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🇵🇰 History of Punjabis (3 Viewers)

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ghazi

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Awans

They are regarded as being of either Arab or Rajput origin, and dwell within every province of the country in fairly significant numbers, other than Gilgit-Baltistan. The tribe itself would have likely originally formed in its current state in northern Punjab, making them one of the few tribes of the Punjab that can be counted as at least somewhat native in origin.

The Awans have historically been land-owners and soldiers, with a strong martial history and a good representation among the Pakistani armed forces. French political scientist Christophe Jaffrelot (who specialises in Pakistan and Hindustan) had this to say about them:

"The Awan deserve close attention, because of their historical importance and, above all, because they settled in the west, right up to the edge of Baluchi and Pashtun territory. Legend has it that their origins go back to Imam Ali and his second wife, Hanafiya. Historians describe them as valiant warriors and farmers who imposed their supremacy on their close kin the Janjuas in part of the Salt Range, and established large colonies all along the Indus to Sind, and a densely populated centre not far from Lahore."

Famous Awans would include Major Muhammad Akram Shaheed (Nishan-e-Haider recipient) and Major General Amir Faisal Alavi (FGO of the SSG).

Awan History - Awan History
 

ghazi

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Rajputs

The Rajputs are a famous tribe that exist across Pakistan and Hindustan. They are well known for being good soldiers as well as fierce resistors to any attempt to conquer them.

In terms of origin, the Rajputs are widely regarded as an amalgamation of many of the different ruling clans across Hindustan during the Islamic era. They are closely related to Jats and Gujjars, sharing many clans with them (e.g the Tors).

There have been many famous Rajputs throughout history, such as Jam Nizammudin (Sultan of Sindh), Shabbir Sharif (Nishan-e-Haider recipient), Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto (Pakistani PM), Isa Khan (Bengali chieftain), etc. The Rajputs have also founded many dynasties throughout history, such as the Samma dynasty or Muzaffarid dynasty. They also make up a significant proportion of the Pakistani military.

Rajput - Wikipedia
Rajput | History, Significance, & Facts
 

ghazi

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Tribes and clans of the Pothohar Plateau

The Potohar plateau, or sometimes pronounced Pothohar Plateau, is a large region of plateau situated in northern Punjab, Pakistan. It is bounded on the east by the Jhelum River, on the west by the Indus River, on the north by the Kala Chitta Range and the Margalla Hills, and on the south by the Salt Range[. The terrain is undulating. The Kala Chitta Range rises to an average height of 450-900 metres (3,000 ft) and extends for about 72 kilometres (45 mi). The Swaan River starts from nearby Murree and ends near Kalabagh in the Indus river. Sakesar is the highest mountain of this region. The region roughly covers the modern day Punjab districts of Attock, Chakwal, Jhelum and Rawalpindi and the Islamabad Capital Territory.
A-map-of-Punjab-Province-Pakistan-showing-Potohar-Plateau-consisting-of-four-Districts_W640.jpg

Map of the Pothohar Region
The Pothohar region is home to a number of tribal groupings, many of whom occupy distinct tracts. The author of the Jhelum District Gazetteer gave the following account of the tribal groupings at the beginning of the 20th Century.
The population is generally clearly sub-divided into tribes (quoms or zats), having a common name and generally supposed to be descended from a traditional common ancestor by agnatic descent, i.e through males only. Some of the tribes are very homogenous, as for instance the Awans, who number 16 percent of the total population. Others again, such as the Jat, who are returned as numbering 12 percent of the population, are a loose congeries of clans than a compact tribe
The author further goes on to say:
Almost every tribe is again sub-divided into clans (muhi), or smaller groups of agnates, distinctly recognized as descended from a somewhat remote ancestor and usually bearing a common name.
More recent works by the British anthropologist Pnina Werbner have confirmed the continuing strength of tribal feelings among emigrant Pothoharis in the United Kingdom. This region was and still is an important source of recruitment into the old colonial British Indian army, and its successor, the Pakistan Army. Official recruitment policies have also encouraged the sense of tribal belonging among the Pothoharis. According to the 1931 Census of India, the last to collect data on castes, the largest tribes of the Rawalpindi Division, starting with the largest numerically, were the Rajput, Awan, Jat, Gujjar and Kashmiri. Here is a list of the major tribes:
TribeAttock DistrictJhelum DistrictRawalpindi DistrictTotal
Rajput36,19278,013212,418326,623
Awan204,29561,32146,627312,243
Jat10,42985,459
16,373
112,261
Pathan47,58914,7226,67568,986
Gujar13,24620,52627,48561,257
Maliar10,52121,34817,29549,164
Sayyad14,93514,83214,57844,345
Mughal6,45918,83016,44641,735
Kashmiri7,51711,50725,793
Dhund Abbasi29, 42329, 423
Gakhar43711,50725,793
Qureshi2,96510,5229,05322,540
Satti15,34315,343
Khattar4,5484454,993
Paracha1,1171,1422,259
Aheer173173
PLEASE NOTE: The present Chakwal District was created out of the merger Talagang Tehsil of Attock District and Chakwal Tehsil of Jhelum District in 1985. The Islamabad Capital Territory was carved out of Rawalpindi District in 1959.


