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Wikipedia

North-West Frontier Province

The North-West Frontier Province (NWFP; Pashto: شمال لویدیځ سرحدي ولایت, Urdu: شمال مغربی سرحدی صوبہ) was a Chief Commissioner's Province of British India, established on 9 November 1901 from the north-western districts of the Punjab Province. Following the referendum in 1947 to join either Pakistan or India, the province voted hugely in favour of joining Pakistan and it acceded accordingly on 14th August, 1947. It was dissolved to form a unified province of West Pakistan in 1955 upon creation of One Unit Scheme and was re-established in 1970. It was known by this name until 19 April 2010, when it was redesignated as the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa following the passing of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan by erstwhile President Asif Ali Zardari.

North-West Frontier Province
شمال لویدیځ سرحدي ولایت (Pashto)
شمال مغربی سرحدی صوبہ (Urdu)
Province of British Raj and Pakistan
1901–2010
Coat of arms
Location within the British Raj
1947–1955
1970–2010

Location within Pakistan
Area 
• 1901
100,142[1][2] km2 (38,665 sq mi)
Population 
• 1901
2,041,534
History
History 
• Established
9 November 1901
19 April 2010
Today part ofPakistan
 · Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

The province covered an area of 70,709 km2 (27,301 sq mi), including much of the current Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province but excluding the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and the former princely states of Amb, Chitral, Dir, Phulra and Swat. Its capital was the city of Peshawar, and the province was composed of six divisions (Bannu, Dera Ismail Khan, Hazara, Kohat, Mardan, and Peshawar Division; Malakand was later added as the seventh division). Until 1947, the province was bordered by five princely states to the north, the minor states of the Gilgit Agency to the northeast, the province of West Punjab to the east and the province of Balochistan to the south. The Kingdom of Afghanistan lay to the northwest, with the Federally Administered Tribal Areas forming a buffer zone between the two.

History

Formation

The northwestern frontier areas were annexed by the East India Company after the Second Sikh War (1848–49). The territories thenceforth formed a part of Punjab until the province, then known as North-West Frontier Province, was created in 1901 from the north-western districts of the Punjab Province.[3] This region, along with the 'Frontier Tribal Areas', acted as a buffer zone with Afghanistan.

Inside Pakistan

Before the Partition of India, the 1947 North-West Frontier Province referendum was held in July 1947 to decide the future of NWFP, in which the people of the province decided in favor of joining Pakistan. However, the then Chief Minister Dr Khan Sahib, along with his brother Bacha Khan and the Khudai Khidmatgars, boycotted the referendum, citing that it did not have the options of the NWFP becoming independent or joining Afghanistan.[4][5]

As a separate province, the NWFP lasted until 1955 when it was merged into the new province of West Pakistan, under the One Unit policy announced by Prime Minister Chaudhry Mohammad Ali. It was recreated after the dissolution of the One Unit system and lasted under its old nomenclature until April 2010, when it was renamed as the 'Khyber Pakhtunkhwa' province.

Government

The offices of Governor and Chief Minister of the North-West Frontier Province lasted until 14 October 1955.

Tenure Governors of the North-West Frontier Province[6]
14 August 1947 – 8 April 1948 Sir George Cunningham
8 April 1948 – 16 July 1949 Sir Ambrose Dundas Flux Dundas
16 July 1949 – 14 January 1950 Sahibzada Mohammad Kursheed
14 January 1950 – 21 February 1950 Mohammad Ibrahim Khan Jhagra (acting)
21 February 1950 – 23 November 1951 Ismail Ibrahim Chundrigar
24 November 1951 – 17 November 1954 Khwaja Shahabuddin
17 November 1954 – 14 October 1955 Qurban Ali Khan
14 October 1955 North-West Frontier Province dissolved
Tenure Chief Ministers of the North-West Frontier Province[6] Political party
1 April 1937 – 7 September 1937 Sir Sahibzada Abdul Qayyum Khan Non-party government nominee
7 September 1937 – 10 November 1939 Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan (1st time) Indian National Congress
10 November 1939 – 25 May 1943 Governor's rule
25 May 1943 – 16 March 1945 Sardar Aurangzeb Khan Muslim League
16 March 1945 – 22 August 1947 Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan (2nd time) Indian National Congress
14 August 1947 Independence of Pakistan
23 August 1947 – 23 April 1953 Abdul Qayyum Khan Kashmiri Pakistan Muslim League
23 April 1953 – 18 July 1955 Sardar Abdur Rashid Khan
19 July 1955 – 14 October 1955 Sardar Bahadur Khan

Demographics

Population history
YearPop.±%
18551,144,047—    
18681,339,566+17.1%
18811,575,943+17.6%
18911,857,519+17.9%
19012,041,534+9.9%
19112,196,933+7.6%
19212,251,340+2.5%
19312,425,076+7.7%
19413,038,067+25.3%
Source: Census of India
[7]: 30 [8]: 345–346 [9][10]

Historical population, language, and religious counts in North-West Frontier Province were enumerated in all districts (Hazara, Mardan, Peshawar, Kohat, Bannu, and Dera Ismail Khan), detailed in the population, language, and religious tables above and below. Separate population counts were taken in the Agencies and Tribal Areas, as detailed on the respective article page.

At independence, there was a clear Muslim Pashtun and Hindkowan majority in the North-West Frontier Province, although there were also significant Hindu and Sikh Pashtun, Hindkowan and Punjabi minorities scattered across the province.

Language

The languages of the North-West Frontier Province included Pashto, Hindko, Kohistani and others, although most of the population spoke either Pashto or Lahnda/Western Punjabi (primarily Hindko and Saraiki). Prior to the arrival of the British, the official language, for governmental uses and such, was Persian.

Language in North–West Frontier Province (1931)
Mother
Tongue
1931[9]: 357–359 
Population Percentage
Pashto 1,279,471 52.76%
Western Punjabi
(Lahnda)
[a]
1,034,874 42.67%
Standard Punjabi 68,031 2.81%
Hindustani 19,221 0.79%
English 7,852 0.32%
Persian 6,030 0.25%
Nepali 5,140 0.21%
Kashmiri 1,796 0.07%
Gujari 596 0.02%
Kohistani 377 0.02%
Turkish 62 0.003%
Arabic 24 0.001%
Welsh 19 0.001%
Portuguese 14 0.001%
French 9 0.0004%
Chinese 5 0.0002%
German 3 0.0001%
Greek 2 0.0001%
Scotch 1 0%
Irish 1 0%
Spanish 1 0%
Dutch 1 0%
Japanese 1 0%
Other Indo-Aryan or
Dravidian languages
1,545 0.06%
Total 2,425,076 100%

Districts

Language in the Districts of North–West Frontier Province (1931)[9]: 357–359 
District Pashto Western Punjabi
(Lahnda)
[a]
Standard Punjabi Hindustani English Others Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar District 781,773 80.24% 127,189 13.05% 40,805 4.19% 11,798 1.21% 5,864 0.6% 6,892 0.71% 974,321 100%
Hazara District 29,375 4.38% 625,268 93.31% 5,436 0.81% 4,113 0.61% 257 0.04% 5,668 0.85% 670,117 100%
Dera Ismail Khan District 53,643 19.57% 213,115 77.76% 4,446 1.62% 419 0.15% 336 0.12% 2,105 0.77% 274,064 100%
Bannu District 228,381 84.49% 33,547 12.41% 6,267 2.32% 1,181 0.44% 556 0.21% 369 0.14% 270,301 100%
Kohat District 186,299 78.85% 35,755 15.13% 11,077 4.69% 1,710 0.72% 839 0.36% 593 0.25% 236,273 100%
Total 1,279,471 52.76% 1,034,874 42.67% 68,031 2.81% 19,221 0.79% 7,852 0.32% 15,627 0.64% 2,425,076 100%

Religion

Religion in North–West Frontier Province (1941)[10]: 22 

  Islam (91.8%)
  Hinduism (5.94%)
  Sikhism (1.91%)
  Christianity (0.36%)
  Others[b] (0.004%)

Religious counts below is for the entirety of NWFP (Hazara, Mardan, Peshawar, Kohat, Bannu, and Dera Ismail Khan). The Agencies and Tribal Areas constituted a separate administrative division where religious composition was not enumerated, except at small Trans-Frontier Posts in the region.

