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Punjab Province (British India)

Punjab was a province of British India. Most of the Punjab region was annexed by the East India Company in 2 April 1849, and declared a province of British Rule, it was one of the last areas of the Indian subcontinent to fall under British control. In 1858, the Punjab, along with the rest of British India, came under the direct rule of the British Crown. It had an area of 358,354.5 km2.

Punjab Province
Province of British India
1849–1947
Coat of arms

Maps of British Punjab
Capital
DemonymPunjabi
History
Government
 • TypeBritish Colonial Government
 • MottoCrescat e Fluviis
"Let it grow from the rivers"
Governor 
• 1849–1853
Henry Montgomery Lawrence (first)
• 1946–1947
Evan Meredith Jenkins (last)
Premier 
• 1937–1942
Sikandar Hayat Khan
• 1942–1947
Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana
Historical eraNew Imperialism
30 March 1849
• Delhi Territory transferred to Punjab from North-Western Provinces
1858
• North-West Frontier Province separated from Punjab
9 November 1901
• Delhi district separated from Punjab
1911
14–15 August 1947
Political subdivisionsRawalpindi Division,[a] Lahore Division,[b] Multan Division,[c] Jullundur Division,[d] Delhi Division,[e] and Princely States[f]
Today part ofIndia
Pakistan

The province comprised four natural geographic regions – Indo-Gangetic Plain West, Himalayan, Sub-Himalayan, and the North-West Dry Area – along with five administrative divisions – Delhi, Jullundur, Lahore, Multan, and Rawalpindi – and a number of princely states.[1] In 1947, the Partition of India led to the province's division into East Punjab and West Punjab, in the newly independent dominions of India and Pakistan respectively.

Etymology

The region was originally called Sapta Sindhu,[2] the Vedic land of the seven rivers flowing into the ocean.[3] The Sanskrit name for the region, as mentioned in the Ramayana and Mahabharata for example, was Panchanada which means "Land of the Five Rivers", and was translated to Persian as Punjab after the Muslim conquests.[4][5] The later name Punjab is a compound of two Persian words[6][7] Panj (five) and āb (water) and was introduced to the region by the Turko-Persian conquerors[8] of India and more formally popularised during the Mughal Empire.[9][10] Punjab literally means "(The Land of) Five Waters" referring to the rivers: Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej, and Beas.[11] All are tributaries of the Indus River, the Chenab being the largest.

Geography

Geographically, the province was a triangular tract of country of which the Indus River and its tributary the Sutlej formed the two sides up to their confluence, the base of the triangle in the north being the Lower Himalayan Range between those two rivers. Moreover, the province as constituted under British rule also included a large tract outside these boundaries. Along the northern border, Himalayan ranges divided it from Kashmir and Tibet. On the west it was separated from the North-West Frontier Province by the Indus, until it reached the border of Dera Ghazi Khan District, which was divided from Baluchistan by the Sulaiman Range. To the south lay Sindh and Rajputana, while on the east the rivers Jumna and Tons separated it from the United Provinces.[1] In total Punjab had an area of approximately 357 000 km square about the same size as modern day Germany, being one of the largest provinces of the British Raj.

It encompassed the present day Indian states of Punjab, Haryana, Chandigarh, Delhi, and some parts of Himachal Pradesh which were merged with Punjab by the British for administrative purposes (but excluding the former princely states which were later combined into the Patiala and East Punjab States Union) and the Pakistani regions of the Punjab, Islamabad Capital Territory and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

In 1901 the frontier districts beyond the Indus were separated from Punjab and made into a new province: the North-West Frontier Province. Subsequently, Punjab was divided into four natural geographical divisions by colonial officials on the decadal census data:[12]: 2 [13]: 4 

  1. Indo-Gangetic Plain West geographical division (including Hisar district, Loharu State, Rohtak district, Dujana State, Gurgaon district, Pataudi State, Delhi, Karnal district, Jalandhar district, Kapurthala State, Ludhiana district, Malerkotla State, Firozpur district, Faridkot State, Patiala State, Jind State, Nabha State, Lahore District, Amritsar district, Gujranwala District and Sheikhupura District);
  2. Himalayan geographical division (including Nahan State, Simla district, Simla Hill States, Kangra district, Mandi State, Suket State, and Chamba State);
  3. Sub-Himalayan geographical division (including Ambala district, Kalsia State, Hoshiarpur district, Gurdaspur district, Sialkot District, Gujrat District, Jhelum District, Rawalpindi District, and Attock District;
  4. North-West Dry Area geographical division (including Montgomery District, Shahpur District, Mianwali District, Lyallpur District, Jhang District, Multan District, Bahawalpur State, Muzaffargarh District, and Dera Ghazi Khan District).

History

Company rule

 
 
The Durbar, or assembly of native princes and nobles, convened by Sir John Lawrence at Lahore

On 21 February 1849, the East India Company decisively defeated the Sikh Empire at the Battle of Gujrat bringing to an end the Second Anglo-Sikh War. Following the victory, the East India Company annexed the Punjab on 2 April 1849 and incorporated it within British India. The province whilst nominally under the control of the Bengal Presidency was administratively independent. Lord Dalhousie constituted the Board of Administration by inducting into it the most experienced and seasoned British officers. The Board was led by Sir Henry Lawrence, who had previously worked as British Resident at the Lahore Durbar and also consisted of his younger brother John Lawrence and Charles Grenville Mansel.[14] Below the Board, a group of acclaimed officers collectively known as Henry Lawrence's "Young Men" assisted in the administration of the newly acquired province. The Board was abolished by Lord Dalhousie in 1853; Sir Henry was assigned to the Rajputana Agency, and his brother John succeeded as the first Chief Commissioner.

Recognising the cultural diversity of the Punjab, the Board maintained a strict policy of non-interference in regard to religious and cultural matters.[15] Sikh aristocrats were given patronage and pensions and groups in control of historical places of worship were allowed to remain in control.[15]

During the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the Punjab remained relatively peaceful, apart from rebellion led by Ahmad Khan Kharral.[16] In May, John Lawrence took swift action to disarm potentially mutinous sepoys and redeploy most European troops to the Delhi ridge.[17] Finally he recruited new regiments of Punjabis to replace the depleted force, and was provided with manpower and support from surrounding princely states such as Jind, Patiala, Nabha and Kapurthala and tribal chiefs on the borderlands with Afghanistan. By 1858, an estimated 70,000 extra men had been recruited for the army and militarised police from within the Punjab.[16]

British Raj

 
The Punjab in 1880

In 1858, under the terms of the Queen's Proclamation issued by Queen Victoria, the Punjab, along with the rest of British India, came under the direct rule of the British Crown.[18] Delhi Territory was transferred from the North-Western Provinces to the Punjab in 1858, partly to punish the city for the important role the last Mughal emperor, Bahadur Shah II, and the city as a whole, played in the 1857 Rebellion.[19]

Sir John Lawrence, then Chief Commissioner, was appointed the first Lieutenant-Governor on 1 January 1859. In 1866, the Judicial Commissioner was replaced by a Chief Court. The direct administrative functions of the Government were carried by the Lieutenant-Governor through the Secretariat, comprising a Chief Secretary, a Secretary and two Under-Secretaries. They were usually members of the Indian Civil Service.[20] The territory under the Lieutenant consisted of 29 Districts, grouped under 5 Divisions, and 43 Princely States. Each District was under a Deputy-Commissioner, who reported to the Commissioner of the Division. Each District was subdivided into between three and seven tehsils, each under a tahsildar, assisted by a naib (deputy) tahsildar.[21]

In 1885 the Punjab administration began an ambitious plan to transform over six million acres of barren waste land in central and western Punjab into irrigable agricultural land. The creation of canal colonies was designed to relieve demographic pressures in the central parts of the province, increase productivity and revenues, and create a loyal support amongst peasant landholders.[22] The colonisation resulted in an agricultural revolution in the province, rapid industrial growth, and the resettlement of over one million Punjabis in the new areas.[23] A number of towns were created or saw significant development in the colonies, such as Lyallpur, Sargodha and Montgomery. Colonisation led to the canal irrigated area of the Punjab increasing from three to fourteen million acres in the period from 1885 to 1947.[24]

The beginning of the twentieth century saw increasing unrest in the Punjab. Conditions in the Chenab colony, together with land reforms such as the Punjab Land Alienation Act, 1900 and the Colonisation Bill, 1906 contributed to the 1907 Punjab unrest. The unrest was unlike any previous agitation in the province as the government had for the first time aggrieved a large portion of the rural population.[25] Mass demonstrations were organised, headed by Lala Lajpat Rai, a leader of the Hindu revivalist sect Arya Samaj.[25] The unrest resulted in the repeal of the Colonisation Bill and the end of paternalist policies in the colonies.[25]

During the First World War, Punjabi manpower contributed heavily to the Indian Army. Out of a total of 683,149 combat troops, 349,688 hailed from the province.[26] In 1918, an influenza epidemic broke out in the province, resulting in the deaths of an estimated 962,937 people or 4.77 percent of the total estimated population.[27] In March 1919 the Rowlatt Act was passed extending emergency measures of detention and incarceration in response to the perceived threat of terrorism from revolutionary nationalist organisations.[28] This led to the infamous Jallianwala Bagh massacre in April 1919, where Colonel Reginald Edward Harry Dyer ordered detachments of the 9th Gorkha Rifles and the 59th Scinde Rifles under his command to fire into a group of some 10,000 unarmed protesters and Baisakhi pilgrims, killing 379.[29]

Administrative reforms

The Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms enacted through the Government of India Act 1919 expanded the Punjab Legislative Council and introduced the principle of dyarchy, whereby certain responsibilities such as agriculture, health, education, and local government, were transferred to elected ministers. The first Punjab Legislative Council under the 1919 Act was constituted in 1921, comprising 93 members, seventy per cent to be elected and rest to be nominated.[30] Some of the British Indian ministers under the dyarchy scheme were Sir Sheikh Abdul Qadir, Sir Shahab-ud-Din Virk and Lala Hari Kishen Lal.[31][32]

The Government of India Act 1935 introduced provincial autonomy to Punjab replacing the system of dyarchy. It provided for the constitution of Punjab Legislative Assembly of 175 members presided by a Speaker and an executive government responsible to the Assembly. The Unionist Party under Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan formed the government in 1937. Sir Sikandar was succeeded by Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana in 1942 who remained the Premier till partition in 1947. Although the term of the Assembly was five years, the Assembly continued for about eight years and its last sitting was held on 19 March 1945.[33]

Partition

The struggle for Indian independence witnessed competing and conflicting interests in the Punjab. The landed elites of the Muslim, Hindu and Sikh communities had loyally collaborated with the British since annexation, supported the Unionist Party and were hostile to the Congress party led independence movement.[34] Amongst the peasantry and urban middle classes, the Hindus were the most active National Congress supporters, the Sikhs flocked to the Akali movement whilst the Muslims eventually supported the Muslim League.[34]

Since the partition of the sub-continent had been decided, special meetings of the Western and Eastern Section of the Legislative Assembly were held on 23 June 1947 to decide whether or not the Province of the Punjab be partitioned. After voting on both sides, partition was decided and the existing Punjab Legislative Assembly was also divided into West Punjab Legislative Assembly and the East Punjab Legislative Assembly. This last Assembly before independence, held its last sitting on 4 July 1947.[35]

