-Khinchi jauhar story and leave assuming Gagron is a Rajput-only monument. Just outside the second gate is the mausoleum of Sufi saint Mitthe Shah, whose annual Muharram urs draws Hindu and Muslim pilgrims from the Hadoti belt — a quietly enduring example of Rajasthan's shared sacred geography.WHY NOBODY KNOWS
If your visit aligns with Muharram, the riverside maidan below the fort fills with a one-week mela: qawwali, langar, and devotees who wade across the Ahu-Kali Sindh confluence to the shrine. Even off-season, the dargah is open and the views from its courtyard back to the fort wall are unmatched.