Religion in North–West Frontier Province (1881–1941)
Religious
group
1881[7]: 95  1891[7]: 95  1901[7]: 95  1911[7]: 307–308  1921[8]: 345–346  1931[9]: 373–375  1941[10]: 22 
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Islam   1,451,444 92.1% 1,714,490 92.3% 1,882,294 92.2% 2,039,994 92.86% 2,062,786 91.62% 2,227,303 91.84% 2,788,797 91.8%
Hinduism   111,892 7.1% 118,881 6.4% 128,617 6.3% 119,942 5.46% 149,881 6.66% 142,977 5.9% 180,321 5.94%
Sikhism   7,880 0.5% 18,575 1% 26,540 1.3% 30,345 1.38% 28,040 1.25% 42,510 1.75% 57,939 1.91%
Christianity   4,728 0.3% 5,573 0.3% 6,125 0.3% 6,585 0.3% 10,610 0.47% 12,213 0.5% 10,889 0.36%
Others N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 67[c] 0.003% 23[d] 0.001% 73[e] 0.003% 121[b] 0.004%
Total Population 1,575,943 100% 1,857,519 100% 2,041,534 100% 2,196,933 100% 2,251,340 100% 2,425,076 100% 3,038,067 100%

Adherents of Islam who were indigenous to frontier regions that continued to have relatively large Hindu populations, and who were also relatively recent converts, were influenced by some traditions of Hinduism; in contrast, Muslims in frontier regions that had been further influenced by orthodox Islam and converted at a much earlier date were noted in their relatively different cultural habits.

"The high road, along which the Mohammedan conquerors and rulers of India passed and repassed lay through the north (the Khyber, Kurram and other routes); and it is probable that Islam never took so firm a hold of the inhabitants of the southern district as of the people to the north of them. In this connection it is interesting to notice that the Mussalman of the Derajat is less strict in his observance of the duties of his religion, such as fasts, prayers and the like, than his northern neighbours. Through Hazara lay the road by which the Emperors of Delhi went to and fro between the capital and their summer retreat in Kashmir, and it was natural that Islam should thoroughly permeate the district. Similarly Kohat, from its situation with regard to the Kurram Valley, which at no very distant period was, nominally at least, a portion of the Afghan kingdom, has been more influenced in the past by its Mohammedan neighbours to the west than have the districts to the south of it. There is no need to consider here the probable date at which the bulk of the Pathans living in the Province, or rather their ancestors, were converted to Islam. It is enough to notice that the had long been Mohammadan when they settled in their present homes, and that their fanaticism and intolerance, especially in the districts where they are strongest, rendered the Province no very inviting place of residence for settlers of a different creed. If no fanaticism in its inhabitants acted as a bar to the settlement of Hindus in Hazara, the absence of any large trade centres was at least equally efficacious. The only other district in which there is a non-Pathan element in the population in any way commensurate to that of Hazara is Dera Ismail Khan. The population here is mainly composed of tribes of Indian origin. Its conversion to Islam is of much later data; fanaticism does not exist, and no particular dislike to the Hindu seems to have existed." [7]: 64–65 

— Excerpt from the Census of India (North-West Frontier Province), 1911 AD

Similarly, adherents of Hinduism who belonged to the various castes and tribes who were indigenous to the frontier regions had considerable Islamic influence, owing to their status as a religious minority in the region for centuries, and thus formed religious syncretism that incorporated aspects from both faiths into their cultures and traditions.

"Hinduism, as it exists in the North-West Frontier Province, is but a pale reflection of the system which flourishes in the United Provinces and other areas to the east. Even of the Derajat, where, as we have seen, the Hindu population is proportionately most numerous, the writer of the Dera Ismail Khan Gazetteer notes, "the Hindus of this district are less particular in the matter of caste prejudices and observances than down country Hindus. Most of them will drink water that has been carried in Mussaks (skins for carrying water) or out of lotas detached from a working well. They habitually ride on donkeys and do a multitude of other things which an orthodox Hindu would shrink from. All idolatrous observances are kept very much in the background. Except a few small images (thakurs) kept in their mandirs they have no idols at all. Nor is it their habit to take their gods about in procession. No one, in fact, sees anything of their worship. They burn their dead, and throw the ashes into the Indus. They always keep a few of the bones, and take them, when the opportunity offers, to the Ganges... There are a good many dharamsalas, mandirs, and dawaras at Dera Ismail Khan and in the cis-Indus tehsils." [7]: 93 

— Excerpt from the Census of India (North-West Frontier Province), 1911 AD

Lastly, decadal census reports throughout the colonial era frequently detailed the difficulty of differentiating adherents of Hinduism with adherents of Sikhism, owing to the traditional ability of the former in assimilating and integrating followers of varied thought into Hinduism.

"The Sikh religion was born out of Hinduism, and fears have been expressed of its being reabsorbed into it. Truly wonderful is the strength and vitality of Hinduism. It is like the boa constrictor of the Indian forests; when a petty enemy appears to worry it, it winds round its opponent, crushes it in its folds, and finally causes it to disappear in its capacious interior. In this way, many centuries ago, Hinduism on its own ground disposed of Buddhism which was largely a Hindu reformation in this way in a prehistoric period it absorbed the religion of the Scythian invaders of Northern India; in this way it has converted educated Islam in India into a semi-paganism; and in this way it is disposing of the reformed and once hopeful religion of Baba Nanak. Hinduism has embraced Sikhism in its folds; the still comparatively young religion is making a vigorous struggle for life, but its ultimate destruction is, it is apprehended, inevitable without State support. Notwithstanding the Sikh Guru's powerful denunciation of Brahmans, secular Sikhs now rarely do anything without their assistance. Brahmans help them to be born, help them to wed, help them to die and help their souls after death to obtain a state of bliss. And Brahmans, with all the deftness of Roman Catholic missionaries in Protestant countries have partially succeeded in persuading the Sikhs to restore to their niches the images of Devi, the Queen of Heaven, and the Saints and gods of the ancient faith." [7]: 62 

— Excerpt from the Census of India (North-West Frontier Province), 1911 AD

Districts

With rapid population growth occurring across all districts in the province, Mardan District was added to the North–West Frontier Province in 1941.

Religion in the Districts of North–West Frontier Province (1941)[10]: 22–23 
District Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity   Others[f] Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar District 769,589 90.35% 51,212 6.01% 24,030 2.82% 6,890 0.81% 112[g] 0.01% 851,833 100%
Hazara District 756,004 94.95% 30,267 3.8% 9,220 1.16% 737 0.09% 2[h] 0.0003% 796,230 100%
Mardan District 483,575 95.47% 10,677 2.11% 11,838 2.34% 449 0.09% 0 0% 506,539 100%
Dera Ismail Khan District 255,757 85.79% 39,167 13.14% 2,390 0.8% 810 0.27% 7[i] 0.002% 298,131 100%
Bannu District 257,648 87.06% 31,471 10.63% 6,112 2.07% 699 0.24% 0 0% 295,930 100%
Kohat District 266,224 91.99% 17,527 6.06% 4,349 1.5% 1,304 0.45% 0 0% 289,404 100%
Total 2,788,797 91.8% 180,321 5.94% 57,939 1.91% 10,889 0.36% 121[b] 0.004% 3,038,067 100%
Religion in the Districts of North–West Frontier Province (1931)[9]: 373–375 
District Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity   Others[f] Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar District 898,683 92.24% 42,321 4.34% 24,271 2.49% 8,974 0.92% 72[j] 0.01% 974,321 100%
Hazara District 636,794 95.03% 25,260 3.77% 7,630 1.14% 432 0.06% 1[k] 0.0001% 670,117 100%
Dera Ismail Khan District 235,707 86% 35,822 13.07% 1,878 0.69% 657 0.24% 0 0% 274,064 100%
Bannu District 237,674 87.93% 26,181 9.69% 5,482 2.03% 964 0.36% 0 0% 270,301 100%
Kohat District 218,445 92.45% 13,393 5.67% 3,249 1.38% 1,186 0.5% 0 0% 236,273 100%
Total 2,227,303 91.84% 142,977 5.9% 42,510 1.75% 12,213 0.5% 73[e] 0.003% 2,425,076 100%
Religion in the Districts of North–West Frontier Province (1921)[8]: 344–346 
District Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity   Others[f] Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar District 836,222 92.16% 48,144 5.31% 15,326 1.69% 7,652 0.84% 23[d] 0.003% 907,367 100%
Hazara District 591,058 94.97% 26,038 4.18% 4,850 0.78% 403 0.06% 0 0% 622,349 100%
Dera Ismail Khan District 218,315 83.72% 39,311 15.08% 1,904 0.73% 1,237 0.47% 0 0% 260,767 100%
Bannu District 219,695 89.04% 23,509 9.53% 3,286 1.33% 244 0.1% 0 0% 246,734 100%
Kohat District 197,496 92.23% 12,879 6.01% 2,674 1.25% 1,074 0.5% 0 0% 214,123 100%
Total 2,062,786 91.62% 149,881 6.66% 28,040 1.25% 10,610 0.47% 23[d] 0.001% 2,251,340 100%

