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History
Gilgit
has been dwelled for
about a thousand
years. Its strategic
location makes it
extremely important
in the history of
the subcontinent.
For been invaded by
different the
parties at times,
its culture varies
in customs and
religion. The early
inhabitants were the
animists, who were
replaced by the
Iranians,
introducing fire
worship in the
region. Then the
Hinduism followed
the Aryan invasion.
The Chinese have
also played an
important role in
the moulding of the
various customs in
the area, as since
the first century BC
it has been an
important
transactional
platform on the Silk
Route from China.
From the 4th to 11th
century AD, Gilgit
remained under the
Buddhist rule.
Gilgit and Yasin
together were then
called Little Bolor,
and Baltistan as
Great Bolor,
according to Chinese
Tang Annals.
The early 8th
century Gilgit
witnessed the
struggle of the
three powers of
China, Arabia, and
Tibet against each
other for control.
In 725, Tibet joined
the kingdoms of
Great and Little
Bolor, and brought
them under its
suzerainty.
From 747 to 751,
there was a Chinese
interlude. The
Chinese troops
swarmed across the
Boroghil and Dargot
passes and to Yasin,
and were later
driven back by the
Arabs Muslims from
the West.
Arab Muslim forces
entered Pakistan
from the south by
the sea, less than a
hundred years after
the death of the
prophet Mohammed in
632, also reaching
Xinjiyang in the
north by land.
Mohammed Bin Qasim
remained successful
in south, but the
northern invasion
repulsed. Kashmir
was a progressing
power at that time,
and the Tibetans
enrolled the
Kashmiris under a
strong unity in
order to keep the
Arab Muslims out of
the northern
Pakistan.
The Shins - European
Shina-speaking
people, invaded
Gilgit in the 10th
century. Shina
language, still the
most important
dialect spoken in
Gilgit, is
responsible for the
movement of the
native Burushaski
speakers to the
valleys of Hunza,
Nagar, and Yasin.
Mahmood Ghazni
invasion from
Afghanistan took
place in the 11th
century, seizing the
land from Hindus,
and conquering it
for the propagation
of Islam. At that
time, Gilgit was the
part of the powerful
independent mountain
stronghold of
Dardistan at that
time. The central
power gradually
faced a decline, and
resulted in the
formation of seven
small autonomous
domains. These were
Gilgit, Punial,
Ishokoman, Ghizar,
Yasin, Hunza, and
Nagar, situated
along the riversides
of Gilgit and Hunza.
These small realms,
spoke their own
languages, followed
their own customs,
and used to be at
war with each other.
After the 15th
century, most of the
local population was
turning to Islam. In
the 16th century,
the Sunni Pathans
started settling
here from Swat. And
before the 17th
century, the Shia
Muslims began their
shifting in
Baltistan.
In 1846, the British
appointed Gulab
Singh as the first
Maharaja of Kashmir,
putting the areas of
Ladakh, Baltistan,
and Gilgit under his
rule. However, the
Maharaja’s forces
could never silence
the repeated
campaigns held by
the Muslim tribesmen
in 1850s and 1860s
against the rule.
In 1877, the British
set up the Gilgit
agency, being
conscious about the
strategic importance
of the area for
being near to China
and Russia. It was
the most isolated
and the most
impractical outpost
of the British
Empire. The reasons
for the failure of
this agency were the
severe weather
conditions, heavy
snowfall covering
the area most of the
time of the year,
not allowing it to
serve its purpose _
to guard against the
possible Russian
thrust through the
mountains to
Kashmir.
The second agency
was set up in 1889,
when the route from
Srinagar via Astor
had improved, and
the Gilgit had also
established a
telegraphic link
with the other
areas. It offered
better working
conditions and
facilities, so
received a warm
welcome from the
British soldiers.
After that, a series
of campaigns started
arousing in order to
take control of the
surrounding
kingdoms. In 1891,
led by the Alergnon
Durand, they overran
Hunza, and in 1893,
strengthened the
fort at Chilas to
defend the new road
over the Babusar
Pass against the
Kohistani tribes.
In 1913, the British
formed a force of
600 Gilgit Scouts in
order to maintain
peace in the area,
and for guarding it
against any possible
invasion. The scouts
were mostly the sons
of royalty from the
seven kingdoms,
commanded by a
subedar major,
usually the brother
of one of the kings,
under the direction
of the political
agent. The Scout’s
bagpipe band wore
the Black Watch
tartan, and even
today, practices in
Chinnar Bagh near
the river. In 1935,
the airfield of the
area was built.
At Partition in
August 1947, when
the British India
was divided into the
Hindu-Majority
India, and the
Muslim-Majority
Pakistan, Gilgit and
Baltistan were
declared the
constitutional parts
of Jammu and
Kashmir. This
automatically made
Gilgit the legal
part of Pakistan.
Kashmir’s Maharaja,
Hari Singh, did not
join the areas to
either with Pakistan
or with India, and
the political agent
of Gilgit handed the
power over to a new
governor Ghansara
Singh. The Gilgit
Scouts were left in
the charge of Major
William Brown, a
British officer who
had volunteered to
see them through
Independence. While
the Hindus and
Muslims shifted
themselves to their
respective places in
India or Pakistan,
the Gilgities had no
other choice than to
remain in suspense
about their future.
At the Pathan
tribesmen’s invasion
from the NWFP to
Kashmir in October
declaring jihad,
Hari Singh escaped
to Delhi. On October
31st, Subedar Major
Babar Khan and
Mirzada Shah Khan
arrested Ghansara
Singh in Gilgit
under the order of
Major William Brown.