Demographics

Population history
YearPop.±%
185517,600,000—    
186819,700,000+11.9%
188120,800,995+5.6%
189122,915,894+10.2%
190124,367,113+6.3%
191123,791,841−2.4%
192125,101,514+5.5%
193128,490,869+13.5%
194134,309,861+20.4%
Source: Census of India
[13]: 8 [36]: 6 [37]: 86 

The first British census of the Punjab was carried out in 1855. This covered only British territory to the exclusion of local princely states, and placed the population at 17.6 million. The first regular census of British India carried out in 1881 recorded a population of 20.8 million people. The final British census in 1941 recorded 34.3 million people in the Punjab, which comprised 29 districts within British territory, 43 princely states, 52,047 villages and 283 towns.[37]

In 1881, only Amritsar and Lahore had populations over 100,000. The commercial and industrial city of Amritsar (152,000) was slightly larger than the cultural capital of Lahore (149,000). Over the following sixty years, Lahore increased in population fourfold, whilst Amritsar grew two-fold. By 1941, the province had seven cities with populations over 100,000 with emergence and growth of Rawalpindi, Multan, Sialkot, Jullundur and Ludhiana.[37]

The colonial period saw large scale migration within the Punjab due to the creation of canal colonies in western Punjab. The majority of colonists hailed from the seven most densely populated districts of Amritsar, Gurdaspur, Jullundur, Hoshiarpur, Ludhiana, Ambala and Sialkot, and consisted primarily of Khatris, Jats, Arains, Sainis, Kambohs and Rajputs. The movement of many highly skilled farmers from eastern and central Punjab to the new colonies, led to western Punjab becoming the most progressive and advanced agricultural region of the province. The period also saw significant numbers of Punjabis emigrate to other regions of the British Empire. The main destinations were East Africa - Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, Southeast Asia - Malaya and Burma, Hong Kong and Canada.[37]

Religion

The Punjab was a religiously eclectic province, comprising three major groups: Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs. By 1941, the religious Muslims constituting an absolute majority at 53.2%, whilst the Hindu population was at 29.1%. The period between 1881 and 1941 saw a significant increase in the Sikh and Christian populations, growing from 8.2% and 0.1% to 14.9% and 1.9% respectively.[37] The decrease in the Hindu population has been attributed to the conversion of Hindus mainly to Sikhism and Islam, and also to Christianity.[37]

Population trends for major religious groups in the Punjab Province of the British India(1881–1941)[37]
Religious
group
Population
% 1881
Population
% 1891
Population
% 1901
Population
% 1911[g]
Population
% 1921
Population
% 1931
Population
% 1941
Islam 47.6% 47.8% 49.6% 51.1% 51.1% 52.4% 53.2%
Hinduism 43.8% 43.6% 41.3% 35.8% 35.1% 30.2% 29.1%
Sikhism 8.2% 8.2% 8.6% 12.1% 12.4% 14.3% 14.9%
Christianity 0.1% 0.2% 0.3% 0.8% 1.3% 1.5% 1.5%
Other religions / No religion 0.3% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.1% 1.6% 1.3%

Indo−Gangetic Plain West geographical division

Including Hisar district, Loharu State, Rohtak district, Dujana State, Gurgaon district, Pataudi State, Delhi, Karnal district, Jalandhar district, Kapurthala State, Ludhiana district, Malerkotla State, Firozpur district, Faridkot State, Patiala State, Jind State, Nabha State, Lahore District, Amritsar district, Gujranwala District, and Sheikhupura District.[12]: 2 [13]: 4 

Population trends for major religious groups in the
Indo−Gangetic Plain West geographical division of Punjab Province(1901—1941)[13]: 48 
Religion Percentage
1901
Percentage
1911
Percentage
1921
Percentage
1931
Percentage
1941
Hinduism   43.79% 42.62% 41.37% 36.04% 33.54%
Islam   37.36% 37.81% 38.0% 39.72% 40.41%
Sikhism   18.35% 18.73% 19.10% 21.88% 23.11%
Christianity   0.18% 0.51% 1.23% 1.54% 1.60%
Jainism 0.32% 0.33% 0.29% 0.27% 0.28%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Religion in Hisar District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 652,842 64.85%
Islam   285,208 28.33%
Sikhism   60,731 6.03%
Christianity   1,235 0.12%
Others[j] 6,693 0.66%
Total Population 1,006,709 100%
Religion in Rohtak District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 780,474 77.53%
Islam   166,569 16.55%
Sikhism   1,466 0.15%
Christianity   1,026 0.1%
Others[j] 6,864 0.68%
Total Population 956,399 100%
Religion in Gurgaon District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 560,573 65.84%
Islam   285,992 33.59%
Sikhism   637 0.07%
Christianity   1,457 0.17%
Others[j] 2,799 0.33%
Total Population 851,458 100%
Religion in Karnal District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 666,301 66.99%
Islam   304,346 30.6%
Sikhism   19,887 2%
Christianity   1,223 0.12%
Others[j] 2,818 0.28%
Total Population 994,575 100%
Religion in Jalandhar District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   509,804 45.23%
Hinduism  [i] 311,010 27.59%
Sikhism   298,741 26.5%
Christianity   5,971 0.53%
Others[j] 1,664 0.15%
Total Population 1,127,190 100%
Religion in Ludhiana District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Sikhism   341,175 41.68%
Islam   302,482 36.95%
Hinduism  [i] 171,715 20.98%
Christianity   1,632 0.2%
Others[j] 1,611 0.2%
Total Population 818,615 100%
Religion in Firozpur District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   641,448 45.07%
Sikhism   479,486 33.69%
Hinduism  [i] 287,733 20.22%
Christianity   11,031 0.78%
Others[j] 3,378 0.24%
Total Population 1,423,076 100%
Religion in Lahore District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   1,027,772 60.62%
Sikhism   310,646 18.32%
Hinduism  [i] 284,689 16.79%
Christianity   67,686 3.99%
Others[j] 4,582 0.27%
Total Population 1,695,375 100%
Religion in Amritsar District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   657,695 46.52%
Sikhism   510,845 36.13%
Hinduism  [i] 217,431 15.38%
Christianity   25,330 1.79%
Others[j] 2,575 0.18%
Total Population 1,413,876 100%
Religion in Gujranwala District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   642,706 70.45%
Hinduism  [i] 108,115 11.85%
Sikhism   99,139 10.87%
Christianity   60,380 6.62%
Others[j] 1,894 0.21%
Total Population 912,234 100%
Religion in Sheikhupura District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage (1941)
Islam   542,344 63.62%
Sikhism   160,706 18.85%
Hinduism  [i] 89,182 10.46%
Christianity   59,985 7.04%
Others[j] 291 0.03%
Total Population 852,508 100%

Himalayan geographical division

Including Nahan State, Simla district, Simla Hill States, Kangra district, Mandi State, Suket State, and Chamba State.[12]: 2 

Population trends for major religious groups in the
Himalayan geographical division of Punjab Province(1901—1941)[13]: 48 
Religion Percentage
1901
Percentage
1911
Percentage
1921
Percentage
1931
Percentage
1941
Hinduism   94.60% 94.53% 94.50% 94.25% 94.35%
Islam   4.53% 4.30% 4.45% 4.52% 4.27%
Sikhism   0.23% 0.46% 0.44% 0.49% 0.60%
Christianity   0.20% 0.26% 0.26% 0.14% 0.10%
Jainism 0.03% 0.02% 0.02% 0.02% 0.03%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Religion in Kangra District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 846,567 94.13%
Islam   43,249 4.81%
Sikhism   4,809 0.53%
Christianity   590 0.07%
Others[j] 4,162 0.46%
Total Population 899,377 100%

Sub−Himalayan geographical division

Including Ambala district, Kalsia State, Hoshiarpur district, Gurdaspur district, Sialkot District, Gujrat District, Jhelum District, Rawalpindi District, and Attock District.[12]: 2 

Population trends for major religious groups in the
Sub−Himalayan geographical division of Punjab Province(1901—1941)[13]: 48 
Religion Percentage
1901
Percentage
1911
Percentage
1921
Percentage
1931
Percentage
1941
Islam   60.62% 61.19% 61.44% 61.99% 62.29%
Hinduism   33.09% 27.36% 26.66% 22.85% 21.98%
Sikhism   5.68% 9.74% 9.77% 11.65% 11.89%
Christianity   0.48% 1.59% 2.01% 2.05% 1.74%
Jainism 0.12% 0.12% 0.12% 0.11% 0.12%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Religion in Ambala District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 412,658 48.68%
Islam   268,999 31.73%
Sikhism   156,543 18.47%
Christianity   4,892 0.58%
Others[j] 4,653 0.55%
Total Population 847,745 100%
Religion in Hoshiarpur District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Hinduism  [i] 584,080 49.91%
Islam   380,759 32.53%
Sikhism   198,194 16.93%
Christianity   6,060 0.52%
Others[j] 1,230 0.11%
Total Population 1,170,323 100%
Religion in Gurdaspur District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   589,923 51.14%
Hinduism  [i] 290,774 25.21%
Sikhism   221,261 19.18%
Christianity   51,522 4.47%
Others [j] 31 0%
Total Population 1,153,511 100%
Religion in Sialkot District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   740,218 62.18%
Hinduism  [i] 231,319 19.43%
Sikhism   139,409 11.71%
Christianity   73,846 6.2%
Others[j] 5,705 0.48%
Total Population 1,190,497 100%
Religion in Gujrat District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   945,609 85.58%
Hinduism  [i] 84,643 7.66%
Sikhism   70,233 6.36%
Christianity   4,391 0.4%
Others[j] 76 0.01%
Total Population 1,104,952 100%
Religion in Jhelum District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   563,033 89.42%
Hinduism  [i] 40,888 6.49%
Sikhism   24,680 3.92%
Christianity   730 0.12%
Others[j] 327 0.05%
Total Population 629,658 100%
Religion in Rawalpindi District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   628,193 80%
Hinduism  [i] 82,478 10.5%
Sikhism   64,127 8.17%
Christianity   4,212 0.54%
Others[j] 6,221 0.79%
Total Population 785,231 100%
Religion in Attock District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   611,128 90.42%
Hinduism  [i] 43,009 6.36%
Sikhism   20,120 2.98%
Christianity   504 0.07%
Others[j] 1,114 0.16%
Total Population 675,875 100%

North−West Dry Area geographical division

Including Montgomery District, Shahpur District, Mianwali District, Lyallpur District, Jhang District, Multan District, Bahawalpur State, Muzaffargarh District, and Dera Ghazi Khan District.[12]: 2 