Tehsils

Religion in the Tehsils of North–West Frontier Province (1941)[10]: 30 
Tehsil Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity  [l] Others[m] Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar Tehsil 335,871 86.27% 33,551 8.62% 15,454 3.97% 2,618[l] 0.67% 1,835[m] 0.47% 389,329 100%
Abbottabad Tehsil 284,228 92.13% 17,558 5.69% 6,035 1.96% 278[l] 0.09% 419[m] 0.14% 308,518 100%
Mardan Tehsil 281,161 93.91% 8,709 2.91% 9,091 3.04% 360[l] 0.12% 63[m] 0.02% 299,384 100%
Charsadda Tehsil 239,634 98.11% 2,533 1.04% 1,940 0.79% 127[l] 0.05% 12[m] 0.005% 244,246 100%
Mansehra Tehsil 237,306 97.58% 4,910 2.02% 965 0.4% 22[l] 0.01% 0 0% 243,203 100%
Nowshera Tehsil 194,084 88.92% 15,128 6.93% 6,636 3.04% 652[l] 0.3% 1,758[m] 0.81% 218,258 100%
Swabi Tehsil 202,414 97.71% 1,968 0.95% 2,747 1.33% 16[l] 0.01% 10[m] 0.005% 207,155 100%
Haripur Tehsil 178,545 95.04% 7,278 3.87% 2,011 1.07% 14[l] 0.01% 6[m] 0.003% 187,854 100%
Bannu Tehsil 157,097 83.74% 24,517 13.07% 5,285 2.82% 467[l] 0.25% 232[m] 0.12% 187,598 100%
Dera Ismail Khan Tehsil 155,100 82.68% 30,065 16.03% 1,740 0.93% 195[l] 0.1% 485[m] 0.26% 187,585 100%
Kohat Tehsil 100,868 88.01% 9,156 7.99% 3,613 3.15% 596[l] 0.52% 383[m] 0.33% 114,616 100%
Teri Tehsil 110,146 97.73% 2,462 2.18% 86 0.08% 0 0% 15[m] 0.01% 112,709 100%
Marwat Tehsil 100,551 92.82% 6,954 6.42% 817 0.75% 0 0% 0 0% 108,332 100%
Hangu Tehsil 55,210 88.94% 5,909 9.52% 650 1.05% 0 0% 310[m] 0.5% 62,079 100%
Tank Tehsil 49,847 89.55% 5,279 9.48% 401 0.72% 81[l] 0.15% 56[m] 0.1% 55,664 100%
Kulachi Tehsil 50,810 92.58% 3,823 6.97% 249 0.45% 0 0% 0 0% 54,882 100%
Amb Tehsil 47,288 98.69% 433 0.9% 195 0.41% 0 0% 0 0% 47,916 100%
Phulra Tehsil 8,637 98.83% 88 1.01% 14 0.16% 0 0% 0 0% 8,739 100%
Total 2,788,797 91.8% 180,321 5.94% 57,929 1.91% 5,426[l] 0.18% 5,583[m] 0.18% 3,038,067 100%
Religion in the Tehsils of North–West Frontier Province (1921)[8]: 510–516 
Tehsil Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity   Others Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar Tehsil 225,897 85.82% 25,414 9.65% 8,223 3.12% 3,671 1.39% 23[d] 0.01% 263,228 100%
Abbottabad Tehsil 214,720 92.54% 13,580 5.85% 3,344 1.44% 390 0.17% 0 0% 232,034 100%
Mansehra Tehsil 195,812 97.48% 4,592 2.29% 468 0.23% 7 0.003% 0 0% 200,879 100%
Mardan Tehsil 161,726 94.22% 6,846 3.99% 2,874 1.67% 196 0.11% 0 0% 171,642 100%
Charsadda Tehsil 161,406 98.16% 2,183 1.33% 787 0.48% 62 0.04% 0 0% 164,438 100%
Haripur Tehsil 153,645 94.85% 7,362 4.54% 968 0.6% 6 0.004% 0 0% 161,981 100%
Swabi Tehsil 155,116 97.41% 3,063 1.92% 1,062 0.67% 1 0.001% 0 0% 159,242 100%
Dera Ismail Khan Tehsil 129,919 83.27% 24,685 15.82% 884 0.57% 529 0.34% 0 0% 156,017 100%
Nowshera Tehsil 132,077 88.75% 10,638 7.15% 2,380 1.6% 3,722 2.5% 0 0% 148,817 100%
Bannu Tehsil 123,384 86.56% 16,130 11.32% 2,777 1.95% 244 0.17% 0 0% 142,535 100%
Marwat Tehsil 96,311 92.43% 7,379 7.08% 509 0.49% 0 0% 0 0% 104,199 100%
Teri Tehsil 89,924 97.49% 2,239 2.43% 45 0.05% 29 0.03% 0 0% 92,237 100%
Kohat Tehsil 67,535 87.51% 6,415 8.31% 2,195 2.84% 1,026 1.33% 0 0% 77,171 100%
Tank Tehsil 47,895 80.31% 10,224 17.14% 811 1.36% 707 1.19% 0 0% 59,637 100%
Kulachi Tehsil 40,501 89.78% 4,402 9.76% 209 0.46% 1 0.002% 0 0% 45,113 100%
Hangu Tehsil 40,037 89.54% 4,225 9.45% 434 0.97% 19 0.04% 0 0% 44,715 100%
Amb Tehsil 21,244 97.66% 440 2.02% 70 0.32% 0 0% 0 0% 21,754 100%
Phulra Tehsil 5,637 98.88% 64 1.12% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 5,701 100%
Total 2,062,786 91.62% 149,881 6.66% 28,040 1.25% 10,610 0.47% 23[d] 0% 2,251,340 100%


Cities

Religion in Urban North–West Frontier Province (1941)[10]: 19 

  Islam (66.26%)
  Hinduism (24.34%)
  Sikhism (7.5%)
  Others (1.9%)
Religion in the Cities of North–West Frontier Province (1941)[10]: 19 
City/Urban Area Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity  [l] Others[m] Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar[n] 122,972 70.91% 31,630 18.24% 14,245 8.21% 2,586[l] 1.49% 1,987[m] 1.15% 173,420 100%
Dera Ismail Khan[n] 26,424 51.5% 22,815 44.47% 1,412 2.75% 195[l] 0.38% 460[m] 0.9% 51,306 100%
Kohat[n] 32,111 71.39% 8,250 18.34% 3,562 7.92% 445[l] 0.99% 609[m] 1.35% 44,977 100%
Nowshera[o] 28,132 63.9% 9,831 22.33% 4,253 9.66% 412[l] 0.94% 1,394[m] 3.17% 44,022 100%
Mardan[n] 30,301 71.31% 5,851 13.77% 6,014 14.15% 282[l] 0.66% 46[m] 0.11% 42,494 100%
Bannu[n] 10,696 27.78% 22,175 57.59% 4,894 12.71% 467[l] 1.21% 232[m] 0.6% 38,504 100%
Abbottabad[n] 12,192 44.46% 11,886 43.34% 2,680 9.77% 298[l] 1.09% 368[m] 1.34% 27,424 100%
Charsadda 15,747 93.48% 745 4.42% 294 1.75% 54[l] 0.32% 5[m] 0.03% 16,845 100%
Parang 13,494 99.99% 2 0.01% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 13,496 100%
Tangi 12,456 96.51% 444 3.44% 2 0.02% 4[l] 0.03% 0 0% 12,906 100%
Mansehra 8,141 79.68% 1,699 16.63% 375 3.67% 2[l] 0.02% 0 0% 10,217 100%
Lakki[p] 5,883 58.01% 3,710 36.58% 548 5.4% 0 0% 0 0% 10,141 100%
Utmanzai 9,768 96.44% 182 1.8% 171 1.69% 8[l] 0.08% 0 0% 10,129 100%
Haripur 5,174 55.5% 3,113 33.39% 1,035 11.1% 0 0% 0 0% 9,322 100%
Tank[p] 5,531 60.85% 3,296 36.26% 181 1.99% 66[l] 0.73% 15[m] 0.17% 9,089 100%
Risalpur 3,506 38.93% 3,937 43.71% 1,024 11.37% 333[l] 3.7% 207[m] 2.3% 9,007 100%
Kulachi[p] 6,610 74.77% 2,092 23.67% 138 1.56% 0 0% 0 0% 8,840 100%
Baffa[p] 7,166 89.71% 735 9.2% 81 1.01% 6[l] 0.08% 0 0% 7,988 100%
Nawan Shehr[p] 5,075 79.12% 1,030 16.06% 309 4.82% 0 0% 0 0% 6,414 100%
Kot Najibullah 4,228 79.55% 929 17.48% 156 2.94% 2[l] 0.04% 0 0% 5,315 100%
Cherat 270 80.12% 30 8.9% 25 7.42% 0 0% 12[m] 3.56% 337 100%
Total
Urban
Population
365,877 66.26% 134,382 24.34% 41,399 7.5% 5,160[l] 0.93% 5,335[m] 0.97% 552,193 100%