Distribution
The Plauteau portion of the Pothohar region is held by the Rajput, Jat, Maliar, Gujar and Mughal. The Salt Range is held entirely by the Awan tribe. While the Murree Hills are held by the Dhund, Dhanyal, Kethwal and Jasgam. Along the Indus river, the Pathan hold the Chhachh illaqa, and the Makhad region, where the Kala Chita mountains meet the Indus river. In terms of population, the Awan and Rajput together accounted two-thirds of the total population of the Pothohar. The Jat, Gujars and Maliars then made remainder of the village population.
Awan
In terms of the general distribution, the Awan are perhaps the most widely distributed of the tribes, found in almost every district of the Pothohar region. The western portion of the Salt Range is in fact referred to as the Awankari, or country of the Awans.
Gakhar
The Gakhar or Kayani are a tribe local to the Pothohar region, found only in Rawalpindi, Jhelum and Mirpur.
Gujar
The Pothohar Gujar are found mainly in Taxila, Rawalpindi and Gujar Khan tehsils of Rawalpindi District.[11]. In Jhelum District, they are found in the east district, along the Jhelum river valley, where they hold eighty villages, Kala Gujran being the most important. [12]. In Attock District, they are found mainly in Attock Tehsil and Fateh Jang Tehsil. They are almost absent in Chakwal District.
Jat
The Pothohar Jat, are found mainly in the Gujar Khan Tehsil of Rawalpindi District, with a few also found in Rawalpindi Tehsil. In Attock District, they are found mainly in Fateh Jang Tehsil and Pindigheb Tehsil, mainly along the border with Rawalpindi District. In Chakwal and Jhelum, they form an important element of the population.
Murree Hills tribes
The plateau is bordered in the east by the Murree Hills. Unlike the tribes settled on the Plateau, for the tribes of the Murree Hills, paternity is not the only fact worth considering. The author of the Rawalpindi District Gazetteer wrote the following:
The family bulks much less largely. Family pride is much weaker and more uncommon. Every family is split with feuds which generally have their origin in the domestic disputes to which polygamy gives rise. All the hillmen are democratic and no respect is paid to family pretensions.
The northern half of the Murree Tehsil is held entirely by the Dhund, who claim to be Abbasi Arabs, claiming descent from the Prophet Mohammad's uncle Abbas ibn Abdul Mutalib. The Satti tribe, which claims Rajput ancestry is found confined to the hilly Kotli Sattian Tehsil. In between these two tribes, are wedged the Kethwal, who claim descent from the Greek general Alexander the Great. The Dhanyal hold the western half of the Murree Tehsil, known as the Karor illaqa, as well as villages in the Islamabad Capital Territory. Like the Awan, the Dhanyal claim descent from the Prophet Mohammed's son in-law Ali. The smallest of the Murree Hill tribes are the Jasgam, who hold several villages in the hilly portion of the Kahuta Tehsil. Like the Dhund, they claim to be Abbasi Arabs.
Rajput
The Rajputs are found in greatest numbers in the Rawalpindi, Kahuta and Gujra Khan tehsils of Rawalpindi District, Fateh Jang and Pindi Gheb tehsils of Attock District, and found through out Jhelum and Chakwal districts.
Principal tribes Full Discription
Here is a brief description of the main tribes of this region.​
Aheer
The Aheer have been referred to as "an ordinary Musalman peasents, like their neighbours." They are essentially a tribe of the Thal region, with villages in Khushab, Sargodha and Mianwali districts. They are differing and conflicting theories about their origin, as is the case with many other Punjab tribes. One of the tradition connects them to Qutab Shah, the ancestor of the Awan and Khokhar tribes. According to another tradition, they are Yaduvanshi Rajputs, and descended from the Krishna. In the Pothohar region, the Aheer have a small presence, with just two villages, Bher Ahir and Ahir in the Gujar Khan Tehsil.
Alpial


