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KHYBER PASS , the most important of the passes which See also: lead from See also: Afghanistan into See also: India
.
It is a narrow See also: defile winding between cliffs of shale and See also: limestone 600 to l000 ft. high, stretching up to more lofty mountains behind
.
No other pass in the See also: world has possessed such strategic importance or retains so many historic associations as this gateway to the plains of India
.
It has probably seen Persian and See also: Greek, Seljuk, Tatar, Mongol and See also: Durani conquerors, with the hosts of See also: Alexander the
See also: Great, Iblahmud of See also: Ghazni, Jenghiz Khan, Timur, See also: Baber, See also: Nadir Shah, Ahmed Shah, and numerous other See also: warrior chiefs pass and repass through its rocky defiles during a See also: period of 2000 years
.
The See also: mountain barrier which separates the See also: Peshawar plains from the Afghan See also: highlands differs in many respects from the mountain barrier which intervenes between the See also: Indus plains and the See also: plateau farther See also: south
.
To the south this barrier consists of a series of flexures folded parallel to the See also: river, through which the plateau drainage breaks down in transverse lines forming gorges and clefts as it cuts through successive ridges
.
West of Peshawar the strike of the mountain systems is roughly from west to See also: east, and this formation is maintained with more or less regularity as far south as the Tochi River and See also: Waziristan
.
Almost immediately west of Peshawar, and stretching along the same parallel of latitude from the meridian of See also: Kabul to within ten See also: miles of the Peshawar cantonment, is the great central range of the Safed Koh, which forms throughout its long, straight See also: line of rugged peaks the See also: southern See also: wall, or See also: water-See also: divide, of the Kabul River See also: basin
.
About the meridian of 71 E. it forks, sending off to the See also: north-east what is locally known as a spur to the Kabul River, but which is geographically only See also: part of that stupendous water-divide which hedges in the See also: Kunar and See also: Chitral valleys, and, under the name of the Shandur Range, unites with the See also: Hindu Kush near the See also: head of the Taghdumbash Pamir
.
The Kabul River breaks through this See also: northern spur of the Safed Koh; and in breaking through it is forced to the northward in a curved channel or trough, deeply sunk in the mountains between terrific cliffs and precipices, where its narrow waterway affords no foothold to See also: man or beast for,many miles
.
To reach the Kabul River within Afghan territory it is necessary to pass over this water-divide; and the Khyber stream, flowing down from the pass at Landi Kotal to a point in the plains opposite See also: Jamrud, 9 M
.
W. of Peshawar, affords the opportunity
.
Pursuing the See also: main road from Peshawar to Kabul, the fort of Jamrud, which commands the See also: British end of the Khyber Pass, lies some 11 m
.
W. of Peshawar
.
The road leads through a barren stony plain, cut up by water-courses and infested by all the worst cut-throats in the Peshawar See also: district
.
Some three miles beyond Jamrud the road enters the mountains at an opening called Shadi Bagiar, and here the Khyber proper begins
.
The See also: highway runs for a See also: short distance through the See also: bed of a See also: ravine, and then joins the road made by Colonel Mackeson in 1839-1842, until it ascends on the See also: left-See also: hand See also: side to a plateau called Shagai
.
From here can be seen the fort of See also: Ali Masjid, which commands the centre of the pass, and which has been the scene of more than one famous siege
.
Still going westward the road turns to the right, and by an easy zigzag descends to the river of Ali Masjid, and runs along its See also: bank
.
The new road along this cliff was made by the British during the Second Afghan War (1879-8o), and here is the narrowest part of the Khyber, not more than 15 ft. broad, with the Rhotas See also: hill on the right fully 2000 ft. overhead
.
Some three miles farther on the valley widens, and on either side lie the hamlets and some sixty towers of the Zakka Khel Afridis
.
Then comes the Loargi
See also: Shinwari plateau, some seven miles in length and three in its widest part, ending at Landi Kotal, where is another British fort, which closes this end of the Khyber and overlooksthe plains of Afghanistan
.
After leaving Landi Kotal the great Kabul highway passes between low hills, until it debouches on the Kabul River and leads to Dakka
.
The whole of the Khyber Pass from end to end lies within the country of the Afridis, and is now recognized as under British control
.
From Shadi Bagiar on the east to Landi Kotal on the west is about 20 M. in a straight line . The Khyber has been adopted by the British as the main road to Kabul, but its difficulties (before they were overcome by British See also: engineers) were such that it was never so regarded by former rulers of India
.
The old road to India left the Kabul River near its junction with the Kunar, and crossed the great divide between the Kunar valley and See also: Bajour; then it turned southwards to the plains
.
During the first Afghan War the Khyber was the scene of many skirmishes with the Afridis and some disasters to the British troops
.
In See also: July 1839 Colonel See also: Wade captured the fortress of Ali Masjid
.
In 1842, when See also: Jalalabad was blockaded, Colonel Moseley was sent to occupy the same fort, but was compelled to evacuate it after a few days owing to scarcity of provisions
.
In See also: April of the same See also: year it was reoccupied by General See also: Pollock in his advance to Kabul
.
It was at Ali Masjid that See also: Sir Neville See also: Chamberlain's friendly
See also: mission to the amir Shere Ali was stopped in 1878, thus causing the second Afghan War; and on the outbreak of that war Ali Masjid was captured by Sir See also: Samuel See also: Browne
.
The treaty which closed the war in May 1879 left the Khyber tribes under British control
.
From that
See also: time the pass was protected by jezailchis See also: drawn from the See also: Afridi tribe, who were paid a subsidy by the British See also: government
.
For 18 years, from 1879 onward, Colonel R
.
See also: Warburton controlled the Khyber, and for the greater part of that time secured its safety; but his See also: term of office came to an end synchronously with the See also: wave of fanaticism which swept along the north-west border of India during 1897
.
The Afridis were persuaded by their mullahs to attack the pass, which they themselves had guaranteed . The British government were warned of the intended See also: movement, but only withdrew the British See also: officers belonging to the Khyber Rifles, and left the pass to its See also: fate
.
The Khyber Rifles, deserted by their officers, made a See also: half-hearted resistance to their See also: fellow-tribesmen, and the pass See also: fell into the hands of the Afridis, and remained in their possession for some months
.
This was the chief cause of the See also: Tirah Expedition of 1897
.
The Khyber Rifles were afterwards strengthened, and divided into two battalions commanded by four British officers
.
See Eighteen Years in the Khyber, by Sir Robert Warburton (19oo); See also: Indian Borderland, by Sir T
.
Holdich (1901)
.
(T
.
H
.
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