Religion in Urban North–West Frontier Province (1921)[8]: 340–342 

  Islam (63.28%)
  Hinduism (28.19%)
  Sikhism (5.58%)
  Christianity (2.95%)
  Others[d] (0.01%)
Religion in the Cities of North–West Frontier Province (1921)[8]: 340–342 
City/Urban Area Islam   Hinduism   Sikhism   Christianity   Others[f] Total
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Peshawar[n] 73,882 70.73% 20,981 20.09% 6,152 5.89% 3,414 3.27% 23[d] 0.02% 104,452 100%
Dera Ismail Khan[n] 21,056 53.52% 17,077 43.41% 724 1.84% 484 1.23% 0 0% 39,341 100%
Kohat[n] 18,898 67.85% 5,796 20.81% 2,139 7.68% 1,020 3.66% 0 0% 27,853 100%
Nowshera[o] 18,335 66.09% 6,192 22.32% 1,319 4.75% 1,896 6.83% 0 0% 27,742 100%
Bannu[n] 6,376 28.64% 13,222 59.4% 2,421 10.88% 242 1.09% 0 0% 22,261 100%
Abbottabad[n] 5,007 36.76% 7,346 53.94% 879 6.45% 388 2.85% 0 0% 13,620 100%
Mardan[o] 5,890 53.89% 3,220 29.46% 1,679 15.36% 141 1.29% 0 0% 10,930 100%
Tank[o] 6,043 55.72% 4,197 38.7% 344 3.17% 262 2.42% 0 0% 10,846 100%
Charsadda 9,710 94.9% 484 4.73% 30 0.29% 8 0.08% 0 0% 10,232 100%
Parang 9,869 99.83% 16 0.16% 1 0.01% 0 0% 0 0% 9,886 100%
Tangi 9,528 96.8% 314 3.19% 1 0.01% 0 0% 0 0% 9,843 100%
Risalpur 2,721 32.02% 3,369 39.64% 601 7.07% 1,808 21.27% 0 0% 8,499 100%
Kulachi 5,649 71.55% 2,162 27.38% 84 1.06% 0 0% 0 0% 7,895 100%
Baffa 6,703 88.16% 861 11.32% 39 0.51% 0 0% 0 0% 7,603 100%
Lakki 4,463 59.7% 2,543 34.02% 470 6.29% 0 0% 0 0% 7,476 100%
Jamrud 1,507 24.59% 3,114 50.82% 1,254 20.46% 253 4.13% 0 0% 6,128 100%
Haripur 2,907 49.36% 2,636 44.76% 346 5.88% 0 0% 0 0% 5,889 100%
Nawan Shehr 3,794 74.51% 1,052 20.66% 246 4.83% 0 0% 0 0% 5,092 100%
Cherat 173 66.28% 80 30.65% 8 3.07% 0 0% 0 0% 261 100%
Total
Urban
Population
212,511 63.28% 94,662 28.19% 18,737 5.58% 9,916 2.95% 23[d] 0.01% 335,849 100%

Castes and tribes

Castes and Tribes of North-West Frontier Province (1931–1941)
Caste or
Tribe
1931[9]: 377–383  1941[10]: 26 [q]
Pop. % Pop. %
Pathan 905,122 37.32% 795,400 26.18%
Awan 280,995 11.59% 178,896 5.89%
Gujar 121,170 5% 114,746 3.78%
Tanoli 86,003 3.55% 113,850 3.75%
Sayyid 81,972 3.38% 71,271 2.35%
Jat 73,919 3.05% 43,041 1.42%
Arora 60,283 2.49% 17,817 0.59%
Swathi 46,556 1.92% 37,245 1.23%
Tarkhan 45,088 1.86%
Julaha 40,055 1.65%
Dhund 39,322 1.62%
Baluch 37,145 1.53%
Khatri 33,804 1.39% 13,946 0.46%
Lohar 28,968 1.19%
Baghban 28,422 1.17%
Qureshi 27,211 1.12%
Karlal 27,185 1.12%
Mochi 26,628 1.1%
Kumhar 23,109 0.95%
Kashmiri 21,704 0.89%
Nai 17,178 0.71%
Brahman 16,379 0.68% 13,478 0.44%
Mughal 16,047 0.66%
Rajput 14,681 0.61%
Sheikh 13,046 0.54%
Dhobi 11,699 0.48%
Qassab 11,534 0.48%
Mirasi 10,869 0.45%
Sarara 9,984 0.41%
Sonar 9,532 0.39%
Chuhra 8,444 0.35% 3,838 0.13%
Paracha &
Banjara
8,259 0.34%
Teli 7,174 0.3%
Gakhar 7,098 0.29%
Maliar 6,622 0.27%
Mallah 6,578 0.27%
Bhatia 6,522 0.27%
Arain 6,480 0.27%
Mashwani 6,084 0.25%
Rangrez 5,703 0.24%
Turk 5,277 0.22%
Bhatiara 4,998 0.21%
Khoja 4,986 0.21%
Gurkha 4,565 0.19%
Machhi 4,130 0.17%
Chamar 2,901 0.12% 12,990 0.43%
Penjara 2,573 0.11%
Darzi 2,177 0.09%
Jhinwar 1,108 0.05%
Others or
Not Stated
157,787 6.51% 1,621,549 53.37%
Total 2,425,076 100% 3,038,067 100%

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Includes Hindko, Peshawari, Derawali, and Tanoli.
  2. ^ a b c Included 71 Jews, 25 Buddhists, 24 Parsis (Zoroastrians), and 1 Jain.
  3. ^ Included 49 Parsis (Zoroastrians), 14 Jews, and 4 Jains.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Included 20 Parsis (Zoroastrians) and 3 Jains.
  5. ^ a b Included 60 Parsis (Zoroastrians), 11 Jews, and 2 Buddhists.
  6. ^ a b c d Including Jainism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Tribals, others, or not stated
  7. ^ Including 70 Jews, 24 Parsis (Zoroastrians), and 18 Buddhists
  8. ^ Including 2 Buddhists
  9. ^ Including 5 Buddhists, 1 Jain, and 1 Jew.
  10. ^ Including 59 Parsis (Zoroastrians), 11 Jews, and 2 Buddhists
  11. ^ Including 1 Parsi (Zoroastrian)
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Tehsil and city religious breakdown figures for Christianity only includes local Christians, labeled as "Indian Christians" on census. Does not include Anglo-Indian Christians or British Christians, who were classified under "Other" category.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Including Anglo-Indian Christians, British Christians, Jainism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Tribals, others, or not stated
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Includes total Municipality and Cantonment population.
  15. ^ a b c d Includes total Cantonment and Notified area population.
  16. ^ a b c d e Includes total Notified area population.
  17. ^ During the 1941 census, many traditional census datasets including caste/tribe enumeration were not extensive due to World War II.