Population trends for major religious groups in the
North−West Dry Area geographical division of Punjab Province(1901—1941)[13]: 48 
Religion Percentage
1901
Percentage
1911
Percentage
1921
Percentage
1931
Percentage
1941
Islam   79.01% 80.00% 78.95% 78.22% 77.85%
Hinduism   17.84% 13.58% 14.23% 12.80% 13.21%
Sikhism   2.91% 5.62% 5.64% 6.73% 6.74%
Christianity   0.23% 0.79% 1.17% 1.18% 1.17%
Jainism 0.01% 0.01% 0.01% 0.01% 0.01%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Religion in Montgomery District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   918,564 69.11%
Hinduism  [i] 210,966 15.87%
Sikhism   175,064 13.17%
Christianity   24,101 1.81%
Others[j] 408 0.03%
Total Population 1,329,103 100%
Religion in Shahpur District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   835,918 83.68%
Hinduism  [i] 102,233 10.23%
Sikhism   48,046 4.81%
Christianity   12,620 1.26%
Others[j] 104 0.01%
Total Population 998,921 100%
Religion in Mianwali District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   436,260 86.16%
Hinduism  [i] 62,824 12.41%
Sikhism   6,865 1.36%
Christianity   324 0.06%
Others[j] 48 0.01%
Total Population 506,321 100%
Religion in Lyallpur District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   877,518 62.85%
Sikhism   262,737 18.82%
Hinduism  [i] 204,059 14.61%
Christianity   51,694 3.7%
Others[j] 297 0.02%
Total Population 1,396,305 100%
Religion in Jhang District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   678,736 82.61%
Hinduism  [i] 129,889 15.81%
Sikhism   12,238 1.49%
Christianity   744 0.09%
Others[j] 24 0%
Total Population 821,631 100%
Religion in Multan District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   1,157,911 78.01%
Hinduism  [i] 249,872 16.83%
Sikhism   61,628 4.15%
Christianity   13,270 0.89%
Others[j] 1,652 0.11%
Total Population 1,484,333 100%
Religion in Muzaffargarh District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   616,074 86.42%
Hinduism  [i] 90,643 12.72%
Sikhism   5,882 0.83%
Christianity   218 0.03%
Others[j] 32 0%
Total Population 712,849 100%
Religion in Dera Ghazi Khan District (1941)[13]: 42 
Religion Population Percentage
Islam   512,678 88.19%
Hinduism  [i] 67,423 11.6%
Sikhism   1,072 0.18%
Christianity   137 0.02%
Others[j] 40 0.01%
Total Population 581,350 100%

Language

As with religion, Punjab was a linguistically eclectically diverse province and region. In 1837, Persian had been abolished as the official language of Company administration and replaced by local Indian vernacular languages. In the Sikh Empire, Persian continued to be the official state language.[38] Shortly after annexing the Punjab in 1849, the Board of Administration canvassed local officials in each of the provinces's six divisions to decide which language was "best suited for the Courts and Public Business".[39] Officials in the western divisions recommended Persian whilst eastern officials suggested a shift to Urdu.[39] In September 1849 a two-language policy was instituted throughout the province. The language policy in the Punjab differed from other Indian provinces in that Urdu was not a widespread local vernacular. In 1849 John Lawrence noted "that Urdu is not the language of these districts and neither is Persian".[39]

In 1854, the Board of Administration abruptly ended the two-language policy and Urdu was designated as the official language of government across the province. The decision was motivated by new civil service rules requiring all officials pass a test in the official language of their local court. In fear of potentially losing their jobs, officials in Persian districts petitioned the board to replace Persian with Urdu, believing Urdu the easier language to master.[40] Urdu remained the official administrative language until 1947.

Officials, although aware that Punjabi was the colloquial language of the majority, instead favoured the use of Urdu for a number of reasons. Criticism of Punjabi included the belief that it was simply a form of patois, lacking any form of standardisation, and that "would be inflexible and barren, and incapable of expressing nice shades of meaning and exact logical ideas with the precision so essential in local proceedings."[40] Similar arguments had earlier been made about Bengali, Oriya and Hindustani; however, those languages were later adopted for local administration. Instead it is believed the advantages of Urdu served the administration greater. Urdu, and initially Persian, allowed the Company to recruit experienced administrators from elsewhere in India who did not speak Punjabi, to facilitate greater integration with other Indian territories which were administered with Urdu, and to help foster ties with local elites who spoke Persian and Urdu and could act as intermediaries with the wider populace.[40]

As per the 1911 census, speakers of the Punjabi language along with the mutually intelligible Lahnda languages and dialects[l] formed just over three-quarters (75.93 per cent) of the total provincial population.

Linguistic Demographics of Punjab Province
Language Percentage
1911[12]: 370 
Punjabi 58.34%
Lahnda[l] 17.59%
Western Hindi[m] 15.82%
Western Pahari 4.11%
Rajasthani 3.0%
Balochi 0.29%
Pashto 0.28%
English 0.15%
Other 0.42%

Indo−Gangetic Plain West geographical division

Including Hisar district, Loharu State, Rohtak district, Dujana State, Gurgaon district, Pataudi State, Delhi, Karnal district, Jalandhar district, Kapurthala State, Ludhiana district, Malerkotla State, Firozpur district, Faridkot State, Patiala State, Jind State, Nabha State, Lahore District, Amritsar district, and Gujranwala District.

Linguistic Demographics of the Indo−Gangetic Plain West geographical division
Language Percentage
1911[12]: 370 
Punjabi 63.49%
Western Hindi[m] 29.56%
Rajasthani 6.26%
Lahnda[l] 1.0%
Western Pahari 0.87%
English 0.11%
Pashto 0.07%
Other 0.13%

Himalayan geographical division

Including Nahan State, Simla district, Simla Hill States, Kangra district, Mandi State, Suket State, and Chamba State.

Linguistic Demographics of the Himalayan geographical division
Language Percentage
1911[12]: 370 
Western Pahari 50.22%
Punjabi 45.15%
Western Hindi[m] 1.39%
English 0.2%
Rajasthani 0.02%
Pashto 0.01%
Other 3.0%

Sub−Himalayan geographical division

Including Ambala district, Kalsia State, Hoshiarpur district, Gurdaspur district, Sialkot District, Gujrat District, Jhelum District, Rawalpindi District, and Attock District.

Linguistic Demographics of the Sub−Himalayan geographical division
Language Percentage
1911[12]: 370 
Punjabi 74.01%
Lahnda[l] 14.76%
Western Hindi[m] 8.81%
Western Pahari 1.49%
Pashto 0.5%
English 0.3%
Rajasthani 0.01%
Other 0.12%

North-West Dry Area geographical division

Including Montgomery District, Shahpur District, Mianwali District, Lyallpur District, Jhang District, Multan District, Bahawalpur State, Muzaffargarh District, and Dera Ghazi Khan District.

Linguistic Demographics of the North-West Dry Area geographical division
Language Percentage
1911[12]: 370 
Lahnda[l] 60.31%
Punjabi 36.14%
Balochi 1.25%
Rajasthani 0.62%
Western Hindi[m] 0.56%
Pashto 0.53%
English 0.05%
Western Pahari 0.01%
Other 0.53%

Castes and tribes

Punjab Province was diverse, with many castes, subcastes and tribes all forming parts of the various ethnic groups in the province, contemporarily known as Punjabis, Saraikis, Haryanvis, Hindkowans, Dogras, Paharis, and others.

Castes and Tribes of Punjab Province[12]: 478 
Caste or Tribe Population
1881
%
1881
Population
1891
%
1891
Population
1901
%
1901
Population
1911
%
1911
Jat 4,167,000 20.03% 4,430,000 19.33% 4,942,000 20.28% 4,957,000 20.83%
Rajput 1,662,000 7.99% 1,759,000 7.68% 1,798,000 7.38% 1,635,000 6.87%
Chamar 1,066,000 5.12% 1,178,000 5.14% 1,208,000 4.96% 1,129,000 4.75%
Brahman 1,069,000 5.14% 1,107,000 4.83% 1,123,000 4.61% 1,018,000 4.28%
Arain 795,000 3.82% 889,000 3.88% 1,007,000 4.13% 978,000 4.11%
Chuhra 1,052,000 5.06% 1,188,000 5.18% 1,189,000 4.88% 926,000 3.89%
Arora 512,000 2.46% 570,000 2.49% 643,000 2.64% 674,000 2.83%
Tarkhan 563,000 2.71% 618,000 2.7% 681,000 2.79% 646,000 2.72%
Julaha 586,000 2.82% 625,000 2.73% 657,000 2.7% 635,000 2.67%
Gujar 552,000 2.65% 614,000 2.68% 632,000 2.59% 610,000 2.56%
Kumhar 467,000 2.25% 515,000 2.25% 569,000 2.34% 550,000 2.31%
Baloch 310,000 1.49% 359,000 1.57% 468,000 1.92% 532,000 2.24%
Khatri 393,000 1.89% 419,000 1.83% 436,000 1.79% 433,000 1.82%
Awan 332,000 1.6% 369,000 1.61% 421,000 1.73% 426,000 1.79%
Mochi 332,000 1.6% 380,000 1.66% 415,000 1.7% 419,000 1.76%
Bania 437,000 2.1% 442,000 1.93% 452,000 1.85% 404,000 1.7%
Kanet 346,000 1.66% 370,000 1.61% 390,000 1.6% 404,000 1.7%
Jhinwar 426,000 2.05% 468,000 2.04% 460,000 1.89% 360,000 1.51%
Nai 324,000 1.56% 357,000 1.56% 376,000 1.54% 350,000 1.47%
Sheikh 336,000 1.62% 332,000 1.45% 321,000 1.32% 339,000 1.42%
Lohar 291,000 1.4% 323,000 1.41% 351,000 1.44% 323,000 1.36%
Mussalli N/A N/A N/A N/A 57,000 0.23% 310,000 1.3%
Teli 261,000 1.25% 301,000 1.31% 322,000 1.32% 296,000 1.24%
Pathan 188,000 0.9% 195,000 0.85% 284,000 1.17% 292,000 1.23%
Faqir 114,000 0.55% 313,000 1.37% 386,000 1.58% 280,000 1.18%
Machhi 161,000 0.77% 189,000 0.82% 236,000 0.97% 280,000 1.18%
Sayyid 200,000 0.96% 215,000 0.94% 238,000 0.98% 247,000 1.04%
Mirasi 192,000 0.92% 229,000 1% 247,000 1.01% 227,000 0.95%
Ahir 173,000 0.83% 196,000 0.86% 205,000 0.84% 209,000 0.88%
Kashmiri 152,000 0.73% 196,000 0.86% 193,000 0.79% 178,000 0.75%
Dagi & Koli 176,000 0.85% 170,000 0.74% 155,000 0.64% 175,000 0.74%
Kamboh 130,000 0.62% 151,000 0.66% 174,000 0.71% 172,000 0.72%
Ghirath 160,000 0.77% 174,000 0.76% 170,000 0.7% 171,000 0.72%
Sunar 145,000 0.7% 163,000 0.71% 177,000 0.73% 158,000 0.66%
Dhobi 124,000 0.6% 139,000 0.61% 147,000 0.6% 156,000 0.66%
Meo 116,000 0.56% 121,000 0.53% 147,000 0.6% 130,000 0.55%
Chhimba 103,000 0.5% 145,000 0.63% 152,000 0.62% 129,000 0.54%
Qassab 92,000 0.44% 108,000 0.47% 118,000 0.48% 120,000 0.5%
Saini 153,000 0.74% 125,000 0.55% 127,000 0.52% 113,000 0.47%
Mali 66,000 0.32% 181,000 0.79% 113,000 0.46% 104,000 0.44%
Mughal 92,000 0.44% 118,000 0.51% 98,000 0.4% 99,000 0.42%
Rathi 85,000 0.41% 101,000 0.44% 88,000 0.36% 98,000 0.41%
Maliar N/A N/A N/A N/A 81,000 0.33% 90,000 0.38%
Dhanuk 66,000 0.32% 74,000 0.32% 77,000 0.32% 83,000 0.35%
Jogi-Rawal 90,000 0.43% 91,000 0.4% 76,000 0.31% 83,000 0.35%
Mahtam 52,000 0.25% 57,000 0.25% 83,000 0.34% 82,000 0.34%
Dumna 71,000 0.34% 69,000 0.3% 69,000 0.28% 79,000 0.33%
Mallah 62,000 0.3% 77,000 0.34% 73,000 0.3% 78,000 0.33%
Qureshi N/A N/A N/A N/A 53,000 0.22% 71,000 0.3%
Dogar 63,000 0.01% 70,000 0.01% 75,000 0.01% 68,000 0.29%
Barwala 55,000 0.26% 64,000 0.28% 69,000 0.28% 64,000 0.27%
Khoja 62,000 0.3% 90,000 0.39% 99,000 0.41% 63,000 0.26%
Khokhar 36,000 0.17% 130,000 0.57% 108,000 0.44% 60,000 0.25%
Bharai 56,000 0.27% 67,000 0.29% 66,000 0.27% 58,000 0.24%
Labana 47,000 0.23% 55,000 0.24% 56,000 0.23% 58,000 0.24%
Other 1,319,995 6.35% 1,229,894 5.37% 1,009,113 4.14% 1,162,841 4.89%
Total population 20,800,995 100% 22,915,894 100% 24,367,113 100% 23,791,841 100%

