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Gilgit
Gilgit (Urdu: گلگت, Hindi: गिलगित) is the
capital city of the Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan. Gilgit City
forms a tehsil of Gilgit, within Gilgit District. Its ancient name was Sargin,
later to be known as Gilit, and it is still called Gilit or Sargin-Gilit by
local people. In the Burushaski language, it is named Geelt and in Khowar it is
called Gilt. Ghallata is considered its name in ancient Sanskrit literature. Gilgit City
is one of the two major hubs in the Northern Areas for mountaineering
expeditions to the Karakoram and other the peaks in the Himalayas,
the other hub being Skardu. Gilgit has an area of 38,000 square kilometres
(14,700 sq mi). The region is significantly mountainous, lying on the foothills
of the Karakoram mountains, and has an average altitude of 1,500 metres (4,900
ft). It is drained by the Indus
River, which rises in the
neighbouring regions of Ladakh and Baltistan.
Gilgit was an important city on the Silk Road, along which
Buddhism was spread from South Asia to the rest of Asia.
The Dards and Chinas appear in many of the old Pauranic
lists of peoples who lived in the region, with the former also mentioned in
Ptolemy's accounts of the region. Two famous travellers, Faxian and Xuanzang,
traversed Gilgit according to their accounts.
Early
history
The former rulers had the title of Ra, and there is reason
to suppose that they were at one time Hindus, but for the last five centuries
and a half they have been Mohammedans. The names of the Hindu Ras have been
lost, with the exception of the last of their number, Shri Buddutt. Tradition
relates that he was killed by a Mohammedan adventurer, who married his daughter
and founded a new dynasty, since called Trakhàn, from a celebrated Ra named
Trakhan, who reigned about the commencement of the fourteenth century. The
previous rulers—of whom Shri Buddutt was the last—were called Shahreis.
Trakhàn
Dynasty
Gilgit was ruled for centuries by the local Trakhàn
Dynasty, which ended about 1810 with the death of Raja Abas, the last Trakhàn
Raja.
The rulers of Hunza and Nager also claim origin with the
Trakhàn dynasty. They claim descent from a heroic Kayani Prince of Persia, Azur
Jamshid (also known as Shamsher), who secretly married the daughter of the king
Shri Badat. She conspired with him to overthrow her cannibal father. Sri
Badat's faith is theorised as Hindu by some and Buddhist by others. However,
considering the region's Buddhist heritage, with the most recent influence
being Islam, the most likely preceding influence of the region is Buddhism.
Though the titular Sri and the name Badat denotes a Hindu origin of the this
ruler.
Prince Azur Jamshid succeeded in overthrowing King Badat
who was known as Adam Khor (literally man-eater), often demanding a child a day
from his subjects, his demise is still celebrated to this very day by locals in
traditional annual celebrations. In the beginning of the new year, where a
Juniper procession walks along the river, in memory of chasing the cannibal
king Sri Badat away.
Azur Jamshid abdicated after 16 years of rule in favour of
his wife Nur Bakht Khatùn until their son and heir Garg, grew of age and
assumed the title of Raja and ruled, for 55 years. The dynasty flourished under
the name of the Kayani dynasty until 1421 when Raja Torra Khan assumed
rulership. He ruled as a memorable king until 1475. He distinguished his family
line from his step brother Shah Rais Khan (who fled to the king of Badakshan
and with who's help he gained Chitral from Raja Torra Khan), as the now-known
dynastic name of Trakhàn. The descendants of Shah Rais Khan were known as the
Ra'issiya Dynasty.
1800s
The period of greatest prosperity was probably under the
Shin Ras, whose rule seems to have been peaceable and settled. The whole population,
from the Ra to the poorest subject lived by agriculture. According to
tradition, Shri Buddutt's rule extended over Chitral, Yassin, Tangir, Darel,
Chilas, Gor, Astor, Hunza, Nagar and Haramosh all of which were held by
tributary princes of the same family.
The area had been a flourishing tract but prosperity was
destroyed by warfare over the next fifty years, and by the great flood of 1841
in which the river Indus was blocked by a
landslip below the Hatu Pir and the valley was turned into a lake. After the
death of Abas, Sulaiman Shah, raja of Yasin, conquered Gilgit. Then, Azad Khan,
raja of Punial, killed Sulaiman Shah, taking Gilgit; then Tair Shah, raja of
Buroshall (Nagar), took Gilgit and killed Azad Khan. Tair Shah's son Shah Sakandar
inherited, only to be killed by Gaur Rahman, raja of Yasin of the Khushwakhte
Dynasty, when he took Gilgit. Then in 1842, Shah Sakandar's brother, Karim
Khan, expelled Gaur Rahman with the support of a Sikh army from Kashmir. The Sikh general, Nathu Shah, left garrison
troops and Karim Khan ruled until Gilgit was ceded to Gulab Singh of Jammu and Kashmir in
1846 by the Treaty of Amritsar, and Dogra troops replaced the Sikh in Gilgit.
Nathu Shah and Karim Khan both transferred their
allegiance to Gulab Singh, continuing local administration. When Hunza attacked
in 1848, both of them were killed. Gilgit fell to the Hunza and their Yasin and
Punial allies, but was soon reconquered by Gulab Singh's Dogra troops. With the
support of Gaur Rahman, Gilgit's inhabitants drove their new rulers out in an
uprising in 1852. Gaur Rahman then ruled Gilgit until his death in 1860, just
before new Dogra forces from Ranbir Singh, son of Gulab Singh, captured the
fort and town. The city was briefly held by Mehtar Aman-ul-Mulk of Chitral for
a few months in 1876, eventually the Mehtar agreed to leave Gilgit after
Maharaja Ranbir Singh agreed to pay him an annual subsidy and the rule of Jammu
was restored. Gilgit came under British rule in 1889, when it was unified with
neighbouring Nagar and Hunza in the Gilgit Agency.
In 1877, in order to guard against the advance of Russia, the British Government, acting as the
suzerain power of Kashmir, established the
Gilgit Agency. The Agency was re-established under control of the British
Resident in Jammu and Kashmir.
It comprised the Gilgit Wazarat; the State of Hunza and Nagar; the Punial Jagir; the
Governorships of Yasin, Kuh-Ghizr and Ishkoman, and Chilas.
In 1935, the British demanded Jammu and Kashmir to lease them Gilgit town
plus most of the Gilgit Agency and the hill-states Hunza, Nagar, Yasin and
Ishkoman for 60 years. Maharaja Hari Singh had no choice but to acquiesce. The
leased region was then treated as part of British India, administered by a
Political Agent at Gilgit responsible to Delhi,
first through the Resident in Jammu and Kashmir
and later a British Agent in Peshawar.
Jammu and Kashmir State no longer kept troops in Gilgit and a mercenary
force, the Gilgit Scouts, was recruited with British officers and paid for by Delhi. In April 1947, Delhi decided to formally retrocede the leased areas to
Hari Singh’s Jammu and Kashmir
State as of August 15,
1947. The transfer was to formally take place on August 1.
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