The Alpial are a Rajput tribe, found mainly in Attock District. According to 1931 census of India, their approximate population was 4,500.[16]
The Alpials claim descent from the Manj Rajputs, and their claim to Rajput origin is generally admitted. They appear to have settled in their present locality about the same time as the Jodhras and Ghebas, that is about the 15th Century, having first wandered through the country now contained in the Khushab and Chakwal districts before settling down in the southern corner of Fateh Jang. [16] The author of the 1929 Attock District Gazetteer had this to say about them:
Hard-working and excellent cultivators, generally tilling their own land and working laboriously on their wells, they have taken only a small part in the more lurid history of the district. Socially they rank high, intermarrying freely with the Mughals. They are a bold, lawless set of men, of fine physique, much given to violent crime, sturdy, independent and wonderfully quarrelsome.
The Alpials occupy a compact block of villages on both banks of the Swaan River, in Rawalpindi Tehsil, Rawalpindi District and the in the Sil Sohan circle of the Fateh Jang Tehsil,Attock District. They own 32 villages in all. The main Alpial villages are Adhwal, Chak Beli Khan, Chakri, Dinal, Dhullial, Dinal, Khilri, Mala Kal, Parial and Raika Maira, all in Fateh Jang Tehsil.
Awan
Most Awans maintain (and have always maintained) they are descended from an individual named Qutb Shah, a ruler of Herat and a general in the army of Mahmud of Ghazni, who himself was a Hashemite descendant of the Prophet Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, Ali (but by a wife other than the Prophet's daughter, Fatimah).
It is asserted that Qutb Shah and six of his sons accompanied and assisted Mahmud in his early eleventh century conquests of what today forms parts of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Northern India. It is claimed that in recognition of their services and valour, Mahmud bestowed upon Qutb Shah and his sons (who, according to tribal traditions, settled primarily in the Salt Range) the title of Awan, meaning "helper".[18]
The Awan, more than any of other tribes referred to are a Pothohar tribe. In numbers, they came only second to the Rajputs. In Rawalpindi District, they are two be found in every tehsil. In the Islamabad Capital Territory, almost all the villages around the town of Golra Sharif are held by the Awan. In Gujar Khan Tehsil, they hold almost all the villages along the Grand Trunk Road, north of the town of Gujar Khan, Pandar Kala being the most important.The Budhal muhi (clan) occupies several villages in this tehsil. They are also found in numbers in villages between Kahuta and Kallar Syedan. The Golra Awans, historically gave great trouble to the British colonial authorities, and permanent police post was maintained in their territory. The recent building of the new capital, Islamabad, and has some impact on this once fearsome tribe. Other important Awan villages are Banda and Rawat, both in Rawalpindi District.
In Jhelum District, they are found along the start of the Salt Range, in Pind Dadan Khan Tehsil, where the village of Nurpur has been the centre of the tribe. Isolated Awan villages are found through out Jhelum District, but there is no compact territory held by the tribe.
In Chakwal District, the Awan hold the whole of the Talagang Tehsil, the western Salt Range and the Thal Desert, and extend in the neighbouring Khushab District. Indeed this region is referred to as the Awankari or Awan country. Their main muhi or clans in the district are the Mumnal, Saghral, Shial, Gang and Mund. Important Awan villages include Tamman, who headmen are seen as the chiefs of the tribe, in the district. Other villages include Lawa, Trap, Dhermund, Pihra Fattial, Thoa, Chinji, Jhatla, Sangwala, Saghar, Dhaular, Bhudial, Patwali, Multan, Pachnand, Nila, Dhurnal and Danda Shah Bilawal.
In Attock District, their villages dominate the centre Pindigheb Tehsil in a strip from the Swaan River to the Kala Chita mountains. In Fateh Jang Tehsil, almost all the villages in the Swaan River valley are held by the Awans. In Attock Tehsil, they share the Chhachh illaqa with the Pathans and the Sarwala, with the Khattars. The principal muhis found in Attock are the Qutubshahi, Sadkal, Bugdial, Chajji, Saidan, Parbar and Ballial. Like the Golra Awan of Rawalpindi District, the Trer Awan of Attock Tehsil gave some difficulty to the British colonial authorities.Important Awan villages in the district, include Dhak, Jalwal, Maira, Jand, Jangla and Narwara in Pindigheb Tehsil, and Jhan and Bathu in Fateh Jang Tehsil, and Shamsabad and Bhallar Jogi in Attock Tehsil.[22] The village of Shamsabad is another important centre of the Awan tribe, and the chiefs of Shamsabad also wield considerable influence in Attock District.