References

  1. ^ Area with Native States in 1901. Province area excluding Native States was 34 169 km2 (13 193 sq mi).
  2. ^ The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1908, p. 46.
  3. ^ "Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | province, Pakistan". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  4. ^ Meyer, Karl E. (5 August 2008). The Dust of Empire: The Race For Mastery in the Asian Heartland – Karl E. Meyer – Google Boeken. ISBN 9780786724819. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  5. ^ "Was Jinnah democratic? – II". Daily Times. 25 December 2011. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  6. ^ a b Ben Cahoon, WorldStatesmen.org. "Pakistan Provinces". Retrieved 3 October 2007.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1911 VOLUME XII NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE" (PDF). Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1921 VOLUME XIV NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE". Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d e f "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1931 VOLUME XV NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE". Retrieved 7 February 2023.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1941 VOLUME X NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE". Retrieved 23 September 2021.

References

  • The Imperial Gazetteer of India (26 vol, 1908–31), a highly detailed description of all of India in 1901. online edition

External links

    north, west, frontier, province, this, article, about, former, province, british, 1901, 1947, pakistan, 1947, 2010, successor, province, khyber, pakhtunkhwa, other, uses, north, west, frontier, disambiguation, nwfp, pashto, شمال, لویدیځ, سرحدي, ولایت, urdu, شم. This article is about the former province of British Raj 1901 1947 and Pakistan 1947 2010 For its successor province see Khyber Pakhtunkhwa For other uses see North West Frontier disambiguation The North West Frontier Province NWFP Pashto شمال لویدیځ سرحدي ولایت Urdu شمال مغربی سرحدی صوبہ was a Chief Commissioner s Province of British India established on 9 November 1901 from the north western districts of the Punjab Province Following the referendum in 1947 to join either Pakistan or India the province voted hugely in favour of joining Pakistan and it acceded accordingly on 14th August 1947 It was dissolved to form a unified province of West Pakistan in 1955 upon creation of One Unit Scheme and was re established in 1970 It was known by this name until 19 April 2010 when it was redesignated as the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa following the passing of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan by erstwhile President Asif Ali Zardari North West Frontier Provinceشمال لویدیځ سرحدي ولایت Pashto شمال مغربی سرحدی صوبہ Urdu Province of British Raj and Pakistan1901 2010Flag Coat of armsLocation within the British Raj1947 19551970 2010Location within PakistanArea 1901100 142 1 2 km2 38 665 sq mi Population 19012 041 534HistoryHistory Established9 November 1901 Renamed to Khyber Pakthunkhwa19 April 2010Preceded by Succeeded by1901 Punjab Province British India 1950 Phulra State1970 intervened by West Pakistan Amb StateSwat StateDir StateChitral StateHazara Tribal AgencyKohistan Tribal Agency Khyber PakhtunkhwaToday part ofPakistan Khyber PakhtunkhwaThe province covered an area of 70 709 km2 27 301 sq mi including much of the current Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province but excluding the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and the former princely states of Amb Chitral Dir Phulra and Swat Its capital was the city of Peshawar and the province was composed of six divisions Bannu Dera Ismail Khan Hazara Kohat Mardan and Peshawar Division Malakand was later added as the seventh division Until 1947 the province was bordered by five princely states to the north the minor states of the Gilgit Agency to the northeast the province of West Punjab to the east and the province of Balochistan to the south The Kingdom of Afghanistan lay to the northwest with the Federally Administered Tribal Areas forming a buffer zone between the two Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Inside Pakistan 2 Government 3 Demographics 3 1 Language 3 1 1 Districts 3 2 Religion 3 2 1 Districts 3 2 2 Tehsils 3 2 3 Cities 3 3 Castes and tribes 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit The northwestern frontier areas were annexed by the East India Company after the Second Sikh War 1848 49 The territories thenceforth formed a part of Punjab until the province then known as North West Frontier Province was created in 1901 from the north western districts of the Punjab Province 3 This region along with the Frontier Tribal Areas acted as a buffer zone with Afghanistan The Punjab in 1880 included areas of the later North West Frontier Province Map of the North West Frontier Province and Kashmir from The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1907 1909 Map of the North West Frontier Province and neighbouring regions National Geographic 1946 Inside Pakistan Edit Before the Partition of India the 1947 North West Frontier Province referendum was held in July 1947 to decide the future of NWFP in which the people of the province decided in favor of joining Pakistan However the then Chief Minister Dr Khan Sahib along with his brother Bacha Khan and the Khudai Khidmatgars boycotted the referendum citing that it did not have the options of the NWFP becoming independent or joining Afghanistan 4 5 As a separate province the NWFP lasted until 1955 when it was merged into the new province of West Pakistan under the One Unit policy announced by Prime Minister Chaudhry Mohammad Ali It was recreated after the dissolution of the One Unit system and lasted under its old nomenclature until April 2010 when it was renamed as the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province Government EditThe offices of Governor and Chief Minister of the North West Frontier Province lasted until 14 October 1955 Tenure Governors of the North West Frontier Province 6 14 August 1947 8 April 1948 Sir George Cunningham8 April 1948 16 July 1949 Sir Ambrose Dundas Flux Dundas16 July 1949 14 January 1950 Sahibzada Mohammad Kursheed14 January 1950 21 February 1950 Mohammad Ibrahim Khan Jhagra acting 21 February 1950 23 November 1951 Ismail Ibrahim Chundrigar24 November 1951 17 November 1954 Khwaja Shahabuddin17 November 1954 14 October 1955 Qurban Ali Khan14 October 1955 North West Frontier Province dissolvedTenure Chief Ministers of the North West Frontier Province 6 Political party1 April 1937 7 September 1937 Sir Sahibzada Abdul Qayyum Khan Non party government nominee7 September 1937 10 November 1939 Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan 1st time Indian National Congress10 November 1939 25 May 1943 Governor s rule25 May 1943 16 March 1945 Sardar Aurangzeb Khan Muslim League16 March 1945 22 August 1947 Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan 2nd time Indian National Congress14 August 1947 Independence of Pakistan23 August 1947 23 April 1953 Abdul Qayyum Khan Kashmiri Pakistan Muslim League23 April 1953 18 July 1955 Sardar Abdur Rashid Khan19 July 1955 14 October 1955 Sardar Bahadur KhanDemographics EditNot to be confused with Federally Administered Tribal Areas Demographics Population historyYearPop 18551 144 047 18681 339 566 17 1 18811 575 943 17 6 18911 857 519 17 9 19012 041 534 9 9 19112 196 933 7 6 19212 251 340 2 5 19312 425 076 7 7 19413 038 067 25 3 Source Census