
Akbar's Fort at Attock
'Attock' (
Urdu: 'اٹک') is a city located in the northern border of the
Punjab province of
Pakistan, and also a border district on the river
Indus. The district is named after Attock Kurdh, the ancient town of the same name. It lies at the end of a natural corridor formed by the
Kabul River where it flows into the
Indus. Historically and strategically, Attock is considered the gateway to
Central Asia[1].
Geography and Climate
Attock is located at '33° 46' 20N' Latitude and '72° 22' 6E' Longitude. It has an altitude of 348 metres (1145 feet). The average annual rainfall in the district is 783mm (30.83 inches).
[ Falling Rain Genomics - Attock City]
Attock District has a climate with very hot summers and very cold winters. The maximum temperature reaches 40°C. The northern part is more humid with a relatively moderate climate as compared to the southern part.
The river
Indus flows on the western and northern sides of the district; the
Haro River comes from
Haripur and passes through the Attock tehsil on the north of the
Kala Chitta Range. The land is mainly hills, plateaus, and dissected plains. The area north of the
Haro River is a
flood plain with fertile soil.
Population
The once vibrant
Urdu speaking population of this city has declined gradually and now only a few hundred native speakers of
Urdu reside here.
History
Attock Khurd (the old city) has a rich history. The great mathematician and grammarian
PÄṇini (पाणिन), who wrote Aá¹£á¹ÄdhyÄyÄ«, the oldest surviving
Sanskrit grammar, was born near Attock in ShalÄtura, modern Lahur, on the right bank of
Indus River in the ancient
Kambojan/
Gandharan territory in 520
B.C.E.. In those days Attock was located on the high road, the
Uttarapatha, the principal route of international commerce and communication between Persia and China.
Attock then finds its name in the history books dating to the rule of
Chandragupta's grandson
Ashoka, the
Buddhist Emperor of upper India, who had converted to the Buddhist faith. In the
Edicts of Ashoka, set in stone, some of them written in Greek, it is declared that Greek populations within his realm also had converted to Buddhism:
:"Here in the king's domain among the Greeks, the Kambojas, the Nabhakas, the Nabhapamkits, the Bhojas, the Pitinikas, the Andhras and the Palidas, everywhere people are following Beloved-of-the-Gods' instructions in Dharma."
::—Rock Edict Nb13 (S. Dhammika).
In the spring of 326
B.C.E. Alexander III of Macedon passed into the Punjab (at Ohind, 16 m. above Attock), using a bridge over the
Indus constructed by
Perdiccas and
Hephaestion[2]. The region became part of the Kingdom of Ederatides the Greek or
Indo-Greek Kingdom, who extended his power over western Punjab. The Indo-Greek kings held the country after him (until about 80
B.C.E.) until its invasion by the
Indo-scythians.
When the Chinese pilgrim
Hiuen Tsang visited the district in 630
C.E. and again in 643
C.E., Buddhism was rapidly declining. The
Brahman revival, to which India owes its present form of Hinduism, had already set in the early years of the
fifth century, and must have been at its height in the days of Hiuen Tsang. From that time the light afforded by the records of the Chinese pilgrims fades. A long period of darkness swallows up the years that intervened before the Muslim invasions and the beginning of continuous history.
The country was under the dominion of the Hindu kings of
Kashmir, and remained so till the end of the
9th century. After that, the district became part of the Kingdom of the rulers of
Kabul, Samanta Deva and his successors (more accurately designated as the "Hindu
Shahis of Kabul"), who remained in possession till the times of
Mahmud Ghaznavi. With the passage of time, the
Gakhars became strong in the hills to the east, but their dominion never extended beyond the
Margalla pass and the Khari Moorat.
Akbar the Great built 'Attock Fort' from
1581 -
1583 under the supervision of Khawaja Shamsuddin Khawafi. It saw countless battles and skirmishes between the
Sikhs and the
Afghans in later years. When
Ranjit Singh sought to include the
Sikh states south of the
Sutlej within his jurisdiction, in
1808 the heads of these states sought and obtained the protection of the British, whose territories had now extended to their neighbourhood. The British sought alliances with Lahore as well as with Kabul, for protection against supposed
French designs on India. A British envoy,
Charles Metcalfe, was received by Ranjit at
Kasur in
1809 and the alliance was formed. In
1813 Ranjit Singh secured Attock Fort as well as the
Koh-i-Noor diamond[3], consolidating his control over the
Punjab.
Attock District was constituted in 1904. The district was named Campbellpur (Campbell town) - after Sir Campbell who laid the foundation stone of Campbellpur City in
1908 a few kilometres south-east of old Attock Khurd town. Although Pakistan had become independent from Britain in 1947 it wasn't until 1978 that the name Attock was adopted for the city.
Attock's first oil well was drilled in Khore in 1946. It has an oil and gas field Dakhini near Jand. One-third of Pakistan's oil is produced here
[4].
Organisation
Attock district covers an area of 6857 square kilometres and is divided into six
tehsils (sub-districts).
#
Attock
#
Jand
#
Fateh Jang
#
Pindi Gheb
#
Hassanabdal
#
Hazro
Prominent areas in the district are Attock,
Jand,
Fatehjang,
Pindigheb,
Gondal,
Hazro,
Chach,
Chhachh,
Ghorghushti,
Kamra,
Madrotah,
Sanjwal,
Daurdad,
Attock Khurd,
Attock Fort,
Kala Chitta,
Attock Cantt,
Shadi Khan,
Mukhad,
Sarwana,
Malhoo,
Nartopa,
Bangi,
Daman,
Kund National Park,
Thatta,
Mithail, Basal.KISRAN
See also
★
Attock District
★
Attock News Website
★
Attock Police
THIS IS NECESSORY THAT IF YOU VIEWING MAJOR CITIES IN ATTOCK DISTRICT SO YOU SHOULD ALSO REMEMBER THE VILLAGE "KISRAN".Which is located 65 km from attock city,some 12 km from famouse kalachita range,27 seven km from jand,40 km from fateh jang and 30 km from PINDIGHEB.This village have some distinctions.1-this village is the 11th big village of the district.2-this iaabout 1000years old.3-this is second cantt of british government in district attock and above these all people off this village fighted the independance war in 1857 in 143 people martyred inthat.(mahnama HAKAYET)
References
1. Adil Najam, "When Kabul comes to Attock", Pervaiz Munir Alvi, Travel & Tourism, History and Economy & Development
2. M. A. Foucher, ''Notes sur la géographie ancienne du Gandhara (commentaire a un chapitre de Hiuen-tsang", ''Bulletin de l´École Française d´Extrême-Orient,'' I, No. 4 (Oct., 1901), pp. 322-369; cited, ''Encyclopedia Britannica'', 1911.
3. ''Encyclopedia Britannica, 1911,'' "Punjab".
4. Attock District Home Page