 

ghazi

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Population of Punjabi Muslim Castes according to the 1901, 1911, 1921 and 1931 Census of India

In this post, I show the number of Muslim castes counted for the Punjab by the four censuses of India, namely the 1901, 1911, 1921 and 1931. The census of Punjab in 1901 listed 153 castes that were wholly or partially Muslims with population over a 100 persons; the lists of 1911 only showed 133, and 1921, it was reduced to 109, and further reduced to 37 for the 1931 Census. This reduction was partly due to a process called as Ashrafization, a term coined by Imtiaz Ahmad, a sociologist at the JNU in Delhi. This process includes groups lower in the caste hierarchy adopting upper-caste Muslim practices to achieve social climbing as well as changing their names. The 1931 census was the last to count to caste on territory that became Pakistan.
The largest caste per percentage and population among the Punjab Muslims were the Jats, and in 1901 made 16% of the total. In every census up to 1931, the Jats remained the largest caste, accounting to 20% in 1931. The top five castes in terms of percentages remained fairly constant over the three decades, with the Rajputs (11% in 1901, 10% in 1911, 10.5% in 1921 and 12% in 1931) forming the next largest group. Among three other castes, Arains remained in third place (8% in 1901, 8% in 1911, 8.5% in 1921 and 9% in 1931), while the Julaha (Ansari) or weavers were in fourth place up to 1921 (5% in 1901, 5% in 1911, 4.5% in 1921 and 4% in 1931). In 1931, the Julaha had fallen to fifth place. The Baluch, who were settled mainly in south-west Punjab were the fifth largest caste up to 1921 (4% in 1901, 4% in 1911, 4% in 1921 and 4% in 1931), then moved up to fourth place in 1931. The next five castes also roughly remained the same. The Gujjars were the sixth largest caste in 1901, 1911 and 1921, and seventh largest group in 1931 (4% in 1901, 4% in 1911, 4% in 1921 and 4% in 1931). While the Awan were the seventh largest group in 1901, 1911 and 1921, and switched places with the Gujjars to become the sixth largest group in 1931 (3.5% in 1901, 3.5% in 1911, 3% in 1921 and 4% in 1931). In eight place were the Mochi (cobblers / leather workers), who kept that position throughout the four censuses (3% in 1901, 3.4% in 1911, 3% in 1921 and 3% in 1931). The ninth largest in 1901 were the Kumhars (potters), who were tenth largest in 1911, 1921 and 1931 (3% in 1901, 3% in 1911, 3% in 1921 and 3% in 1931). In 1901, the Shaikh were the tenth largest caste, but slipped to 11 in 1911, 15 in 1921, and back to 11 in 1931 (3% in 1901, 3% in 1911, 2% in 1921 and 3% in 1931). In ninth place for the rest of the three census years were the Mussali (Muslim Shaikh), who in 1901 stood at 34 (0.5% in 1901, 3% in 1911, 2% in 1921 and 3% in 1931). This drastic change was likely as the results of both conversion by the Hindu Chuhra caste to Islam in the western districts and re designation by the Census of certain castes as Mussali such as the Kutana.
Just a brief note on groups are known as "peripatetic nomads". These are various itinerant populations who move among densely populated areas to offer specialized services (crafts or trades) to their residents—external consultants, for example. There were several groups among Punjabi Muslims who fell within this category such as the Abdal, Aheri (Thori), Changar, Kangar and Kanjar. None of these were counted in the 1931 Census. There is an excellent account of these communities in Punjab by late American anthropologist Joseph C. Berland, in his book No Five Fingers Are Alike: Cognitive Amplifiers in Social Context.
