In the
Middle Ages, Hindu traders visited present-day
Azerbaijan for
Silk Road trade. The area was traversed by Hindu traders coming mostly from
Multan and
Sindh (in present-day Pakistan). The
Atasghah in
Surakhani was used by those traders to worship while in the area. Most of the traders left around the advent of the
British Raj. The ceremonies were officiated by a
Punjabi pandit. Historical sources indicate that locals worshipped at Surakhani even before the construction of the Atashgah, drawn by the "seven holes with burning flame" from which Surakhani takes its name. In the 1880s, the Czar
Alexander III of Russia went to Azerbaijan to witness one of the last Hindu ceremonies performed there. After the 1890s, nearly all of the original Hindu merchants in Azerbaijan had died or left for The Indian Subcontinent. ==Demographics==