of India 7 30 8 345 346 9 10 Historical population language and religious counts in North West Frontier Province were enumerated in all districts Hazara Mardan Peshawar Kohat Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan detailed in the population language and religious tables above and below Separate population counts were taken in the Agencies and Tribal Areas as detailed on the respective article page At independence there was a clear Muslim Pashtun and Hindkowan majority in the North West Frontier Province although there were also significant Hindu and Sikh Pashtun Hindkowan and Punjabi minorities scattered across the province Language Edit The languages of the North West Frontier Province included Pashto Hindko Kohistani and others although most of the population spoke either Pashto or Lahnda Western Punjabi primarily Hindko and Saraiki Prior to the arrival of the British the official language for governmental uses and such was Persian Language in North West Frontier Province 1931 MotherTongue 1931 9 357 359 Population PercentagePashto 1 279 471 52 76 Western Punjabi Lahnda a 1 034 874 42 67 Standard Punjabi 68 031 2 81 Hindustani 19 221 0 79 English 7 852 0 32 Persian 6 030 0 25 Nepali 5 140 0 21 Kashmiri 1 796 0 07 Gujari 596 0 02 Kohistani 377 0 02 Turkish 62 0 003 Arabic 24 0 001 Welsh 19 0 001 Portuguese 14 0 001 French 9 0 0004 Chinese 5 0 0002 German 3 0 0001 Greek 2 0 0001 Scotch 1 0 Irish 1 0 Spanish 1 0 Dutch 1 0 Japanese 1 0 Other Indo Aryan orDravidian languages 1 545 0 06 Total 2 425 076 100 Districts Edit Language in the Districts of North West Frontier Province 1931 9 357 359 District Pashto Western Punjabi Lahnda a Standard Punjabi Hindustani English Others TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar District 781 773 80 24 127 189 13 05 40 805 4 19 11 798 1 21 5 864 0 6 6 892 0 71 974 321 100 Hazara District 29 375 4 38 625 268 93 31 5 436 0 81 4 113 0 61 257 0 04 5 668 0 85 670 117 100 Dera Ismail Khan District 53 643 19 57 213 115 77 76 4 446 1 62 419 0 15 336 0 12 2 105 0 77 274 064 100 Bannu District 228 381 84 49 33 547 12 41 6 267 2 32 1 181 0 44 556 0 21 369 0 14 270 301 100 Kohat District 186 299 78 85 35 755 15 13 11 077 4 69 1 710 0 72 839 0 36 593 0 25 236 273 100 Total 1 279 471 52 76 1 034 874 42 67 68 031 2 81 19 221 0 79 7 852 0 32 15 627 0 64 2 425 076 100 Religion Edit Religion in North West Frontier Province 1941 10 22 Islam 91 8 Hinduism 5 94 Sikhism 1 91 Christianity 0 36 Others b 0 004 Religious counts below is for the entirety of NWFP Hazara Mardan Peshawar Kohat Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan The Agencies and Tribal Areas constituted a separate administrative division where religious composition was not enumerated except at small Trans Frontier Posts in the region Religion in North West Frontier Province 1881 1941 Religiousgroup 1881 7 95 1891 7 95 1901 7 95 1911 7 307 308 1921 8 345 346 1931 9 373 375 1941 10 22 Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Islam 1 451 444 92 1 1 714 490 92 3 1 882 294 92 2 2 039 994 92 86 2 062 786 91 62 2 227 303 91 84 2 788 797 91 8 Hinduism 111 892 7 1 118 881 6 4 128 617 6 3 119 942 5 46 149 881 6 66 142 977 5 9 180 321 5 94 Sikhism 7 880 0 5 18 575 1 26 540 1 3 30 345 1 38 28 040 1 25 42 510 1 75 57 939 1 91 Christianity 4 728 0 3 5 573 0 3 6 125 0 3 6 585 0 3 10 610 0 47 12 213 0 5 10 889 0 36 Others N A N A N A N A N A N A 67 c 0 003 23 d 0 001 73 e 0 003 121 b 0 004 Total Population 1 575 943 100 1 857 519 100 2 041 534 100 2 196 933 100 2 251 340 100 2 425 076 100 3 038 067 100 Adherents of Islam who were indigenous to frontier regions that continued to have relatively large Hindu populations and who were also relatively recent converts were influenced by some traditions of Hinduism in contrast Muslims in frontier regions that had been further influenced by orthodox Islam and converted at a much earlier date were noted in their relatively different cultural habits The high road along which the Mohammedan conquerors and rulers of India passed and repassed lay through the north the Khyber Kurram and other routes and it is probable that Islam never took so firm a hold of the inhabitants of the southern district as of the people to the north of them In this connection it is interesting to notice that the Mussalman of the Derajat is less strict in his observance of the duties of his religion such as fasts prayers and the like than his northern neighbours Through Hazara lay the road by which the Emperors of Delhi went to and fro between the capital and their summer retreat in Kashmir and it was natural that Islam should thoroughly permeate the district Similarly Kohat from its situation with regard to the Kurram Valley which at no very distant period was nominally at least a portion of the Afghan kingdom has been more influenced in the past by its Mohammedan neighbours to the west than have the districts to the south of it There is no need to consider here the probable date at which the bulk of the Pathans living in the Province or rather their ancestors were converted to Islam It is enough to notice that the had long been Mohammadan when they settled in their present homes and that their fanaticism and intolerance especially in the districts where they are strongest rendered the Province no very inviting place of residence for settlers of a different creed If no fanaticism in its inhabitants acted as a bar to the settlement of Hindus in Hazara the absence of any large trade centres was at least equally efficacious The only other district in which there is a non Pathan element in the population in any way commensurate to that of Hazara is Dera Ismail Khan The population here is mainly composed of tribes of Indian origin Its conversion to Islam is of much later data fanaticism does not exist and no particular dislike to the Hindu seems to have existed 7 64 65 Excerpt from the Census of India North West Frontier Province 1911 AD Similarly adherents of Hinduism who belonged to the various castes and tribes who were indigenous to the frontier regions had considerable Islamic influence owing to their status as a religious minority in the region for centuries and thus formed religious syncretism that incorporated aspects from both faiths into their cultures and traditions Hinduism as it exists in the North West Frontier Province is but a pale reflection of the system which flourishes in the United Provinces and other areas to the east Even of the Derajat where as we have seen the Hindu population is proportionately most numerous the writer of the Dera Ismail Khan Gazetteer notes the Hindus of this district are less particular in the matter of caste prejudices and observances than down country Hindus Most of them will drink water that has been carried in Mussaks skins for carrying water or out of lotas detached from a working well They habitually ride on donkeys and do a multitude of other things which an orthodox Hindu would shrink from All idolatrous observances are kept very much in the background Except a few small images thakurs kept in their mandirs they have no idols at all Nor is it their habit to take their gods about in procession No one in fact sees anything of their worship They burn their dead and throw the ashes into the Indus They always keep a few of the bones and take them when the opportunity offers to the Ganges There are a good many dharamsalas mandirs and dawaras at Dera Ismail Khan and in the cis Indus tehsils 7 93 Excerpt from the Census of India North West Frontier Province 1911 AD Lastly decadal census reports throughout the colonial era frequently