Chitral,
or Chitrāl, is the
name of a town
35°52′52″N,
71°47′53″E , valley,
river, district, and
former princely
state in the former
Malakand Division of
the Northwest
Frontier Province of
Pakistan.
Chitral Town,
capital of the
Chitral District, is
situated on the west
bank of the Chitral
(or Kunar) River.
The town is at the
foot of Tirich Mir,
the highest peak of
the Hindu Kush,
7,708 m or 25,289 ft
high. It has a
population of about
20,000, while the
District (of 14,833
km˛ or 5,727 sq mi),
has a population of
about 300,000. The
altitude of the
valley is about
1,100 m or 3,700 ft.
Geography
The easiest access
to Chitral is in the
southwest along the
Chitral/Kunar valley
towards Jalalabad;
this route is open
all year and
provides direct
access to Kabul.
However the
Pakistan-Afghanistan
border prevents this
being used as an
internal route to
Peshawar and the
south.
The other routes are
over mountain
passes. To the
south, the Lowari
Pass (3,200 m or
10,499 ft) leads 365
km (227 mi) to the
region of Peshawar;
this is now a road
road. In the north,
the easiest route
during summer (it is
closed by snow in
the winter), and the
only one which
allows the use of
pack animals, runs
over the Broghol
Pass (3,798 m or
12,460 ft) to
Afghanistan's Wakhan
Corridor. To the
east, there is a 405
km (252 mi) route to
Gilgit over the
3,719 m (12,201 ft)
Shandur Pass. And in
the west, the Dorah
Pass provides an
additional route to
Afghanistan. The
territory is home to
rare falcons and the
snow leopard, and is
cut off by snow from
the rest of the
country for six
months a year.
Population
The main tribe, the
Khos, speak Khowar
(or Chitrali), one
of the Dardic
languages, which is
also spoken in parts
of Yasin, Gilgit and
Swat. Pashto is also
spoken and
understood by few in
the city. Chitral is
known for the famous
Kalash tribe that
resides in three
remote valleys west
of Ayun, which is
ten miles down from
Chitral town. The
culture is
conservative
Islamic. Women are
nearly invisible in
the culture, except
to their male
relatives and other
women. They do not
walk the streets of
town, so men or
children do the
shopping. Travel
requires the company
of a close male
relative and
sometimes the
wearing of a burqa.
Women aren't allowed
to visit the mosque,
so they pray in
their homes.
History
A British garrison,
sent from Gilgit to
oversee the smooth
transition of power
to the heir apparent
after a ruler was
murdered, was
besieged in Chitral
Fort for over a
month in 1895. |