Literacy

Literacy Rate by Religious Community in Punjab Province (1941)[13]: 65 
Religion % Total Literacy % Total Male Literacy % Total Female Literacy
Jains 41.93% 29.03% 12.90%
Sikhs 17.03% 12.13% 4.90%
Hindus 16.35% 11.89% 4.46%
Christians 7.76% 4.69% 3.07%
Muslims 6.97% 5.52% 1.45%
Others 7.62% 6.85% 0.77%
Total 10.87% 8.13% 2.74%

Administrative divisions

 
Districts of Punjab with Muslim (green) and non-Muslim (pink) majorities, as per 1941 census
Punjab (British India): British Territory and Princely States
Division Districts in British Territory / Princely States
Rawalpindi Division
Lahore Division
Multan Division
Jullundur Division
Delhi Division
Total area, British Territory 97,209 square miles
Native States
Total area, Native States 36,532 square miles
Total area, Punjab 133,741 square miles

Agriculture

Within a few years of its annexation, the Punjab was regarded as British India's model agricultural province. From the 1860s onwards, agricultural prices and land values soared in the Punjab. This stemmed from increasing political security and improvements in infrastructure and communications. New cash crops such as wheat, tobacco, sugar cane and cotton were introduced. By the 1920s the Punjab produced a tenth of India's total cotton crop and a third of its wheat crop. Per capita output of all the crops in the province increased by approximately 45 percent between 1891 and 1921, a growth contrasting to agricultural crises in Bengal, Bihar and Orissa during the period.[41]

The Punjab Agricultural College and Research Institute became the first higher educational agricultural institution in the Punjab when established in 1906. Rapid agricultural growth, combined with access to easy credit for landowners, led to a growing crisis of indebtedness.[42] When landowners were unable to pay down their loans, urban based moneylenders took advantage of the law to foreclose debts of mortgaged land.[42] This led to a situation where land increasingly passed to absentee moneylenders who had little connection to the villages were the land was located. The colonial government recognised this as a potential threat to the stability of the province, and a split emerged in the government between paternalists who favoured intervention to ensure order, and those who opposed state intervention in private property relations.[41] The paternalists emerged victorious and the Punjab Land Alienation Act, 1900 prevented urban commercial castes, who were overwhelmingly Hindu, from permanently acquiring land from statutory agriculturalist tribes, who were mainly Muslim and Sikh.[43]

Accompanied by the increasing franchise of the rural population, this interventionist approach led to a long lasting impact on the political landscape of the province. The agricultural lobby remained loyal to the government, and rejected communalism in common defence of its privileges against urban moneylenders.[41] This position was entrenched by the Unionist Party. The Congress Party's opposition to the Act led to it being marginalised in the Punjab, reducing its influence more so than in any other province, and inhibiting its ability to challenge colonial rule locally. The political dominance of the Unionist Party would remain until partition, and significantly it was only on the collapse of its power on the eve of independence from Britain, that communal violence began to spread in rural Punjab.[41]

Army

In the immediate aftermath of annexation, the Sikh Khalsa Army was disbanded, and soldiers were required to surrender their weapons and return to agricultural or other pursuits.[15] The Bengal Army, keen to utilise the highly trained ex-Khalsa army troops began to recruit from the Punjab for Bengal infantry units stationed in the province. However opposition to the recruitment of these soldiers spread and resentment emerged from sepoys of the Bengal Army towards the incursion of Punjabis into their ranks. In 1851, the Punjab Irregular Force also known as the 'Piffars' was raised. Initially they consisted of one garrison and four mule batteries, four regiments of cavalry, eleven of infantry and the Corps of Guides, totalling approximately 13,000 men.[44] The gunners and infantry were mostly Punjabi, many from the Khalsa Army, whilst the cavalry had a considerable Hindustani presence.[44]

During the Indian Rebellion of 1857, eighteen new regiments were raised from the Punjab which remained loyal to the East India Company throughout the crisis in the Punjab and United Provinces.[45] By June 1858, of the 80,000 native troops in the Bengal Army, 75,000 were Punjabi of which 23,000 were Sikh.[46] In the aftermath of the rebellion, a thorough re-organisation of the army took place. Henceforth recruitment into the British Indian Army was restricted to loyal peoples and provinces. Punjabi Sikhs emerged as a particularly favoured martial race to serve the army.[47] In the midst of The Great Game, and fearful of a Russian invasion of British India, the Punjab was regarded of significant strategic importance as a frontier province. In addition to their loyalty and a belief in their suitability to serve in harsh conditions, Punjabi recruits were favoured as they could be paid at the local service rate, whereas soldiers serving on the frontier from more distant lands had to be paid extra foreign service allowances.[48] By 1875, of the entire Indian army, a third of recruits hailed from the Punjab.[49]

In 1914, three fifths of the Indian army came from the Punjab, despite the region constituting approximately one tenth of the total population of British India.[49] During the First World War, Punjabi Sikhs alone accounted for one quarter of all armed personnel in India.[47] Military service provided access to the wider world, and personnel were deployed across the British Empire from Malaya, the Mediterranean and Africa.[47] Upon completion of their terms of service, these personnel were often amongst the first to seek their fortunes abroad.[47] At the outbreak of the Second World War, 48 percent of the Indian army came from the province.[50] In Jhelum, Rawalpindi and Attock, the percentage of the total male population who enlisted reached fifteen percent.[51] The Punjab continued to be the main supplier of troops throughout the war, contributing 36 percent of the total Indian troops who served in the conflict.[52]

The huge proportion of Punjabis in the army meant that a significant amount of military expenditure went to Punjabis and in turn resulted in an abnormally high level of resource input in the Punjab.[53] It has been suggested that by 1935 if remittances of serving officers were combined with income from military pensions, more than two thirds of Punjab's land revenue could have been paid out of military incomes.[53] Military service further helped reduce the extent of indebtedness across the Province. In Hoshiarpur, a notable source of military personnel, in 1920 thirty percent of proprietors were debt free compared to the region's average of eleven percent.[53] In addition, the benefits of military service and the perception that the government was benevolent towards soldiers, affected the latter's attitudes towards the British.[46] The loyalty of recruited peasantry and the influence of military groups in rural areas across the province limited the reach of the nationalist movement in the province.[46]

Communications and transport

In 1853, the Viceroy Lord Dalhousie issued a minute stressing the military importance of railways across India.[54] In the Punjab, however, it was initially strategic commercial interests which drove investment in railways and communications from 1860.[54]

Independent railway companies emerged, such as the Scinde, Punjab and Delhi railways to build and operate new lines. In 1862, the first section of railway in the Punjab was constructed between Lahore and Amritsar, and Lahore Junction railway station opened. Lines were opened between Lahore and Multan in 1864, and Amritsar and Delhi in 1870.[54] The Scinde, Punjab and Delhi railways merged to form the Scinde, Punjab & Delhi Railway in 1870, creating a link between Karachi and Lahore via Multan. The Punjab Northern State Railway linked Lahore and Peshawar in 1883. By 1886, the independent railways had amalgamated into North Western State Railway.[54]

The construction of railway lines and the network of railway workshops generated employment opportunities, which in turn led to increased immigration into cantonment towns.[54] As connectivity increased across the province, it facilitated the movement of goods, and increased human interaction. It has been observed that the Ferozpur, Lahore and Amritsar began to develop into one composite cultural triangle due to the ease of connectivity between them.[54] Similarly barriers of spoken dialects eroded over time, and cultural affinities were increasingly fostered.[54]

Education

In 1854, the Punjab education department was instituted with a policy to provide secular education in all government managed institutions.[55] Privately run institutions would only receive grants-in-aid in return for providing secular instruction.[55] By 1864 this had resulted in a situation whereby all grants-in-aid to higher education schools and colleges were received by institutions under European management, and no indigenous owned schools received government help.[55]

In the early 1860s, a number of educational colleges were established, including Lawrence College, Murree, King Edward Medical University, Government College, Lahore, Glancy Medical College and Forman Christian College. In 1882, Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner published a damning report on the state of education in the Punjab. He lamented the failure to reconcile government run schools with traditional indigenous schools, and noted a steady decline in the number of schools across the province since annexation.[56] He noted in particular how Punjabi Muslim's avoided government run schools due to the lack of religious subjects taught in them, observing how at least 120,000 Punjabis attended schools unsupported by the state and describing it as 'a protest by the people against our system of education.'[57] Leitner had long advocated the benefits of oriental scholarship, and the fusion of government education with religious instruction. In January 1865 he had established the Anjuman-i-Punjab, a subscription based association aimed at using a European style of learning to promote useful knowledge, whilst also reviving traditional scholarship in Arabic, Persian and Sanskrit.[58] In 1884, a reorganisation of the Punjab education system occurred, introducing measures tending towards decentralisation of control over education and the promotion of an indigenous education agency. As a consequence several new institutions were encouraged in the province. The Arya Samaj opened a college in Lahore in 1886, the Sikhs opened the Khalsa College whilst the Anjuman-i-Himayat-i-Islam stepped in to organise Muslim education.[59] In 1886, the Punjab Chiefs' College, later renamed Aitchison College, was opened to further the education of the elite classes.

Government

Early administration

In 1849, a Board of Administration was put in place to govern the newly annexed province. The Board was led by a President and two assistants. Beneath them Commissioners acted as Superintendents of revenue and police and exercised the civil appellate and the original criminal powers of Sessions Judges, whilst Deputy Commissioners were given subordinate civil, criminal and fiscal powers.[60] In 1853, the Board of Administration was abolished, and authority was invested in a single Chief Commissioner. The Government of India Act 1858 led to further restructuring and the office of Lieutenant-Governor replaced that of Chief Commissioner.

Although The Indian Councils Act, 1861 laid the foundation for the establishment of a local legislature in the Punjab, the first legislature was constituted in 1897. It consisted of a body of nominated officials and non-officials and was presided over by the Lieutenant-Governor. The first council lasted for eleven years until 1909. The Morley-Minto Reforms led to an elected members complementing the nominated officials in subsequent councils.[61]

Punjab Legislative Council and Assembly

The Government of India Act 1919 introduced the system of dyarchy across British India and led to the implementation of the first Punjab Legislative Council in 1921. At the same time the office of lieutenant governor was replaced with that of governor. The initial Council had ninety three members, seventy per cent of which were elected and the rest nominated.[61] A president was elected by the Council to preside over the meetings. Between 1921 and 1936, there were four terms of the Council.[61]

Council Inaugurated Dissolved President(s)
First Council 8 January 1921 27 October 1923 Sir Montagu Butler and Herbert Casson
Second Council 2 January 1924 27 October 1926 Herbert Casson, Sir Abdul Qadir and Sir Shahab-ud-Din Virk
Third Council 3 January 1927 26 July 1930 Sir Shahab-ud-Din Virk
Fourth Council 24 October 1930 10 November 1936 Sir Shahab-ud-Din Virk and Sir Chhotu Ram

In 1935, the Government of India Act 1935 replaced dyarchy with increased provincial autonomy. It introduced direct elections, and enabled elected Indian representatives to form governments in the provincial assemblies. The Punjab Legislative Council was replaced by a Punjab Legislative Assembly, and the role of President with that of a Speaker. Membership of the Assembly was fixed at 175 members, and it was intended to sit for five years.[61]

First Assembly Election

The first election was held in 1937 and was won outright by the Unionist Party. Its leader, Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan was asked by the Governor, Sir Herbert Emerson to form a Ministry and he chose a cabinet consisting of three Muslims, two Hindus and a Sikh.[62] Sir Sikandar died in 1942 and was succeeded as Premier by Khizar Hayat Khan Tiwana.

