Online Encyclopedia

DERA GHAZI KHAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 64 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DERA

GHAZI KHAN  , a
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town and
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district of
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British India, in the
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Punjab . In 1901 the town had a population of 21,700 . There are several handsome mosques in the native quarter . It commands the
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direct approaches to the Baluch highlands by Sakki Sarwar and Fort Monro . For many years past both the town and cantonment have been threatened by the erosion of the
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river
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Indus . The town was founded at the close of the 15th century and named after Ghazi Khan, son of Haji Khan, a Baluch chieftain, who after holding the country for the Langah sultans of Multan had made himself
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independent . Together with the two other deras (settlements), Dera Ismail Khan and Dera Fateh Khan, it gave its name to the territorial
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area locally and historically known as Derajat, which after many vicissitudes came into the possession of the British after the
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Sikh War, in 1849, and was divided into the two districts of Dera Ghazi Khan and Dera Ismail Khan . The DISTRICT OF DERA GHAZI KHAN contains an area of 5306 sq. m . The district is a long narrow
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strip of country, 198 m. in length, sloping gradually from the hills which form its western boundary to the river Indus on the east . Below the hills the country is high and arid, generally level, but some-times
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rolling in sandy undulations, and much intersected by hill torrents, 201 in number . With the exceptions of two, these streams dry up after the rains, and their influence is only felt for a few miles below the hills . The eastern portion of the district is at a level sufficiently low to benefit by the floods of the Indus .

A barren

tract intervenes between these zones, and is beyond the reach of the hill streams on the one hand and of the Indus on the other . Although liable to
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great extremes of temperature, and to a very scanty rainfall, the district is not unhealthy . The population in 1901 was 471,149, the great majority being Baluch Mahommedans . The
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principal exports are wheat and indigo . The only manufactures are for domestic use . There is no railway in the district, and only 29 M. of metalled road . The Indus, which is nowhere bridged within the district, is navigable by native boats . The
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geographical boundary between the
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Pathan and Baluch races in the hills nearly corresponds with the
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northern limit of the district . The frontier tribes on the Dera Ghazi Khan border include the Kasranis, Bozdars, Khosas, Lagharis, Khetvans, Gurchanis, Mazaris, Mariris and Bugtis . The chief of these are described under their
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separate names .

End of Article: DERA GHAZI KHAN
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