1901 Census
In 1901, the total population in Punjab was 24,754,737, of which Muslims were 12,183,345 (49%). The Muslim castes with population over 100 were:
Caste PopulationPercentage of the total Muslim population
1.Jat 1,962,25216%
2.Rajput 1,347,34711%
3.Arain 1,005,188 8%
4.Julaha 592,7865%
5.Baluch 467,843 4%
6.Gujjar 460,4104%
7.Awan 421,112 3.5%
8.Mochi 409,6773%
9.Kumhar 359,8893%
10.Shaikh 321,4083%
11.Teli 318,5983%
12.Tarkhan 294,0962%
13.Pathan 263,8972%
14.Faqir 255,8642%
15.Sayyad 244,2272%
16.Machi 240,9832%
17.Nai 207,8222%
18. Lohar 206,3712%
19.Kashmiri 193,0881.5%
20.Meo 146,6521%
21.Jhinwar 142,2081%
22.Dhobi 128,4871%
23.Qassab (Qasai) 118,6441%
24.Khokhar 107,9390.9%
25.Khoja (Punjabi Shaikh) 99,2380.8%
26.Mughal 98,2820.8%
27.Maliar 81,0930.6%
28.Dogar 75,0800.6%
29.Kamboh 73,8780.6%
30.Mallaah 70,2230.6%
31.Bharai / Shaikh Sarwari 65,678
32.Barwala 62,466
33.Chhimba 60,051
34.Mussali / Muslim Shaikh 57,410
35.Qureshi 52,951
36.Kutana[1] 49,982
37.Jogi and Rawal 41,030
38.Kharral 40,296
39.Changar 39,354
40.Ulema[2] 34,099
41.Pachhada 31,117
42.Darzi 28,969
43.Sonar (Tank Rajput) 28,565
44.Gakhar 26,259
45.Dhund (Abbasi) 23,591
46.Daudpotra (Abbasi) 20,384
47.Rangrez[3] 20,160
48.Lilari 20,027
49.Penja 19,679
50.Rawat 17,374
51.Satti 17,094
52.Mahtam 15,076
53.Bhatiara 13,942
54.Jhabel 13,278
55.Khatik 11,362
56.Kahut 10,804
57.Kakkezai 10,793
58.Raj 10,486
59.Chamar 10,332
60.Kanchan 8,984
61.Odh 8,583
62.Janjua 8,361
63.Maniar 7,907
64.Kalal (Kalwar) 7,563
65.Khattar 7,411
66.Kunjra 6,913
67.Nat 6,330
68.Kanera 5,893
69.Pakhiwara 5,590
70.Taga / Tyagi 5,214
71.Paracha 4,564
72.Khanzada (Jadaun) 3,971
73.Banjara 3,728
74.Harni 3,575
75.Labana 3,531
76.Ghosi 3,543
77.Gadi 3,294
78.Bodla 3,184
79.Noongar 2,894
80.Ahir 2,816
81.Khakha 2,765
82.Sansi 2,536
83.Bhat 2,487
84.Aheri 2,449
85.Gagra 2,433
86.Ghulam (Gola) 2,405
87.Sudhan[4] 2,291
88.Niaria 2,162
89.Kathia[5] 2,099
90.Baddun 1,896
91.Lilla 1,691
92.Baghban[6] 1,602
93.Kehal 1,531
94.Batwal 1,477
95.Qalandar 1,449
96.Bharbhunja 1,385
97.Thathera 1,374
99.Perna 1,270
99.Bhand 1,162
100.Toba 1,140
101.Dabgar 1,127
102.Khumra 1,109
103.Arab 1,098
104.Barar[7] 1,025
105.Kangar 915
106.Domna[8] 902
107.Kanjar 889
108.Garri / Gayri[9] 826
109.Kayastha[10] 822
110.Kamangar 783
111.Kharasia 773
112.Darugar 728
113.Marath[11] 689
114.Gadariya[12] 661
115.Phaphra 632
116.Turk 563
117.Bawaria[13] 468
118.Dogra[14] 448
119.Bisati[15] 439
120.Mohipota / Mohipotra[16] 431
121.Thori (Nayak) 392
122.Brahman 386
123.Patwa 363
124.Karal[17] 350
125.Chirimar 341
126.Sirkiband 330
127.Tanoli[18] 309
128.Sahnsar 305
129.Mali 294
130.Qizilbash 294
131.Saiqalgar 280
132.Lodha / Lodhi[19] 268
133. Bazigar 254
134. Bangali 252
135. Attar[20] 216
136. Pasi 215
137. Bhatia[21] 213
138. Jhojha 202
139. Sattiar[22] 198
140. Arora 189
141. Khushabi 185
142. Saini 180
143.Kanet[23] 176
144. Khatri 161
145. Hijra[24] 157
146.Bohra 150
147. Sapela[25] 149
148.Gandhila[26] 145
149. Chanal[27] 139
150. Kamachi[28] 137
151.Shorgir[29] 124
152.Tamboli 123
153. Cheenigar[30] 101



 