detailed the difficulty of differentiating adherents of Hinduism with adherents of Sikhism owing to the traditional ability of the former in assimilating and integrating followers of varied thought into Hinduism The Sikh religion was born out of Hinduism and fears have been expressed of its being reabsorbed into it Truly wonderful is the strength and vitality of Hinduism It is like the boa constrictor of the Indian forests when a petty enemy appears to worry it it winds round its opponent crushes it in its folds and finally causes it to disappear in its capacious interior In this way many centuries ago Hinduism on its own ground disposed of Buddhism which was largely a Hindu reformation in this way in a prehistoric period it absorbed the religion of the Scythian invaders of Northern India in this way it has converted educated Islam in India into a semi paganism and in this way it is disposing of the reformed and once hopeful religion of Baba Nanak Hinduism has embraced Sikhism in its folds the still comparatively young religion is making a vigorous struggle for life but its ultimate destruction is it is apprehended inevitable without State support Notwithstanding the Sikh Guru s powerful denunciation of Brahmans secular Sikhs now rarely do anything without their assistance Brahmans help them to be born help them to wed help them to die and help their souls after death to obtain a state of bliss And Brahmans with all the deftness of Roman Catholic missionaries in Protestant countries have partially succeeded in persuading the Sikhs to restore to their niches the images of Devi the Queen of Heaven and the Saints and gods of the ancient faith 7 62 Excerpt from the Census of India North West Frontier Province 1911 AD Districts Edit With rapid population growth occurring across all districts in the province Mardan District was added to the North West Frontier Province in 1941 Religion in the Districts of North West Frontier Province 1941 10 22 23 District Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity Others f TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar District 769 589 90 35 51 212 6 01 24 030 2 82 6 890 0 81 112 g 0 01 851 833 100 Hazara District 756 004 94 95 30 267 3 8 9 220 1 16 737 0 09 2 h 0 0003 796 230 100 Mardan District 483 575 95 47 10 677 2 11 11 838 2 34 449 0 09 0 0 506 539 100 Dera Ismail Khan District 255 757 85 79 39 167 13 14 2 390 0 8 810 0 27 7 i 0 002 298 131 100 Bannu District 257 648 87 06 31 471 10 63 6 112 2 07 699 0 24 0 0 295 930 100 Kohat District 266 224 91 99 17 527 6 06 4 349 1 5 1 304 0 45 0 0 289 404 100 Total 2 788 797 91 8 180 321 5 94 57 939 1 91 10 889 0 36 121 b 0 004 3 038 067 100 Religion in the Districts of North West Frontier Province 1931 9 373 375 District Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity Others f TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar District 898 683 92 24 42 321 4 34 24 271 2 49 8 974 0 92 72 j 0 01 974 321 100 Hazara District 636 794 95 03 25 260 3 77 7 630 1 14 432 0 06 1 k 0 0001 670 117 100 Dera Ismail Khan District 235 707 86 35 822 13 07 1 878 0 69 657 0 24 0 0 274 064 100 Bannu District 237 674 87 93 26 181 9 69 5 482 2 03 964 0 36 0 0 270 301 100 Kohat District 218 445 92 45 13 393 5 67 3 249 1 38 1 186 0 5 0 0 236 273 100 Total 2 227 303 91 84 142 977 5 9 42 510 1 75 12 213 0 5 73 e 0 003 2 425 076 100 Religion in the Districts of North West Frontier Province 1921 8 344 346 District Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity Others f TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar District 836 222 92 16 48 144 5 31 15 326 1 69 7 652 0 84 23 d 0 003 907 367 100 Hazara District 591 058 94 97 26 038 4 18 4 850 0 78 403 0 06 0 0 622 349 100 Dera Ismail Khan District 218 315 83 72 39 311 15 08 1 904 0 73 1 237 0 47 0 0 260 767 100 Bannu District 219 695 89 04 23 509 9 53 3 286 1 33 244 0 1 0 0 246 734 100 Kohat District 197 496 92 23 12 879 6 01 2 674 1 25 1 074 0 5 0 0 214 123 100 Total 2 062 786 91 62 149 881 6 66 28 040 1 25 10 610 0 47 23 d 0 001 2 251 340 100 Tehsils Edit Religion in the Tehsils of North West Frontier Province 1941 10 30 Tehsil Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity l Others m TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar Tehsil 335 871 86 27 33 551 8 62 15 454 3 97 2 618 l 0 67 1 835 m 0 47 389 329 100 Abbottabad Tehsil 284 228 92 13 17 558 5 69 6 035 1 96 278 l 0 09 419 m 0 14 308 518 100 Mardan Tehsil 281 161 93 91 8 709 2 91 9 091 3 04 360 l 0 12 63 m 0 02 299 384 100 Charsadda Tehsil 239 634 98 11 2 533 1 04 1 940 0 79 127 l 0 05 12 m 0 005 244 246 100 Mansehra Tehsil 237 306 97 58 4 910 2 02 965 0 4 22 l 0 01 0 0 243 203 100 Nowshera Tehsil 194 084 88 92 15 128 6 93 6 636 3 04 652 l 0 3 1 758 m 0 81 218 258 100 Swabi Tehsil 202 414 97 71 1 968 0 95 2 747 1 33 16 l 0 01 10 m 0 005 207 155 100 Haripur Tehsil 178 545 95 04 7 278 3 87 2 011 1 07 14 l 0 01 6 m 0 003 187 854 100 Bannu Tehsil 157 097 83 74 24 517 13 07 5 285 2 82 467 l 0 25 232 m 0 12 187 598 100 Dera Ismail Khan Tehsil 155 100 82 68 30 065 16 03 1 740 0 93 195 l 0 1 485 m 0 26 187 585 100 Kohat Tehsil 100 868 88 01 9 156 7 99 3 613 3 15 596 l 0 52 383 m 0 33 114 616 100 Teri Tehsil 110 146 97 73 2 462 2 18 86 0 08 0 0 15 m 0 01 112 709 100 Marwat Tehsil 100 551 92 82 6 954 6 42 817 0 75 0 0 0 0 108 332 100 Hangu Tehsil 55 210 88 94 5 909 9 52 650 1 05 0 0 310 m 0 5 62 079 100 Tank Tehsil 49 847 89 55 5 279 9 48 401 0 72 81 l 0 15 56 m 0 1 55 664 100 Kulachi Tehsil 50 810 92 58 3 823 6 97 249 0 45 0 0 0 0 54 882 100 Amb Tehsil 47 288 98 69 433 0 9 195 0 41 0 0 0 0 47 916 100 Phulra Tehsil 8 637 98 83 88 1 01 14 0 16 0 0 0 0 8 739 100 Total 2 788 797 91 8 180 321 5 94 57 929 1 91 5 426 l 0 18 5 583 m 0 18 3 038 067 100 Religion in the Tehsils of North West Frontier Province 1921 8 510 516 Tehsil Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity Others TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar Tehsil 225 897 85 82 25 414 9 65 8 223 3 12 3 671 1 39 23 d 0 01 263 228 100 Abbottabad Tehsil 214 720 92 54 13 580 5 85 3 344 1 44 390 0 17 0 0 232 034 100 Mansehra Tehsil 195 812 97 48 4 592 2 29 468 0 23 7 0 003 0 0 200 879 100 Mardan Tehsil 161 726 94 22 6 846 3 99 2 874 1 67 196 0 11 0 0 171 642 100 Charsadda Tehsil 161 406 98 16 2 183 1 33 787 0 48 62 0 04 0 0 164 438 100 Haripur Tehsil 153 645 94 85 7 362 4 54 968 0 6 6 0 004 0 0 161 981 100 Swabi Tehsil 155 116 97 41 3 063 1 92 1 062 0 67 1 0 001 0 0 159 242 100 Dera Ismail Khan Tehsil 129 919 83 27 24 685 15 82 884 0 57 529 0 34 0 0 156 017 100 Nowshera Tehsil 132 077 88 75 10 638 7 15 2 380 1 6 3 722 2 5 0 0 148 817 100 Bannu Tehsil 123 384 86 56 16 130 11 32 2 777 1 95 244 0 17 0 0 142 535 100 Marwat Tehsil 96 311 92 43 7 379 7 08 509 0 49 0 0 0 0 104 199 100 Teri Tehsil 89 924 97 49 2 239 2 43 45 0 05 29 0 03 0 0 92 237 100 Kohat Tehsil 67 535 87 51 6 415 8 31 2 195 2 84 1 026 1 33 0 0 77 171 100 Tank Tehsil 47 895 80 31 10 224 17 14 811 1 36 707 1 19 0 0 59 637 100 Kulachi Tehsil 40 501 89 78 4 402 9 76 209 0 46 1 0 002 0 0 45 113 100 Hangu Tehsil 40 037 89 54 4 225 9 45 434 0 97 19 0 04 0 0 44 715 100 Amb Tehsil 21 244 97 66 440 2 02 70 0 32 0 0 0 0 21 754 100 Phulra Tehsil 5 637 98 88 64 1 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 701 100 Total 2 062 786 91 62 149 881 6 66 28 040 1 25 10 610 0 47 23 d 0 2 251 340 100 Cities Edit Religion in Urban North West Frontier Province 1941 10 19 Islam 66 26 Hinduism 24 34 Sikhism 7 5 Others 1 9 Religion in the Cities of North West Frontier Province 1941 10 19 City Urban Area Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity l Others m TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar n 122 972 70 91 31 630 18 24 14 245 8 21 2 586 l 1 49 1 987 m 1 15 173 420 100 Dera Ismail Khan n 26 424 51 5 22 815 44 47 1 412 2 75 195 l 0 38 460 m 0 9 51 306 100 Kohat n 32 111 71 39 8 250 18 34 3 562 7 92 445 l 0 99 609 m 1 35 44 977 100 Nowshera o 28 132 63 9 9 831 22 33 4 253 9 66 412 l 0 94 1 394 m 3 17 44 022 100 Mardan n 30 301 71 31 5 851 13 77 6 014 14 15 282 l 0 66 46 m 0 11 42 494 100 Bannu n 10 696 27 78 22 175 57 59 4 894 12 71 467 l 1 21 232 m 0 6 38 504 100 Abbottabad n 12 192 44 46 11 886 43 34 2 680 9 77 298 l 1 09 368 m 1 34 27 424 100 Charsadda 15 747 93 48 745 4 42 294 1 75 54 l 0 32 5 m 0 03 16 845 100 Parang 13 494 99 99 2 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 496 100 Tangi 12 456 96 51 444 3 44 2 0 02 4 l 0 03 0 0 12 906 100 Mansehra 8 141 79 68 1 699 16 63 375 3 67 2 l 0 02 0 0 10 217 100 Lakki p 5 883 58 01 3 710 36 58 548 5 4 0 0 0 0 10 141 100 Utmanzai 9 768 96 44 182 1 8 171 1 69 8 l 0 08 0 0 10 129 100 Haripur 5 174 55 5 3 113 33 39 1 035 11 1 0 0 0 0 9 322 100 Tank p 5 531 60 85 3 296 36 26 181 1 99 66 l 0 73 15 m 0 17 9 089 100 Risalpur 3 506 38 93 3 937 43 71 1 024 11 37 333 l 3 7 207 m 2 3 9 007 100 Kulachi p 6 610 74 77 2 092 23 67 138 1 56 0 0 0 0 8 840 100 Baffa p 7 166 89 71 735 9 2 81 1 01 6 l 0 08 0 0 7 988 100 Nawan Shehr p 5 075 79 12 1 030 16 06 309 4 82 0 0 0 0 6 414 100 Kot Najibullah 4 228 79 55 929 17 48 156 2 94 2 l 0 04 0 0 5 315 100 Cherat 270 80 12 30 8 9 25 7 42 0 0 12 m 3 56 337 100 TotalUrbanPopulation 365 877 66 26 134 382 24 34 41 399 7 5 5 160 l 0 93 5 335 m 0 97 552 193 100 Religion in Urban North West Frontier Province 1921 8 340 342 Islam 63 28 Hinduism 28 19 Sikhism 5 58 Christianity 2 95 Others d 0 01 Religion in the Cities of North West Frontier Province 1921 8 340 342 City Urban Area Islam Hinduism Sikhism Christianity Others f TotalPop Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Peshawar n 73 882 70 73 20 981 20 09 6 152 5 89 3 414 3 27 23 d 0 02 104 452 100 Dera Ismail Khan n 21 056 53 52 17 077 43 41 724 1 84 484 1 23 0 0 39 341 100 Kohat n 18 898 67 85 5 796 20 81 2 139 7 68 1 020 3 66 0 0 27 853 100 Nowshera o 18 335 66 09 6 192 22 32 1 319 4 75 1 896 6 83 0 0 27 742 100 Bannu n 6 376 28 64 13 222 59 4 2 421 10 88 242 1 09 0 0 22 261 100 Abbottabad n 5 007 36 76 7 346 53 94 879 6 45 388 2 85 0 0 13 620 100 Mardan o 5 890 53 89 3 220 29 46 1 679 15 36 141 1 29 0 0 10 930 100 Tank o 6 043 55 72 4 197 38 7 344 3 17 262 2 42 0 0 10 846 100 Charsadda 9 710 94 9 484 4 73 30 0 29 8 0 08 0 0 10 232 100 Parang 9 869 99 83 16 0 16 1 0 01 0 0 0 0 9 886 100 Tangi 9 528 96 8 314 3 19 1 0 01 0 0 0 0 9 843 100 Risalpur 2 721 32 02 3 369 39 64 601 7 07 1 808 21 27 0 0 8 499 100 Kulachi 5 649 71 55 2 162 27 38 84 1 06 0 0 0 0 7 895 100 Baffa 6 703 88 16 861 11 32 39 0 51 0 0 0 0 7 603 100 Lakki 4 463 59 7 2 543 34 02 470 6 29 0 0 0 0 7 476 100 Jamrud 1 507 24 59 3 114 50 82 1 254 20 46 253 4 13 0 0 6 128 100 Haripur 2 907 49 36 2 636 44 76 346 5 88 0 0 0 0 5 889 100 Nawan Shehr 3 794 74 51 1 052 20 66 246 4 83 0 0 0 0 5 092 100 Cherat 173 66 28 80 30 65 8 3 07 0 0 0 0 261 100 TotalUrbanPopulation 212 511 63 28 94 662 28 19 18 737 5 58 9 916 2 95 23 d 0 01 335 849 100 Castes and tribes Edit Castes and Tribes of North West Frontier Province 1931 1941 Caste orTribe 1931 9 377 383 1941 10 26 q Pop Pop Pathan 905 122 37 32 795 400 26 18 Awan 280 995 11 59 178 896 5 89 Gujar 121 170 5 114 746 3 78 Tanoli 86 003 3 55 113 850 3 75 Sayyid 81 972 3 38 71 271 2 35 Jat 73 919 3 05 43 041 1 42 Arora 60 283 2 49 17 817 0 59 Swathi 46 556 1 92 37 245 1 23 Tarkhan 45 088 1 86 Julaha 40 055 1 65 Dhund 39 322 1 62 Baluch 37 145 1 53 Khatri 33 804 1 39 13 946 0 46 Lohar 28 968 1 19 Baghban 28 422 1 17 Qureshi 27 211 1 12 Karlal 27 185 1 12 Mochi 26 628 1 1 Kumhar 23 109 0 95 Kashmiri 21 704 0 89 Nai 17 178 0 71 Brahman 16 379 0 68 13 478 0 44 Mughal 16 047 0 66 Rajput 14 681 0 61 Sheikh 13 046 0 54 Dhobi 11 699 0 48 Qassab 11 534 0 48 Mirasi 10 869 0 45 Sarara 9 984 0 41 Sonar 9 532 0 39 Chuhra 8 444 0 35 3 838 0 13 Paracha amp Banjara 8 259 0 34 Teli 7 174 0 3 Gakhar 7 098 0 29 Maliar 6 622 0 27 Mallah 6 578 0 27 Bhatia 6 522 0 27 Arain 6 480 0 27 Mashwani 6 084 0 25 Rangrez 5 703 0 24 Turk 5 277 0 22 Bhatiara 4 998 0 21 Khoja 4 986 0 21 Gurkha 4 565 0 19 Machhi 4 130 0 17 Chamar 2 901 0 12 12 990 0 43 Penjara 2 573 0 11 Darzi 2 177 0 09 Jhinwar 1 108 0 05 Others orNot Stated 157 787 6 51 1 621 549 53 37 Total 2 425 076 100 3 038 067 100 See also EditFrontier Regions Federally Administered Tribal Areas Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of PakistanNotes Edit a b Includes Hindko Peshawari Derawali and Tanoli a b c Included 71 Jews 25 Buddhists 24 Parsis Zoroastrians and 1 Jain Included 49 Parsis Zoroastrians 14 Jews and 4 Jains a b c d e f g h Included 20 Parsis Zoroastrians and 3 Jains a b Included 60 Parsis Zoroastrians 11 Jews and 2 Buddhists a b c d Including Jainism Buddhism Zoroastrianism Judaism Tribals others or not stated Including 70 Jews 24 Parsis Zoroastrians and 18 Buddhists Including 2 Buddhists Including 5 Buddhists 1 Jain and 1 Jew Including 59 Parsis Zoroastrians 11 Jews and 2 Buddhists Including 1 Parsi Zoroastrian a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Tehsil and city religious breakdown figures for Christianity only includes local Christians labeled as Indian Christians on census Does not include Anglo Indian Christians or British Christians who were classified under Other category a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Including Anglo Indian Christians British Christians Jainism Buddhism Zoroastrianism Judaism Tribals others or not stated a b c d e f g h i j k Includes total Municipality and Cantonment population a b c d Includes total Cantonment and Notified area population a b c d e Includes total Notified area population During the 1941 census many traditional census datasets including caste tribe enumeration were not extensive due to World War II References Edit Area with Native States in 1901 Province area excluding Native States was 34 169 km2 13 193 sq mi The Imperial Gazetteer of India 1908 p 46 sfn error no target CITEREFThe Imperial Gazetteer of India1908 help Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province Pakistan Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 9 July 2020 Meyer Karl E 5 August 2008 The Dust of Empire The Race For Mastery in the Asian Heartland Karl E Meyer Google Boeken ISBN 9780786724819 Retrieved 10 July 2013 Was Jinnah democratic II Daily Times 25 December 2011 Retrieved 24 February 2019 a b Ben Cahoon WorldStatesmen org Pakistan Provinces Retrieved 3 October 2007 a b c d e f g h CENSUS OF INDIA 1911 VOLUME XII NORTH WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE PDF Retrieved 23 September 2021 a b c d e f CENSUS OF INDIA 1921 VOLUME XIV NORTH WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE Retrieved 2 February 2023 a b c d e f CENSUS OF INDIA 1931 VOLUME XV NORTH WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE Retrieved 7 February 2023 a b c d e f g h CENSUS OF INDIA 1941 VOLUME X NORTH WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE Retrieved 23 September 2021 References EditThe Imperial Gazetteer of India 26 vol 1908 31 a highly detailed description of all of India in 1901 online editionExternal links EditGovernment of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North West Frontier Province amp oldid 1139611671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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