Position Name
Premier Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan
Revenue Minister Sir Sundar Singh Majithia
Development Minister Sir Chhotu Ram
Finance Minister Manohar Lal
Public Works Minister Khizar Hayat Khan Tiwana
Education Minister Mian Abdul Haye

Second Assembly Election

The next election was held in 1946. The Muslim League won the most seats, winning 73 out of a total of 175. However a coalition led by the Unionist Party and consisting of the Congress Party and Akali Party were able to secure an overall majority. A campaign of civil disobedience by the Muslim League followed, lasting six weeks, and led to the resignation of Sir Khizar Tiwana and the collapse of the coalition government on 2 March 1947.[63] The Muslim League however were unable to attract the support of other minorities to form a coalition government themselves.[64] Amid this stalemate the Governor Sir Evan Jenkins assumed control of the government and remained in charge until the independence of India and Pakistan.[64]

Coat of arms

 
Arms of British Punjab

Crescat e Fluviis meaning, Let it grow from the rivers was the Latin motto used in the Coat of arms for Punjab Province. As per the book History of the Sikhs written by Khushwant Singh, it means Strength from the Rivers.

See also

References

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  2. ^ D. R. Bhandarkar, 1989, Some Aspects of Ancient Indian Culture: Sir William Meyers Lectures, 1938-39 7 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine, Asia Educational Services, p. 2.
  3. ^ A.S. valdiya, "River Sarasvati was a Himalayn-born river" 24 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Current Science 10 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine, vol 104, no.01, ISSN 0011-3891.
  4. ^ Yule, Henry (31 December 2018). . dsalsrv02.uchicago.edu. Archived from the original on 1 December 2018. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  5. ^ Macdonell, Arthur Anthony (31 December 2018). . dsalsrv02.uchicago.edu. Archived from the original on 1 December 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
  6. ^ H K Manmohan Siṅgh. "The Punjab". The Encyclopedia of Sikhism, Editor-in-Chief Harbans Singh. Punjabi University, Patiala. from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
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  9. ^ Gandhi, Rajmohan (2013). Punjab: A History from Aurangzeb to Mountbatten. New Delhi, India, Urbana, Illinois: Aleph Book Company. ISBN 978-93-83064-41-0.
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  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 ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1941 VOLUME VI PUNJAB PROVINCE". from the original on 31 May 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  14. ^ J. S. Grewal, The Sikhs of the Punjab, Volumes 2-3, Cambridge University Press, 8 October 1998, p.258
  15. ^ a b c Arvind-Pal Singh Mandair, Sikhism: A Guide for the Perplexed, A&C Black, 8 August 2013, p.77
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  22. ^ Imran Ali, THE PUNJAB CANAL COLONIES, 1885-1940, 1979, The Australian National University, Canberra, p34
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  32. ^ http://www.pap.gov.pk/uploads/previous_members/S-1924-1926.htm 7 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab
  33. ^ http://www.pap.gov.pk/uploads/previous_members/S-1937-1945.htm 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab
  34. ^ a b Pritam Singh, Federalism, Nationalism and Development: India and the Punjab Economy, Routledge, 19 February 2008, p.54
  35. ^ http://www.pap.gov.pk/uploads/previous_members/S-1946-1947.htm 7 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab
  36. ^ "CCensus of India 1931. Vol. 17, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables". from the original on 6 June 2020. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Krishan, Gopal (2004). "Demography of the Punjab (1849–1947)" (PDF). Journal of Punjab Studies. 11 (1): 77–89. (PDF) from the original on 9 February 2018. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
  38. ^ Goud and Mookherjee, R. Sidda and Manisha (20 April 2014). India and Iran in Contemporary Relations. Allied Publishers. p. 64. ISBN 8184249098.
  39. ^ a b c Mir, Farina (2010). The Social Space of Language: Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab. University of California Press. pp. 35–50. ISBN 0520262697.
  40. ^ a b c Mir, Farina (2010). The Social Space of Language: Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab. University of California Press. pp. 37–50. ISBN 0520262697.
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  42. ^ a b Islam, M. Mufakharul. "The Punjab Land Alienation Act and the Professional Moneylenders." Modern Asian Studies 29, no. 2
  43. ^ Robert W. Stern, Democracy and Dictatorship in South Asia, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001, p.53
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  45. ^ Harsh V. Pant, Handbook of Indian Defence Policy: Themes, Structures and Doctrines, Routledge, 6 October 2015, p.18
  46. ^ a b c Rajit K. Mazumder, The Indian Army and the Making of Punjab, Orient Blackswan, 2003, p.3
  47. ^ a b c d Robin Cohen, The Cambridge Survey of World Migration - "Darshan Singh Tatla - Sikh free and military migration during the colonial period", Cambridge University Press, 2 November 1995, p.69
  48. ^ Ian Talbot, British Rule in the Punjab, page 207
  49. ^ a b Ian Talbot, Punjab and the Raj, 1988, page 41
  50. ^ Kalim Siddiqui, Conflict, Crisis and War in Pakistan, Springer, 18 June 1972, p.92
  51. ^ Tan Tai Yong, The Garrison State: Military, Government and Society in Colonial Punjab, 1849-1947,, SAGE Publications India, 7 April 2005, p.291
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  56. ^ Gottlieb William Leitner, History of indigenous education in the Punjab since annexation and in 1882, Republican Books, 1882
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  59. ^ Robert Ivermee, Secularism, Islam and Education in India, 1830–1910, Routledge, 28 July 2015, p.105
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  64. ^ a b Lionel Knight, Britain in India, 1858–1947, Anthem Press, 1 November 2012, p.154
  1. ^ Including Attock District, Jhelum District, Rawalpindi District, and Shahpur District
  2. ^ Including Amritsar District, Gujranwala District, Gujrat District, Gurdaspur District, Lahore District, Lyallpur District,
  3. ^ Including Dera Ghazi Khan District, Jhang District, Mianwali District, Multan District, and Muzaffargarh District
  4. ^ Including Firozpur district, Hoshiarpur district, Jalandhar district, Kangra district, and Ludhiana district
  5. ^ Including Ambala district, Delhi district, Gurgaon district, Hisar district, Karnal district, Rohtak district, and Shimla. Later renamed Ambala Division in 1911, following separation of Delhi district from Punjab Province.
  6. ^ Including Patiala State, Jind State, Nabha State, Bahawalpur State, Sirmur State, Loharu State, Dujana, Pataudi State, Kalsia, Simla Hill States, Kapurthala State, Mandi State, Malerkotla State, Suket State, Faridkot State, Siba State, Chamba State, and Kahlur (Bilaspur)
  7. ^ Delhi district is made into a separate territory
  8. ^ 1941 figure reached by combining total population of all districts (Lahore, Sialkot, Gujranwala, Sheikhupura, Gujrat, Shahpur, Jhelum, Rawalpindi, Attock, Mianwali, Montgomery, Lyallpur, Jhang, Multan, Muzaffargargh, Dera Ghazi Khan), one tehsil (Shakargarh -- then part of Gurdaspur District), and one princely state (Bahawalpur) in Punjab Province, British India, as per 1941 census data. These districts, tehsil, and princely state would ultimately make up the subdivision of West Punjab Province, Pakistan (contemporarily known as Punjab Province, Pakistan), following the partition of India in 1947. The districts and princely state in 1941 that made up Punjab Province, Pakistan have since undergone various bifurcations at several points throughout the post-independence era, due to the rapid population growth witnessed across the province.
  9. ^ 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 Including Ad-Dharmis
  10. ^ 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 Including Jainism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Tribals, others, or not stated
  11. ^ 1941 figure reached by combining total population of all districts (Hisar, Rohtak, Gurgaon, Karnal, Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Firozpur, Amritsar, Simla, Kangra, Ambala, Hoshiarpur, and Gurdaspur(minus Shakargarh Tehsil), and princely states (Loharu, Dujana, Pataudi, Kapurthala, Malerkotla, Faridkot, Patiala, Jind, Nabha, Nahan, Simla Hill, Mandi, Suket, Chamba, and Kalsia) in Punjab Province, British India, as per 1941 census data. These districts and princely states would ultimately make up the subdivision of East Punjab, Patiala and East Punjab States Union, Chief Commissioner's Province of Himachal Pradesh, and Bilaspur State (contemporarily known as Punjab, India, Chandigarh, Haryana, and Himachal Pradesh), immediately following the partition of India in 1947. The districts and princely states in 1941 that made up Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh in India have since undergone various bifurcations at several points throughout the post-independence era, due to the rapid population growth witnessed across the province.
  12. ^ a b c d e Western Punjabi languages and dialects including Saraiki, Hindko and Pahari-Pothwari, and other related languages or dialects
  13. ^ a b c d e Including Hindustani (Hindi and Urdu), Braj Bhasha, Haryanvi, and other related languages or dialects