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There is a debate on which language of Punjabi is the oldest one as it now appears from research that historically Punjabis had more languages than one can count and Punjabi is not a single language, rather a group of languages collectively called Punjabi. my bet is on Hindlko as earliest form of Punjabi. It is found that old writing system Kharosihi script was once used to write the ancient languages of Punjab. Later Punjabi writers started writing in Sanskrit, Pali and later in Farsi instead of in their mother tongues.
 

ghazi

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Bib and Sarrara tribes of Hazara

In this post, I shall look at two tribes, namely the Bib and Sarrara that are found in the Hazara region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Hazara is located in the North-Eastern part of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, east of the Indus River and comprises six districts: Abbottabad, Battagram, Haripur, Mansehra, Kohistan, and New District Torghar. The region is bounded on the north and east by the Northern Areas and Azad Kashmir. To the south are the Islamabad Capital Territory and the province of Punjab, whilst to the west lies the rest of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The river Indus runs through the division in a north-south line, forming much of the western border of the division. The total area of Hazara is 18,013 km².



Hazara region shaded: Source Wikipedia
Hazara lies in a region which is a crossroads of cultures, where the plains of the Punjab meet the Central Asia. Its population consists of numerous tribes, many of whom claim and are of Pashtun ancestry. However the tribes looked at in this post make no such claim. It is likely that they are of Hindu ancestry, but all claim Arab ancestry. Like most of the population of Hazara, all these tribes speak the Hindko language, which main be descended from the ancient language of the Gandhara civilization. The population are referred to as Hindkowan, meaning people who speak Hindko.
Bib
I start this post with one of the least known of the Hazara tribes, the Bib. The origin of the Bib is subject to some argument. According to their own traditions, the Bib are a branch of the Awan tribe, a claim generally not accepted by the Awans. They, like the Awans claim descent from the fourth Caliph of Islam, Ali. Their customs are similar to neighbouring Hindkowan communities, and they are entirely Sunni.
The are found in the Abbotabad District, occupying two villages between the Rash plains and Thandiani range. This region is extremely mountainous, located in the northeast of Abbottabad District in the foothills of the Himalayas. To the east beyond the Kunhar River lies the Pir Panjal mountain range of Kashmir. Cut from the other the Awans of the Haripur plain, the Bib have much in common with their neighbours the Karlal and Sarrara, rather then the Awans.
Sarrara
The other tribe I will look at are the Sarrara, who closely connect themselves to the Dhund, a tribe found mainly in the Murree hills. Some traditions make the Sarrara a branch of the Dhund, like the Dhund, the Sarrara claim to be Abbasi Arabs.
British Sources
Like many other tribes in the region, there are a number of theories about the origin of the Sarrara tribe. Horace Arthur Rose was an early 20th Century British colonial official who co-authored A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province, which is one of the most comprehensive glossaries on the tribes of Punjab, and a good source on many Punjabi tribes. He describes the Sarrara as follows:
A tribe found in Hazara which belongs to a race inhabiting Chibhal, or the hill country of Kashmir on the Hazaraa border, and, according to Wace, akin to the same ethnic group as the Dhund, Satti, and Karral of the same tract. They are chiefly found in the Abbottabad tehsil, where they are purely agricultural. They are all Muslim and are probably quite distinct from the Sarera of the eastern hills.
Rose connects the Sarrara with the people of the Chibhal, the region that starts across the Jhelum River, in what the is now the central and southern parts of Azad Kashmir, as the well the districts of Rajouri and Poonch in Indian administered Kashmir. Most of these tribes speak Pahari,and in Hazara the Sarrara like their neighbours the Dhund and Karral tribes speak the Dhundi-Karali dialect of Hindko, which is very close to the Pahari spoken in Chibhal. While J. M Wikely, author of a military manual, the Punjabi Musalmans has this to say about them:

This tribe is met with only in the Boi tract, between the Thamdiani range and the Kunhar river, in the Hazara district. They connect themselves with both the Dhunds and the Tanaolis, but say at the same time that they came from Pakpattan in the Montgomery district. The tribe is classed as Sahu and inter-marry on equal terms with the Dhunds.
The Sarrara share a common tradition with Dhund, Jasgam and Khatreel tribes, claiming to be descended from the Abbasi dynasty, which was the second dynasty of the Islamic Caliphate. However, the tradition of coming from Pakpattan does not appear in their own traditions.
Local Traditions
The story of the Sarrara starts with Zarab Khan, who said to have come to the Pothohar region with Qutb Shah, the ancestor of the Awan. He was said to have given the task of arranging an agreement with the king of Kashmir. He completed this task and after signing a treaty with the king of Kashmir, was on the way back. He reached Kahuta in the Rawalpindi district and decided not to go further for some reasons. From those of Zarab Khan's family that remained in the Murree and Kahuta hills descend the Dhund, Jasgam and Khateel tribes. The reason Zarab Khan is said to left Baghdad was that the Abbasids caliphate were disintegrating, his enemies were powerful and sought refuge in Herat. According to another tradition, Zarab Khan is said descend from a person by the name of Adil, who is said to have to come to India from Baghdad and settled down in Delhi permanently. Adil's sixth or seventh descendent was Zarab Khan bin Mutaaf. The resting place of Zarab Khan and his son Akbar Gai Khan is in Darab Kot Rawalpindi district of Pakistan.
The Sarrara get their name from their ancestor Sarrara Khan, also known as Sultan Sakhi Sarwar. He was said to be son of Akbar Gai Khan, who was the son of Zarab Khan, and lived in Darab Kot in Kahuta tehsil. These names also appear in the ancestry of the Dhund, Jasgam and Khatreel tribes. This Akbar Gai Khan is said to have had twelve sons, namely:
Kahonder Khan (forefather of Dhund)
Tanoli Khan (forefather of Tanolis in area of Tanawal and Amb Durband)
Chajjar Kanal
Salal
Agar Khan
Kool or Koor
Hakim Khan
Sarrara (ancestor of the Sarraras)
Hans Khan
Molam Khan
Dilhawas
Barra Hazaria
Sarrara Khan then left Kahuta and lived for many years at someplace in Potohar Plateau and which saw his clan expand in numbers. However, the Sarrara soon came into conflict with the original occupants of the area. The Sarrara left the Pothohar region and entered Hazara, arriving in what is now Abbottabad, and eventually settling on the west side of the mountain range called Thandyani. Most of this region was said to uninhabited and Sarrara Khan settled in place in the Thandyani now called Chamyali, He chose a spot near a stream called Salol, and this has been the home of the Sarrara ever since. Their original village was named Pattan, which means a river crossing.
After the collapse of Mughal authority, Hazara passed to the Sikhs. The Sarrara resisted the rule of Ranjit Singh. With coming of the British in 1848, the legendary Major Abbott pacified the region and founded the town of Abbottabad. The 1931 Census, the last that counted caste, the Sarrara numbered 10,000, all in the Abbotabad tehsil.
Distribution
The Sarrara are still only found in the Boi tract between the Thandiani range and Kunhar river in the Abbottabad District. The largest Sarrara village is Pattan Kalan and other important villages include Pattan Khurd, Chamiali, Bandi Sarrara, Darer, Batangi, Sialkot, Kotlian, in Kukmang Union Council. Each village is inhabited with a different clan, descended from one of the sons of Sarrara Khan
Clan Villages
Behlumal, descended from Behlum KhanMain villages are Chamyali, Drer and Batangi. Other villages include Chak Pattan, Bagla, Khuhi, Bunna Khaiter, Salol, Aziz Gran, Barwala, Sunda Jabri area, and are also found in Tarhora and Pattan Khurd.
Tatral, descended from Tatar KhanChak Pattan, Bagla, Khuhi and Jabri area and are in majority in Masina.
Dumal, descended from Dumat KhanChak Pattan, Utla Khaiter, Jabban, Jabri , Barwala, Dhaki and are scattered in other part of Pattan
Lashkaryal, descended from Lashkari Khan Kotlian Gehar and Duwata area

Posted on May 24, 2022 by newpakhistoryPosted in Tribes of Hazara Division, Tribes of PothoharTagged Abbasi biradari Hazara, Bib, Bib Awan tribe, Bib biradari, Bib tribe, Sarrara, Sarrara Abbasi, Sarrara tribe.Leave a comment

