Introduction | Land and Climate | Culture | History
I INTRODUCTION Punjab (historic region), historical region in the northwestern part of the subcontinent of India. The region is now divided into the province of Punjab in Pakistan and the states of Punjab and Haryāna in India.
Introduction | Land and Climate | Culture | History
II
LAND
AND CLIMATE
The regions name means "land of
five rivers" and comes from the five tributaries of the Indus river that
traverse the Punjab: the Jhelum, Chenāb, Rāvi, Beās, and Sutlej. The rivers
floodplains, generally running from northeast to southwest, are the major
topographical feature of the region. The Salt Hills border the Punjab on the
north, and to the northeast lie the Siwālik foothills of the Himalayas. East of
the Punjab flows the Yamuna River of the Ganges River system. To the south and
west, the Punjab touches the Thar Desert. Also to the west is the Indus River.
Temperatures in the region average 34°C (94°F) in June, often exceeding 45°C
(113°F), but drop to an average of 12°C (54°F) in January. Annual rainfall
across the region averages about 500 mm (20 in). About 70 percent of the total
falls during the monsoon season, from June through September. In winter,
cyclones from the west bring rain to the northern part of the region.
Introduction | Land and Climate | Culture | History
III CULTURE The Punjab region has a rich cultural tradition. Punjabi literature dates to the Islamic poetry of Attar, a 13th-century follower of Sufism. Romantic folk ballads such as the Hir Ranjha, Sohni Mahiwal, and Mirza Sahiban have remained popular in the region. Giddhaa dance that originated in the regionand both Sikh and Muslim musical forms are still common across the Punjab.
Introduction | Land and Climate | Culture | History
IV
HISTORY
People have inhabited the Punjab
since the late Stone Age.
The Indus Valley Civilization,
the earliest known civilization of South Asia included a city at Harappā, which
dates to about 2000 BC. Between 2000 BC and 1000 BC, Aryan-speaking tribes
migrated into the Punjab from the northwest. Early inhabitants of the region are
described in ancient scriptures written in Vedic, an early form of Sanskrit, and
in some Indian epics. The battle between the Kauravas and Pandavas, recorded in
the Indian epic poem the Mahabharata, took place at Kurukshetra, which
lies in eastern Punjab near the city of Delhi.
Beginning with the invading Greeks in 327 BC, political and cultural influences from the northwest have repeatedly affected the Punjab region. Hindu conquerors of the Punjab from northern India included members of the Gupta Dynasty, in the 4th and 5th centuries AD, and the Shahiyas in the 8th and 9th centuries. The Ghaznavids and the Ghurids, Muslim invaders from Afghanistan, conquered the Punjab in the 11th century. The region subsequently fell within the early Muslim empires of northern India.
From the 13th to 16th centuries,
the Punjab was devastated by periodic invasions of Mongol tribes and the Turkic
Tatar tribes, including an invasion by Tamerlane,
who sacked Delhi in 1398. In 1526 Babur, founder of the Mughal dynasty and a
direct descendant of Tamerlane, defeated the sultan of Delhi at the Battle of
Pānīpat. Under Baburs dynasty, which held sway for some 250 years, the Punjab
was split among its Lahore, Multān, and Delhi subahs (provinces).
An important influence in the history of the Punjab region was the development of the Sikh religion (see Sikhs). Influenced by both Hindu and Muslim thought, the Sikh religion started with the teachings of the guru Nanak during the 15th century. In the 18th century the Sikhs, the Moguls, and the Afghans all struggled for control of the Punjab. By 1765 many independent Sikh kingdoms had been established in the region. These kingdoms were later welded into a single powerful state, called the Sikh Kingdom of the Punjab, founded by Indian warrior Ranjit Singh. The kingdom, which included Kashmīr and eastern Afghanistan, began to unravel after Singhs death, and the British annexed it to India after the Anglo-Sikh wars (1845-1846 and 1848-1849).
Despite its historic and
geographic unity, the Punjab was partitioned between India and Pakistan when
India gained independence from Britain in 1947. Under the terms of the Indian
Independence Act, the Punjab was divided into the East Punjab province of the
Union of India and the West Punjab province of Pakistan. The partition cut the
Sikh community in half, causing violent conflicts. As a result of the fighting,
large numbers of Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs abandoned their homes in the Punjab
and emigrated to friendly territory. Partition also disrupted irrigation
systems, leading to bitter disputes over water distribution between the two
countries. These conflicts ended in 1960, when India and Pakistan signed the
Indus Waters Treaty.
The Pakistani portion of the Punjab region was merged in 1955 into the province of West Pakistan, and in 1970 it was reconstituted as Punjab province. In 1956 the Indian portion was merged with other provinces to form the present state of Punjab. For the subsequent history of Punjab state, see Punjab (state, India).
Introduction | Land and Climate | Culture | History
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