punjab, province, british, india, this, article, about, historical, region, british, india, other, uses, name, punjab, disambiguation, punjab, province, british, india, most, punjab, region, annexed, east, india, company, april, 1849, declared, province, briti. This article is about a historical region in British India For other uses of the name see Punjab disambiguation Punjab was a province of British India Most of the Punjab region was annexed by the East India Company in 2 April 1849 and declared a province of British Rule it was one of the last areas of the Indian subcontinent to fall under British control In 1858 the Punjab along with the rest of British India came under the direct rule of the British Crown It had an area of 358 354 5 km2 Punjab ProvinceProvince of British India1849 1947Flag Coat of armsShow globe of British Punjab from 1901 1947Show detailed map of British Punjab in 1909Show map of British Punjab in 1880Maps of British PunjabCapitalLahore Muree summer capital 1873 1876 Shimla summer capital 1876 1947 DemonymPunjabiHistoryGovernment TypeBritish Colonial Government MottoCrescat e Fluviis Let it grow from the rivers Governor 1849 1853Henry Montgomery Lawrence first 1946 1947Evan Meredith Jenkins last Premier 1937 1942Sikandar Hayat Khan 1942 1947Malik Khizar Hayat TiwanaHistorical eraNew Imperialism Second Anglo Sikh War30 March 1849 Delhi Territory transferred to Punjab from North Western Provinces1858 North West Frontier Province separated from Punjab9 November 1901 Delhi district separated from Punjab1911 Partition of India14 15 August 1947Political subdivisionsRawalpindi Division a Lahore Division b Multan Division c Jullundur Division d Delhi Division e and Princely States f Preceded by Succeeded by1849 Sikh Empire1858 North Western Provinces1862 Cis Sutlej states 1901 North West Frontier Province1947 West PunjabEast PunjabToday part ofIndiaPakistanThe province comprised four natural geographic regions Indo Gangetic Plain West Himalayan Sub Himalayan and the North West Dry Area along with five administrative divisions Delhi Jullundur Lahore Multan and Rawalpindi and a number of princely states 1 In 1947 the Partition of India led to the province s division into East Punjab and West Punjab in the newly independent dominions of India and Pakistan respectively Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Company rule 3 2 British Raj 3 3 Administrative reforms 3 4 Partition 4 Demographics 4 1 Religion 4 1 1 Indo Gangetic Plain West geographical division 4 1 2 Himalayan geographical division 4 1 3 Sub Himalayan geographical division 4 1 4 North West Dry Area geographical division 4 2 Language 4 2 1 Indo Gangetic Plain West geographical division 4 2 2 Himalayan geographical division 4 2 3 Sub Himalayan geographical division 4 2 4 North West Dry Area geographical division 4 3 Castes and tribes 4 4 Literacy 5 Administrative divisions 6 Agriculture 7 Army 8 Communications and transport 9 Education 10 Government 10 1 Early administration 10 2 Punjab Legislative Council and Assembly 10 3 First Assembly Election 10 4 Second Assembly Election 11 Coat of arms 12 See also 13 ReferencesEtymology EditThe region was originally called Sapta Sindhu 2 the Vedic land of the seven rivers flowing into the ocean 3 The Sanskrit name for the region as mentioned in the Ramayana and Mahabharata for example was Panchanada which means Land of the Five Rivers and was translated to Persian as Punjab after the Muslim conquests 4 5 The later name Punjab is a compound of two Persian words 6 7 Panj five and ab water and was introduced to the region by the Turko Persian conquerors 8 of India and more formally popularised during the Mughal Empire 9 10 Punjab literally means The Land of Five Waters referring to the rivers Jhelum Chenab Ravi Sutlej and Beas 11 All are tributaries of the Indus River the Chenab being the largest Geography EditGeographically the province was a triangular tract of country of which the Indus River and its tributary the Sutlej formed the two sides up to their confluence the base of the triangle in the north being the Lower Himalayan Range between those two rivers Moreover the province as constituted under British rule also included a large tract outside these boundaries Along the northern border Himalayan ranges divided it from Kashmir and Tibet On the west it was separated from the North West Frontier Province by the Indus until it reached the border of Dera Ghazi Khan District which was divided from Baluchistan by the Sulaiman Range To the south lay Sindh and Rajputana while on the east the rivers Jumna and Tons separated it from the United Provinces 1 In total Punjab had an area of approximately 357 000 km square about the same size as modern day Germany being one of the largest provinces of the British Raj It encompassed the present day Indian states of Punjab Haryana Chandigarh Delhi and some parts of Himachal Pradesh which were merged with Punjab by the British for administrative purposes but excluding the former princely states which were later combined into the Patiala and East Punjab States Union and the Pakistani regions of the Punjab Islamabad Capital Territory and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa In 1901 the frontier districts beyond the Indus were separated from Punjab and made into a new province the North West Frontier Province Subsequently Punjab was divided into four natural geographical divisions by colonial officials on the decadal census data 12 2 13 4 Indo Gangetic Plain West geographical division including Hisar district Loharu State Rohtak district Dujana State Gurgaon district Pataudi State Delhi Karnal district Jalandhar district Kapurthala State Ludhiana district Malerkotla State Firozpur district Faridkot State Patiala State Jind State Nabha State Lahore District Amritsar district Gujranwala District and Sheikhupura District Himalayan geographical division including Nahan State Simla district Simla Hill States Kangra district Mandi State Suket State and Chamba State Sub Himalayan geographical division including Ambala district Kalsia State Hoshiarpur district Gurdaspur district Sialkot District Gujrat District Jhelum District Rawalpindi District and Attock District North West Dry Area geographical division including Montgomery District Shahpur District Mianwali District Lyallpur District Jhang District Multan District Bahawalpur State Muzaffargarh District and Dera Ghazi Khan District History EditCompany rule Edit See also Company rule in India The Durbar or assembly of native princes and nobles convened by Sir John Lawrence at Lahore On 21 February 1849 the East India Company decisively defeated the Sikh Empire at the Battle of Gujrat bringing to an end the Second Anglo Sikh War Following the victory the East India Company annexed the Punjab on 2 April 1849 and incorporated it within British India The province whilst nominally under the control of the Bengal Presidency was administratively independent Lord Dalhousie constituted the Board of Administration by inducting into it the most experienced and seasoned British officers The Board was led by Sir Henry Lawrence who had previously worked as British Resident at the Lahore Durbar and also consisted of his younger brother John Lawrence and Charles Grenville Mansel 14 Below the Board a group of acclaimed officers collectively known as Henry Lawrence s Young Men assisted in the administration of the newly acquired province The Board was abolished by Lord Dalhousie in 1853 Sir Henry was assigned to the Rajputana Agency and his brother John succeeded as the first Chief Commissioner Recognising the cultural diversity of the Punjab the Board maintained a strict policy of non interference in regard to religious and cultural matters 15 Sikh aristocrats were given patronage and pensions and groups in control of historical places of worship were allowed to remain in control 15 During the Indian Rebellion of 1857 the Punjab remained relatively peaceful apart from rebellion led by Ahmad Khan Kharral 16 In May John Lawrence took swift action to disarm potentially mutinous sepoys and redeploy most European troops to the Delhi ridge 17 Finally he recruited new regiments of Punjabis to replace the depleted force and was provided with manpower and support from surrounding princely states such as Jind Patiala Nabha and Kapurthala and tribal chiefs on the borderlands with Afghanistan By 1858 an estimated 70 000 extra men had been recruited for the army and militarised police from within the Punjab 16 British Raj Edit See also British Raj The Punjab in 1880 In 1858 under the terms of the Queen s Proclamation issued by Queen Victoria the Punjab along with the rest of British India came under the direct rule of the British Crown 18 Delhi Territory was transferred from the North Western Provinces to the Punjab in 1858 partly to punish the city for the important role the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah II and the city as a whole played in the 1857 Rebellion 19 Sir John Lawrence then Chief Commissioner was appointed the first Lieutenant Governor on 1 January 1859 In 1866 the Judicial Commissioner was replaced by a Chief Court The direct administrative functions of the Government were carried by the Lieutenant Governor through the Secretariat comprising a Chief Secretary a Secretary and two Under Secretaries They were usually members of the Indian Civil Service 20 The territory under the Lieutenant consisted of 29 Districts grouped under 5 Divisions and 43 Princely States Each District was under a Deputy Commissioner who reported to the Commissioner of the Division Each District was subdivided into between three and seven tehsils each under a tahsildar assisted by a naib deputy tahsildar 21 In 1885 the Punjab administration began an ambitious plan to transform over six million acres of barren waste land in central and western Punjab into irrigable agricultural land The creation of canal colonies was designed to relieve demographic pressures in the central parts of the province increase productivity and revenues and create a loyal support amongst peasant landholders 22 The colonisation resulted in an agricultural revolution in the province rapid industrial growth and the resettlement of over one million Punjabis in the new areas 23 A number of towns were created or saw significant development in the colonies such as Lyallpur Sargodha and Montgomery Colonisation led to the canal irrigated area of the Punjab increasing from three to fourteen million acres in the period from 1885 to 1947 24 The beginning of the twentieth century saw increasing unrest in the Punjab Conditions in the Chenab colony together with land reforms such as the Punjab Land Alienation Act 1900 and the Colonisation Bill 1906 contributed to the 1907 Punjab unrest The unrest was unlike any previous agitation in the province as the government had for the first time aggrieved a large portion of the rural population 25 Mass demonstrations were organised headed by Lala Lajpat Rai a leader of the Hindu revivalist sect Arya Samaj 25 The unrest resulted in the repeal of the Colonisation Bill and the end of paternalist policies in the colonies 25 During the First World War Punjabi manpower contributed heavily to the Indian Army Out of a total of 683 149 combat troops 349 688 hailed from the province 26 In 1918 an influenza epidemic broke out in the province resulting in the deaths of an estimated 962 937 people or 4 77 percent of the total estimated population 27 In March 1919 the Rowlatt Act was passed extending emergency measures of detention and incarceration in response to the perceived threat of terrorism from revolutionary nationalist organisations 28 This led to the infamous Jallianwala Bagh massacre in April 1919 where Colonel Reginald Edward Harry Dyer ordered detachments of the 9th Gorkha Rifles and the 59th Scinde Rifles under his command to fire into a group of some 10 000 unarmed protesters and Baisakhi pilgrims killing 379 29 Administrative reforms Edit The Montagu Chelmsford Reforms enacted through the Government of India Act 1919 expanded the Punjab Legislative Council and introduced the principle of dyarchy whereby