Online Encyclopedia

BANNU

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 355 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BANNU  , a

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town and
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district of
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British India, in the" Derajat division of the North-West Frontier Province . The town (also called Edwardesabad and Dhulipnagar) lies in the north-west corner of the district, in the valley of the
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Kurram
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river . Pop . (1901) 14,300 . It forms the
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base for all punitive expeditions to the Tochi Valley and Waziri frontier . The district of Bannu, which only consists of the Bannu and Marwat tahsils since the constitution of the North-West Frontier Province in 1901, contains an
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area of 168o sq. m. lying north of the
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Indus . The cis-Indus portions of Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan now comprises the new
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Punjab district of
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Mianwali . In addition to the Indus the other streams flowing through the district are the Kurram (which falls into the Indus) and its tributary the Gambila . The valley of Bannu proper, stretching to the
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foot of the frontier hills, forms an irregular oval, measuring 6o m. from north to south and about 40 M. from east to west . In 1901 the population was 231,485, of whom the
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great majority were Mahommedans . The
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principal tribes inhabiting the district are: (1) Waziri Pathans,
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recent immigrants from the hills, for the most
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part peaceable and good cultivators; (2) Marwats, a
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Pathan
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race, inhabiting the
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lower and more sandy portions of the Bannu valley; (3) Bannuchis, a mongrel Afghan tribe of
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bad physique and mean vices . The inhabitants of this district have always been very
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independent and stubbornly resisted the Afghan and
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Sikh predecessors of the British .

After the

annexation of the Punjab the valley was administered by Herbert Edwardes so thoroughly that it became a source of strength instead of weakness during the Mutiny . The inhabitants of the valley itself are now peaceful, but it is always subject to incursion from the Waziri tribes in the Tochi valley and the neighbouring hills . Salt is quarried on government account at
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Kalabagh and
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alum is largely obtained in the same neighbourhood . The chief export is wheat . A military road leadsfrom Bannu town towards Dera Ismail Khan . The Indus, which is nowhere bridged within the district, is navigable for native boats throughout its course of 76 M . The chief frontier tribes on the border are the Waziris, Battannis and Dawaris . All these are described under their
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separate names .

End of Article: BANNU
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