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See also: Pathan tribe on the Dera See also: Ismail Khan border of the See also: North-west Frontier Province of See also: India
.
The See also: Sherani Agency occupies an See also: area of 1500 sq. in. and had a population in 1901 of 12,371
.
The Sheranis occupy the See also: principal portion of the See also: mountain known as the Takht-i-Suliman and the country thence eastward down to the border of Dera Ismail Khan See also: district
.
They are bounded on the north by the See also: Gomal Pass, and beyond that by the Mahsud Waziris; on the See also: south by the Ustaranas and Zmarais; and on the west by the Haripals, Kakars and See also: Mandu Khels
.
Between the Sherani country and the See also: British border lie several small mountain ridges, across which the three chief passes are the Zarakni or See also: Sheikh Haidar
.
the Draband and the Chandwan
.
The Sheranis are generally of middling stature, thin, but See also: hardy and active
.
They have bold features, high cheek-bones, and their general appearance is See also: wild and manly
.
Their dress consists of a coarse black blanket tied round the See also: waist, and another thrown over the shoulders
.
Their chief occupation is See also: agriculture, but they carry on an extensive See also: trade in the autumn months in Dera Ismail Khan district
.
The Sherani tribe and country are divided into two well-defined branches called Bargha and Largha, or the High-lands and the Lowlands, the inhabitants being called respectively Barghawals and Larghawals
.
The See also: Highlands are on the See also: side of See also: Zhob, the Lowlands on the side of the Derajat, the dividing See also: line being generally the See also: watershed and higher peaks of the Takht-i-Suliman range of mountains
.
The See also: physical configuration of the country makes the separation so See also: complete that the two tribal divisions See also: act independently of each other
.
After the Zhob expedition of 1890 the question of boundaries between the See also: Punjab and See also: Baluchistan came up for See also: settlement, and the See also: government decided that Bargha should remain with Baluchistan and Largha with the Punjab
.
The Gomal See also: river from Kundar-Domandi to Kajuri-Kach is the boundary between Baluchistan and See also: Waziristan, as well as between the respective provinces
.
In 1931 these frontier districts were transferred from the Punjab to the North-west Frontier Province
.
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The place near drabun may please be corrected as chudwan.
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