certain responsibilities such as agriculture health education and local government were transferred to elected ministers The first Punjab Legislative Council under the 1919 Act was constituted in 1921 comprising 93 members seventy per cent to be elected and rest to be nominated 30 Some of the British Indian ministers under the dyarchy scheme were Sir Sheikh Abdul Qadir Sir Shahab ud Din Virk and Lala Hari Kishen Lal 31 32 The Government of India Act 1935 introduced provincial autonomy to Punjab replacing the system of dyarchy It provided for the constitution of Punjab Legislative Assembly of 175 members presided by a Speaker and an executive government responsible to the Assembly The Unionist Party under Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan formed the government in 1937 Sir Sikandar was succeeded by Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana in 1942 who remained the Premier till partition in 1947 Although the term of the Assembly was five years the Assembly continued for about eight years and its last sitting was held on 19 March 1945 33 Partition Edit See also Partition of India The struggle for Indian independence witnessed competing and conflicting interests in the Punjab The landed elites of the Muslim Hindu and Sikh communities had loyally collaborated with the British since annexation supported the Unionist Party and were hostile to the Congress party led independence movement 34 Amongst the peasantry and urban middle classes the Hindus were the most active National Congress supporters the Sikhs flocked to the Akali movement whilst the Muslims eventually supported the Muslim League 34 Since the partition of the sub continent had been decided special meetings of the Western and Eastern Section of the Legislative Assembly were held on 23 June 1947 to decide whether or not the Province of the Punjab be partitioned After voting on both sides partition was decided and the existing Punjab Legislative Assembly was also divided into West Punjab Legislative Assembly and the East Punjab Legislative Assembly This last Assembly before independence held its last sitting on 4 July 1947 35 Demographics EditPopulation historyYearPop 185517 600 000 186819 700 000 11 9 188120 800 995 5 6 189122 915 894 10 2 190124 367 113 6 3 191123 791 841 2 4 192125 101 514 5 5 193128 490 869 13 5 194134 309 861 20 4 Source Census of India 13 8 36 6 37 86 The first British census of the Punjab was carried out in 1855 This covered only British territory to the exclusion of local princely states and placed the population at 17 6 million The first regular census of British India carried out in 1881 recorded a population of 20 8 million people The final British census in 1941 recorded 34 3 million people in the Punjab which comprised 29 districts within British territory 43 princely states 52 047 villages and 283 towns 37 In 1881 only Amritsar and Lahore had populations over 100 000 The commercial and industrial city of Amritsar 152 000 was slightly larger than the cultural capital of Lahore 149 000 Over the following sixty years Lahore increased in population fourfold whilst Amritsar grew two fold By 1941 the province had seven cities with populations over 100 000 with emergence and growth of Rawalpindi Multan Sialkot Jullundur and Ludhiana 37 The colonial period saw large scale migration within the Punjab due to the creation of canal colonies in western Punjab The majority of colonists hailed from the seven most densely populated districts of Amritsar Gurdaspur Jullundur Hoshiarpur Ludhiana Ambala and Sialkot and consisted primarily of Khatris Jats Arains Sainis Kambohs and Rajputs The movement of many highly skilled farmers from eastern and central Punjab to the new colonies led to western Punjab becoming the most progressive and advanced agricultural region of the province The period also saw significant numbers of Punjabis emigrate to other regions of the British Empire The main destinations were East Africa Kenya Uganda and Tanzania Southeast Asia Malaya and Burma Hong Kong and Canada 37 Religion Edit Main article Religion in the Punjab The Punjab was a religiously eclectic province comprising three major groups Muslims Hindus and Sikhs By 1941 the religious Muslims constituting an absolute majority at 53 2 whilst the Hindu population was at 29 1 The period between 1881 and 1941 saw a significant increase in the Sikh and Christian populations growing from 8 2 and 0 1 to 14 9 and 1 9 respectively 37 The decrease in the Hindu population has been attributed to the conversion of Hindus mainly to Sikhism and Islam and also to Christianity 37 Population trends for major religious groups in the Punjab Province of the British India 1881 1941 37 Religiousgroup Population 1881 Population 1891 Population 1901 Population 1911 g Population 1921 Population 1931 Population 1941Islam 47 6 47 8 49 6 51 1 51 1 52 4 53 2 Hinduism 43 8 43 6 41 3 35 8 35 1 30 2 29 1 Sikhism 8 2 8 2 8 6 12 1 12 4 14 3 14 9 Christianity 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 8 1 3 1 5 1 5 Other religions No religion 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 1 1 6 1 3 Religion in West Punjab 1941 h 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 12 983 076 75 Hinduism i 2 376 309 13 73 Sikhism 1 527 345 8 82 Christianity 382 669 2 21 Others j 40 458 0 23 Total Population 17 309 857 100 Territory comprises the contemporary subdivisions of Punjab Pakistan and Islamabad Capital Territory Religion in East Punjab 1941 k 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 7 960 240 46 82 Islam 5 276 668 31 04 Sikhism 3 588 840 21 11 Christianity 129 797 0 76 Others j 44 459 0 26 Total Population 17 000 004 100 Territory comprises the contemporary subdivisions of Punjab India Chandigarh Haryana and Himachal Pradesh Indo Gangetic Plain West geographical division Edit Including Hisar district Loharu State Rohtak district Dujana State Gurgaon district Pataudi State Delhi Karnal district Jalandhar district Kapurthala State Ludhiana district Malerkotla State Firozpur district Faridkot State Patiala State Jind State Nabha State Lahore District Amritsar district Gujranwala District and Sheikhupura District 12 2 13 4 Population trends for major religious groups in theIndo Gangetic Plain West geographical division of Punjab Province 1901 1941 13 48 Religion Percentage1901 Percentage1911 Percentage1921 Percentage1931 Percentage1941Hinduism 43 79 42 62 41 37 36 04 33 54 Islam 37 36 37 81 38 0 39 72 40 41 Sikhism 18 35 18 73 19 10 21 88 23 11 Christianity 0 18 0 51 1 23 1 54 1 60 Jainism 0 32 0 33 0 29 0 27 0 28 Total 100 100 100 100 100 Religion in Hisar District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 652 842 64 85 Islam 285 208 28 33 Sikhism 60 731 6 03 Christianity 1 235 0 12 Others j 6 693 0 66 Total Population 1 006 709 100 Religion in Rohtak District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 780 474 77 53 Islam 166 569 16 55 Sikhism 1 466 0 15 Christianity 1 026 0 1 Others j 6 864 0 68 Total Population 956 399 100 Religion in Gurgaon District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 560 573 65 84 Islam 285 992 33 59 Sikhism 637 0 07 Christianity 1 457 0 17 Others j 2 799 0 33 Total Population 851 458 100 Religion in Karnal District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 666 301 66 99 Islam 304 346 30 6 Sikhism 19 887 2 Christianity 1 223 0 12 Others j 2 818 0 28 Total Population 994 575 100 Religion in Jalandhar District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 509 804 45 23 Hinduism i 311 010 27 59 Sikhism 298 741 26 5 Christianity 5 971 0 53 Others j 1 664 0 15 Total Population 1 127 190 100 Religion in Ludhiana District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageSikhism 341 175 41 68 Islam 302 482 36 95 Hinduism i 171 715 20 98 Christianity 1 632 0 2 Others j 1 611 0 2 Total Population 818 615 100 Religion in Firozpur District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 641 448 45 07 Sikhism 479 486 33 69 Hinduism i 287 733 20 22 Christianity 11 031 0 78 Others j 3 378 0 24 Total Population 1 423 076 100 Religion in Lahore District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 1 027 772 60 62 Sikhism 310 646 18 32 Hinduism i 284 689 16 79 Christianity 67 686 3 99 Others j 4 582 0 27 Total Population 1 695 375 100 Religion in Amritsar District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 657 695 46 52 Sikhism 510 845 36 13 Hinduism i 217 431 15 38 Christianity 25 330 1 79 Others j 2 575 0 18 Total Population 1 413 876 100 Religion in Gujranwala District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 642 706 70 45 Hinduism i 108 115 11 85 Sikhism 99 139 10 87 Christianity 60 380 6 62 Others j 1 894 0 21 Total Population 912 234 100 Religion in Sheikhupura District 1941 13 42 Religion Population Percentage 1941 Islam 542 344 63 62 Sikhism 160 706 18 85 Hinduism i 89 182 10 46 Christianity 59 985 7 04 Others j 291 0 03 Total Population 852 508 100 Himalayan geographical division Edit Including Nahan State Simla district Simla Hill States Kangra district Mandi State Suket State and Chamba State 12 2 Population trends for major religious groups in theHimalayan geographical division of Punjab Province 1901 1941 13 48 Religion Percentage1901 Percentage1911 Percentage1921 Percentage1931 Percentage1941Hinduism 94 60 94 53 94 50 94 25 94 35 Islam 4 53 4 30 4 45 4 52 4 27 Sikhism 0 23 0 46 0 44 0 49 0 60 Christianity 0 20 0 26 0 26 0 14 0 10 Jainism 0 03 0 02 0 02 0 02 0 03 Total 100 100 100 100 100 Religion in Kangra District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 846 567 94 13 Islam 43 249 4 81 Sikhism 4 809 0 53 Christianity 590 0 07 Others j 4 162 0 46 Total Population 899 377 100 Sub Himalayan geographical division Edit Including Ambala district Kalsia State Hoshiarpur district Gurdaspur district Sialkot District Gujrat District Jhelum District Rawalpindi District and Attock District 12 2 Population trends for major religious groups in theSub Himalayan geographical division of Punjab Province 1901 1941 13 48 Religion Percentage1901 Percentage1911 Percentage1921 Percentage1931 Percentage1941Islam 60 62 61 19 61 44 61 99 62 29 Hinduism 33 09 27 36 26 66 22 85 21 98 Sikhism 5 68 9 74 9 77 11 65 11 89 Christianity 0 48 1 59 2 01 2 05 1 74 Jainism 0 12 0 12 0 12 0 11 0 12 Total 100 100 100 100 100 Religion in Ambala District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 412 658 48 68 Islam 268 999 31 73 Sikhism 156 543 18 47 Christianity 4 892 0 58 Others j 4 653 0 55 Total Population 847 745 100 Religion in Hoshiarpur District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageHinduism i 584 080 49 91 Islam 380 759 32 53 Sikhism 198 194 16 93 Christianity 6 060 0 52 Others j 1 230 0 11 Total Population 1 170 323 100 Religion in Gurdaspur District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 589 923 51 14 Hinduism i 290 774 25 21 Sikhism 221 261 19 18 Christianity 51 522 4 47 Others j 31 0 Total Population 1 153 511 100 Religion in Sialkot District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 740 218 62 18 Hinduism i 231 319 19 43 Sikhism 139 409 11 71 Christianity 73 846 6 2 Others j 5 705 0 48 Total Population 1 190 497 100 Religion in Gujrat District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 945 609 85 58 Hinduism i 84 643 7 66 Sikhism 70 233 6 36 Christianity 4 391 0 4 Others j 76 0 01 Total Population 1 104 952 100 Religion in Jhelum District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 563 033 89 42 Hinduism i 40 888 6 49 Sikhism 24 680 3 92 Christianity 730 0 12 Others j 327 0 05 Total Population 629 658 100 Religion in Rawalpindi District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 628 193 80 Hinduism i 82 478 10 5 Sikhism 64 127 8 17 Christianity 4 212 0 54 Others j 6 221 0 79 Total Population 785 231 100 Religion in Attock District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 611 128 90 42 Hinduism i 43 009 6 36 Sikhism 20 120 2 98 Christianity 504 0 07 Others j 1 114 0 16 Total Population 675 875 100 North West Dry Area geographical division Edit Including Montgomery District Shahpur District Mianwali District Lyallpur District Jhang District