Bangial tribe

In this post, I will look at the Bangial, sometimes spelt Bangyal, tribe of the Potohar region of Pakistan. A few Bangyal are also found in the Mirpur District of Azad Kashmir. The Bangyal claim ancestry from the Panwar, and I will start off with a brief note of the Panwar, or sometimes pronounced as Parmar or Puar. In the Pothohar region, the correct pronunciation is Panwar. I would also refer the reader to the Facebook page Mirpur and Dadyal Heritage Society (accessible through mirpurheritage.com), which has some excellent information on these tribes.
Rajah Jagdev and the Panwar Rajputs
The Panwar were dynasty that in early medieval India ruled over the Malwa region in central India. Like the Chauhans, the Panwar are from the fire born or Agnivansh branch of the Rajputs. Quite a number of tribes in Pothohar and neighbouring Chibhal region claim descent from the Panwars, all having some tradition of migration from central India, followed by conversion to Islam at the hands of a particular Sufi saint. Many of these tribes also have traditions of initially settling in the region known as Chibhal. The key figure that appears in the origin story of Chibhali Panwar is Raja Jagdev Panwar, who has an almost semi-mythical. According to tribal myths of, he became the ruler of Malwa after death of his father Udayaditya, but he handed over the throne to his brother owing to family-dispute and settled at Jarg, somewhere in present day Okara District. He is said to have slain a demon who used to eat a human-being daily in a fort near Dipalpur, also in Okara. The local king Raja Kankhar bestowed upon him half his kingdom and gave his daughter in marriage. He is said to have struck off his own head on the demand of a witch-wife of the court-bard of Raja Jai Chand of Lambargaon but this was miraculously restored. Jagdev then migrated to the Chibhal territory, where he founded Akhnoor State, ruled by Panwar Dynasty of his descendants for over six centuries. Many of the local Dogra clans claim descent from the Raja such as the Ambarai.
Akhnoor lies in the heart of Chibhal located on the banks of the Chenab River. The territory of Chibhal lies between Tawi River and Jhelum rivers, with the Pir Panjal Mountains forming its northern boundary and gets its name from the Chib tribe. Presently, Chibhal is divided by the line of control, with Mirpur and Bhimber districts within Pakistani Kashmir, and districts of Rajauri, Reasi, and parts of Jammu (including Akhnur) west of the Manawar Tawi in Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir. The Bangial have traditions of leaving the region and settling in plains territory of northern Punjab in Gujarkhan, Jhelum, and Kharian. Rajah Jagdev Panwar is also seen as a common ancester of the Panwars of this region, such as the Hon and Sahnsral.
Bangial
So who are the Bangial, sometimes written as Bangyal, and we have go back to my first post on the Pothohar tribes. The word al means son of in number of dialects that fall within Lahnda, such as Pothohari and Pahari. J. M Wikely, author of the army recruitment guide Punjab Musalmans describes them as such:

Male population: Approximately 2,000 (Census 1931).
Locality: The tribe is found chiefly in the Rawalpindi district, where they occupy five villages in the Gujar Khan tehsil. There appear to be a few also in the Jhelum, Gujrat and G
ujranwala districts
Particular: Bangial and Baghial appear to be the same tribe, those members of it which are in the Rawalpindi district are classed as Rajputs, while in Gujrat, Gujranwala and Jhelum they are Jats. They describe themselves as being Panwar Rajputs. The first ancestor of Musalman faith was Bangash Khan.

Other then this brief mention, British sources have been quite on the Bangial. According to the Bangials themselves, they are descended from a Rajah Bangash Khan, a Panwar Rajput, who arrived in the Pothohar region from central India, hence the name Bangash al, shortened to Bangyal. According to other traditions, the Raja came from Delhi. This Bangash Khan is also seen as ancestor by the closely related Baghial tribe. Changa Bangial in Gujarkhan Tehsil is said to be their first settlement in the region, and according to some traditions Changa was a son of Bangash Khan.
A bit more detail description of the comes largely from the book Tazkira Pothohar by Mohammad Artsab. Bangash Khan is said to come from the lineage of Raja Jagdev Panwar, who had three sons, Rokha Khan, Chhanga Khan and Sanbar Khan. The Bangial all claim decent from one of these three brothers, and generally consider the town of Changa Bangyal as there first settlement. The brothers were said to have come from Sialkot, during the period of Gakhar rule, which could be anything between the 14th and 18th Century. Most Bangial generally connect themselves with Changa Bangial as their ancestral village. In Mirpur, the Bangyal claim descent from two brothers, Raj Khan and Shahu Khan, who are said to have come from Changa Bangial.
Like many of their neighbours such as the Kalyal, some groups of Bangial consider themselves as Jats, while other see themselves as Rajputs. In Gujranwala, Gujrat and Jhelum districts of Punjab, and Mirpur District of Azad Kashmir, the Bangial strongly identify themselves as Jat, and intermarry with tribes of Jat status, such as the Warriach and Tarar. But as we move towards Dina and neighbouring Gujar Khan tehsils, almost all the Bangial claim Rajput ancestry, so briefly we can summarize, that the Jhelum River divides these two groups.


 

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