Gilgit was then
declared as ‘the
Independent Republic
of Gilgit’, which
later acceding to
Pakistan.
After the 15th
century, most of the
local population was
turning to Islam. In
the 16th century,
the Sunni Pathans
started settling
here from Swat. And
before the 17th
century, the Shia
Muslims began their
shifting in
Baltistan.
In 1846, the British
appointed Gulab
Singh as the first
Maharaja of Kashmir,
putting the areas of
Ladakh, Baltistan,
and Gilgit under his
rule. However, the
Maharaja’s forces
could never silence
the repeated
campaigns held by
the Muslim tribesmen
in 1850s and 1860s
against the rule.
In 1877, the British
set up the Gilgit
agency, being
conscious about the
strategic importance
of the area for
being near to China
and Russia. It was
the most isolated
and the most
impractical outpost
of the British
Empire. The reasons
for the failure of
this agency were the
severe weather
conditions, heavy
snowfall covering
the area most of the
time of the year,
not allowing it to
serve its purpose _
to guard against the
possible Russian
thrust through the
mountains to
Kashmir.
The second agency
was set up in 1889,
when the route from
Srinagar via Astor
had improved, and
the Gilgit had also
established a
telegraphic link
with the other
areas. It offered
better working
conditions and
facilities, so
received a warm
welcome from the
British soldiers.
After that, a series
of campaigns started
arousing in order to
take control of the
surrounding
kingdoms. In 1891,
led by the Alergnon
Durand, they overran
Hunza, and in 1893,
strengthened the
fort at Chilas to
defend the new road
over the Babusar
Pass against the
Kohistani tribes.
In 1913, the British
formed a force of
600 Gilgit Scouts in
order to maintain
peace in the area,
and for guarding it
against any possible
invasion. The scouts
were mostly the sons
of royalty from the
seven kingdoms,
commanded by a
subedar major,
usually the brother
of one of the kings,
under the direction
of the political
agent. The Scout’s
bagpipe band wore
the Black Watch
tartan, and even
today, practices in
Chinnar Bagh near
the river. In 1935,
the airfield of the
area was built.
At Partition in
August 1947, when
the British India
was divided into the
Hindu-Majority
India, and the
Muslim-Majority
Pakistan, Gilgit and
Baltistan were
declared the
constitutional parts
of Jammu and
Kashmir. This
automatically made
Gilgit the legal
part of Pakistan.
Kashmir’s Maharaja,
Hari Singh, did not
join the areas to
either with Pakistan
or with India, and
the political agent
of Gilgit handed the
power over to a new
governor Ghansara
Singh. The Gilgit
Scouts were left in
the charge of Major
William Brown, a
British officer who
had volunteered to
see them through
Independence. While
the Hindus and
Muslims shifted
themselves to their
respective places in
India or Pakistan,
the Gilgities had no
other choice than to
remain in suspense
about their future.
At the Pathan
tribesmen’s invasion
from the NWFP to
Kashmir in October
declaring jihad,
Hari Singh escaped
to Delhi. On October
31st, Subedar Major
Babar Khan and
Mirzada Shah Khan
arrested Ghansara
Singh in Gilgit
under the order of
Major William Brown.
Gilgit was then
declared as ‘the
Independent Republic
of Gilgit’, which
later acceding to
Pakistan.
1948 was the year of
war between India
and Pakistan over
the Kashmir issue.
At its end in 1949,
the Government of
Pakistan issued a
proclamation
separating the
Northern Areas of
Jammu and Kashmir
from Azad Kashmir,
placing them under
the administration
of the Federal
Government, naming
them as the Northern
Areas of Pakistan.
Until 1974 the seven
domains around
Gilgit and Hunza
rivers remained more
or less autonomous,
with the mirs or
rajas having the
control of
administration,
police, and justice.
Afterwards, the
Pakistani government
incorporated these
into Pakistan.
Since 1975, Pakistan
has kept the
Northern Areas under
tight federal
control. The main
reasons are their
strategic location
adjoining China and
the use of the
Karakoram Highway
for keeping an eye
upon the movements
of Chinese nuclear
material and
missiles.
Despite the
controversial
political issues,
Gilgit has also been
under certain
religious tensions
between Shia and
Sunni Muslims. In
1998, The Sunnis of
Chilas attacked the
Shias of Gilgit,
killing hundreds of
people. The main
issue was that the
Shias finished the
month of Ramadan a
day ahead of Sunnis.
The Sunni Muslims
also attacked the
Shias in 1989, again
causing several
deaths.
In 2001, the Sunnis
and Shias clashed
once again. The
reason was the
demand of the Sunni
Muslims, that the
Shia students should
study the books
written by the Sunni
religious scholars.
As the Agra Summit
was about to be
held, the army took
control over the
area, cutting off
all the
communications
between the area and
the rest of the
Pakistan. The reason
of this cut-off was
to conceal the
inter-country
quarrels from the
rest of the world,
because it might
have affected
Pakistan’s position
in the Summit in
case they were out,
as Gilgit was
already a
controversial area
regarding its
association with
Kashmir _ one of the
vital topics of the
Summit.
The area of Gilgit
has been run under
the federal
government of
Pakistan, but still
the it has not given
the locals their
civil or even basic
human rights. The
reason is that the
Pakistani government
itself is unsure
about the future
status of Kashmir,
whether it will get
totally independent
or will it become
the part of
Pakistan. Due to the
reason, even a
proper
infrastructure is
missing, educational
and healthcare is
far ahead. The
Gilgities are still
waiting for having a
representation in
the legislature, and
despite being the
legal part of Azad
Kashmir; they have
never ever seen the
face of the Azad
Kashmiri Prime
Minister. |