Multan District Bahawalpur State Muzaffargarh District and Dera Ghazi Khan District 12 2 Population trends for major religious groups in theNorth West Dry Area geographical division of Punjab Province 1901 1941 13 48 Religion Percentage1901 Percentage1911 Percentage1921 Percentage1931 Percentage1941Islam 79 01 80 00 78 95 78 22 77 85 Hinduism 17 84 13 58 14 23 12 80 13 21 Sikhism 2 91 5 62 5 64 6 73 6 74 Christianity 0 23 0 79 1 17 1 18 1 17 Jainism 0 01 0 01 0 01 0 01 0 01 Total 100 100 100 100 100 Religion in Montgomery District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 918 564 69 11 Hinduism i 210 966 15 87 Sikhism 175 064 13 17 Christianity 24 101 1 81 Others j 408 0 03 Total Population 1 329 103 100 Religion in Shahpur District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 835 918 83 68 Hinduism i 102 233 10 23 Sikhism 48 046 4 81 Christianity 12 620 1 26 Others j 104 0 01 Total Population 998 921 100 Religion in Mianwali District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 436 260 86 16 Hinduism i 62 824 12 41 Sikhism 6 865 1 36 Christianity 324 0 06 Others j 48 0 01 Total Population 506 321 100 Religion in Lyallpur District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 877 518 62 85 Sikhism 262 737 18 82 Hinduism i 204 059 14 61 Christianity 51 694 3 7 Others j 297 0 02 Total Population 1 396 305 100 Religion in Jhang District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 678 736 82 61 Hinduism i 129 889 15 81 Sikhism 12 238 1 49 Christianity 744 0 09 Others j 24 0 Total Population 821 631 100 Religion in Multan District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 1 157 911 78 01 Hinduism i 249 872 16 83 Sikhism 61 628 4 15 Christianity 13 270 0 89 Others j 1 652 0 11 Total Population 1 484 333 100 Religion in Muzaffargarh District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 616 074 86 42 Hinduism i 90 643 12 72 Sikhism 5 882 0 83 Christianity 218 0 03 Others j 32 0 Total Population 712 849 100 Religion in Dera Ghazi Khan District 1941 13 42 Religion Population PercentageIslam 512 678 88 19 Hinduism i 67 423 11 6 Sikhism 1 072 0 18 Christianity 137 0 02 Others j 40 0 01 Total Population 581 350 100 Language Edit As with religion Punjab was a linguistically eclectically diverse province and region In 1837 Persian had been abolished as the official language of Company administration and replaced by local Indian vernacular languages In the Sikh Empire Persian continued to be the official state language 38 Shortly after annexing the Punjab in 1849 the Board of Administration canvassed local officials in each of the provinces s six divisions to decide which language was best suited for the Courts and Public Business 39 Officials in the western divisions recommended Persian whilst eastern officials suggested a shift to Urdu 39 In September 1849 a two language policy was instituted throughout the province The language policy in the Punjab differed from other Indian provinces in that Urdu was not a widespread local vernacular In 1849 John Lawrence noted that Urdu is not the language of these districts and neither is Persian 39 In 1854 the Board of Administration abruptly ended the two language policy and Urdu was designated as the official language of government across the province The decision was motivated by new civil service rules requiring all officials pass a test in the official language of their local court In fear of potentially losing their jobs officials in Persian districts petitioned the board to replace Persian with Urdu believing Urdu the easier language to master 40 Urdu remained the official administrative language until 1947 Officials although aware that Punjabi was the colloquial language of the majority instead favoured the use of Urdu for a number of reasons Criticism of Punjabi included the belief that it was simply a form of patois lacking any form of standardisation and that would be inflexible and barren and incapable of expressing nice shades of meaning and exact logical ideas with the precision so essential in local proceedings 40 Similar arguments had earlier been made about Bengali Oriya and Hindustani however those languages were later adopted for local administration Instead it is believed the advantages of Urdu served the administration greater Urdu and initially Persian allowed the Company to recruit experienced administrators from elsewhere in India who did not speak Punjabi to facilitate greater integration with other Indian territories which were administered with Urdu and to help foster ties with local elites who spoke Persian and Urdu and could act as intermediaries with the wider populace 40 As per the 1911 census speakers of the Punjabi language along with the mutually intelligible Lahnda languages and dialects l formed just over three quarters 75 93 per cent of the total provincial population Linguistic Demographics of Punjab Province Language Percentage1911 12 370 Punjabi 58 34 Lahnda l 17 59 Western Hindi m 15 82 Western Pahari 4 11 Rajasthani 3 0 Balochi 0 29 Pashto 0 28 English 0 15 Other 0 42 Indo Gangetic Plain West geographical division Edit Including Hisar district Loharu State Rohtak district Dujana State Gurgaon district Pataudi State Delhi Karnal district Jalandhar district Kapurthala State Ludhiana district Malerkotla State Firozpur district Faridkot State Patiala State Jind State Nabha State Lahore District Amritsar district and Gujranwala District Linguistic Demographics of the Indo Gangetic Plain West geographical division Language Percentage1911 12 370 Punjabi 63 49 Western Hindi m 29 56 Rajasthani 6 26 Lahnda l 1 0 Western Pahari 0 87 English 0 11 Pashto 0 07 Other 0 13 Himalayan geographical division Edit Including Nahan State Simla district Simla Hill States Kangra district Mandi State Suket State and Chamba State Linguistic Demographics of the Himalayan geographical division Language Percentage1911 12 370 Western Pahari 50 22 Punjabi 45 15 Western Hindi m 1 39 English 0 2 Rajasthani 0 02 Pashto 0 01 Other 3 0 Sub Himalayan geographical division Edit Including Ambala district Kalsia State Hoshiarpur district Gurdaspur district Sialkot District Gujrat District Jhelum District Rawalpindi District and Attock District Linguistic Demographics of the Sub Himalayan geographical division Language Percentage1911 12 370 Punjabi 74 01 Lahnda l 14 76 Western Hindi m 8 81 Western Pahari 1 49 Pashto 0 5 English 0 3 Rajasthani 0 01 Other 0 12 North West Dry Area geographical division Edit Including Montgomery District Shahpur District Mianwali District Lyallpur District Jhang District Multan District Bahawalpur State Muzaffargarh District and Dera Ghazi Khan District Linguistic Demographics of the North West Dry Area geographical division Language Percentage1911 12 370 Lahnda l 60 31 Punjabi 36 14 Balochi 1 25 Rajasthani 0 62 Western Hindi m 0 56 Pashto 0 53 English 0 05 Western Pahari 0 01 Other 0 53 Castes and tribes Edit Punjab Province was diverse with many castes subcastes and tribes all forming parts of the various ethnic groups in the province contemporarily known as Punjabis Saraikis Haryanvis Hindkowans Dogras Paharis and others Castes and Tribes of Punjab Province 12 478 Caste or Tribe Population 1881 1881 Population 1891 1891 Population 1901 1901 Population 1911 1911Jat 4 167 000 20 03 4 430 000 19 33 4 942 000 20 28 4 957 000 20 83 Rajput 1 662 000 7 99 1 759 000 7 68 1 798 000 7 38 1 635 000 6 87 Chamar 1 066 000 5 12 1 178 000 5 14 1 208 000 4 96 1 129 000 4 75 Brahman 1 069 000 5 14 1 107 000 4 83 1 123 000 4 61 1 018 000 4 28 Arain 795 000 3 82 889 000 3 88 1 007 000 4 13 978 000 4 11 Chuhra 1 052 000 5 06 1 188 000 5 18 1 189 000 4 88 926 000 3 89 Arora 512 000 2 46 570 000 2 49 643 000 2 64 674 000 2 83 Tarkhan 563 000 2 71 618 000 2 7 681 000 2 79 646 000 2 72 Julaha 586 000 2 82 625 000 2 73 657 000 2 7 635 000 2 67 Gujar 552 000 2 65 614 000 2 68 632 000 2 59 610 000 2 56 Kumhar 467 000 2 25 515 000 2 25 569 000 2 34 550 000 2 31 Baloch 310 000 1 49 359 000 1 57 468 000 1 92 532 000 2 24 Khatri 393 000 1 89 419 000 1 83 436 000 1 79 433 000 1 82 Awan 332 000 1 6 369 000 1 61 421 000 1 73 426 000 1 79 Mochi 332 000 1 6 380 000 1 66 415 000 1 7 419 000 1 76 Bania 437 000 2 1 442 000 1 93 452 000 1 85 404 000 1 7 Kanet 346 000 1 66 370 000 1 61 390 000 1 6 404 000 1 7 Jhinwar 426 000 2 05 468 000 2 04 460 000 1 89 360 000 1 51 Nai 324 000 1 56 357 000 1 56 376 000 1 54 350 000 1 47 Sheikh 336 000 1 62 332 000 1 45 321 000 1 32 339 000 1 42 Lohar 291 000 1 4 323 000 1 41 351 000 1 44 323 000 1 36 Mussalli N A N A N A N A 57 000 0 23 310 000 1 3 Teli 261 000 1 25 301 000 1 31 322 000 1 32 296 000 1 24 Pathan 188 000 0 9 195 000 0 85 284 000 1 17 292 000 1 23 Faqir 114 000 0 55 313 000 1 37 386 000 1 58 280 000 1 18 Machhi 161 000 0 77 189 000 0 82 236 000 0 97 280 000 1 18 Sayyid 200 000 0 96 215 000 0 94 238 000 0 98 247 000 1 04 Mirasi 192 000 0 92 229 000 1 247 000 1 01 227 000 0 95 Ahir 173 000 0 83 196 000 0 86 205 000 0 84 209 000 0 88 Kashmiri 152 000 0 73 196 000 0 86 193 000 0 79 178 000 0 75 Dagi amp Koli 176 000 0 85 170 000 0 74 155 000 0 64 175 000 0 74 Kamboh 130 000 0 62 151 000 0 66 174 000 0 71 172 000 0 72 Ghirath 160 000 0 77 174 000 0 76 170 000 0 7 171 000 0 72 Sunar 145 000 0 7 163 000 0 71 177 000 0 73 158 000 0 66 Dhobi 124 000 0 6 139 000 0 61 147 000 0 6 156 000 0 66 Meo 116 000 0 56 121 000 0 53 147 000 0 6 130 000 0 55 Chhimba 103 000 0 5 145 000 0 63 152 000 0 62 129 000 0 54 Qassab 92 000 0 44 108 000 0 47 118 000 0 48 120 000 0 5 Saini 153 000 0 74 125 000 0 55 127 000 0 52 113 000 0 47 Mali 66 000 0 32 181 000 0 79 113 000 0 46 104 000 0 44 Mughal 92 000 0 44 118 000 0 51 98 000 0 4 99 000 0 42 Rathi 85 000 0 41 101 000 0 44 88 000 0 36 98 000 0 41 Maliar N A N A N A N A 81 000 0 33 90 000 0 38 Dhanuk 66 000 0 32 74 000 0 32 77 000 0 32 83 000 0 35 Jogi Rawal 90 000 0 43 91 000 0 4 76 000 0 31 83 000 0 35 Mahtam 52 000 0 25 57 000 0 25 83 000 0 34 82 000 0 34 Dumna 71 000 0 34 69 000 0 3 69 000 0 28 79 000 0 33 Mallah 62 000 0 3 77 000 0 34 73 000 0 3 78 000 0 33 Qureshi N A N A N A N A 53 000 0 22 71 000 0 3 Dogar 63 000 0 01 70 000 0 01 75 000 0 01 68 000 0 29 Barwala 55 000 0 26 64 000 0 28 69 000 0 28 64 000 0 27 Khoja 62 000 0 3 90 000 0 39 99 000 0 41 63 000 0 26 Khokhar 36 000 0 17 130 000 0 57 108 000 0 44 60 000 0 25 Bharai 56 000 0 27 67 000 0 29 66 000 0 27 58 000 0 24 Labana 47 000 0 23 55 000 0 24 56 000 0 23 58 000 0 24 Other 1 319 995 6 35 1 229 894 5 37 1 009 113 4 14 1 162 841 4 89 Total population 20 800 995 100 22 915 894 100 24 367 113 100 23 791 841 100 Literacy Edit Literacy Rate by Religious Community in Punjab Province 1941 13 65 Religion Total Literacy Total Male Literacy Total Female LiteracyJains 41 93 29 03 12 90 Sikhs 17 03 12 13 4 90 Hindus 16 35 11 89 4 46 Christians 7 76 4 69 3 07 Muslims 6 97 5 52 1 45 Others 7 62 6 85 0 77 Total 10 87 8 13 2 74 Administrative divisions Edit Districts of Punjab with Muslim green and non Muslim pink majorities as per 1941 census Punjab British India British Territory and Princely States Division Districts in British Territory Princely StatesRawalpindi Division AttockJhelumRawalpindiShahpurLahore Division AmritsarGujranwalaGujratGurdaspurLahoreLyallpurMontgomerySheikhupuraSialkotMultan Division Dera Ghazi KhanJhangMianwaliMultanMuzaffargarhJullundur Division FerozeporeHoshiarpurJullundurKangraLudhianaDelhi Division AmbalaDelhiGurgaonHissarKarnalRohtakShimlaTotal area British Territory 97 209 square milesNative States PatialaJindNabhaBahawalpurSirmurLoharuDujanaPataudiKalsiaSimla Hill StatesKapurthalaMandiMalerkotlaSuketFaridkotSibaChambaKahlur Bilaspur Total area Native States 36 532 square milesTotal area Punjab 133 741 square milesAgriculture EditWithin a few years of its annexation the Punjab was regarded as British India s model agricultural province From the 1860s onwards agricultural prices and land values soared in the Punjab This stemmed from increasing political security and improvements in infrastructure and communications New cash crops such as wheat tobacco sugar cane and cotton were introduced By the 1920s the Punjab produced a tenth of India s total cotton crop and a third of its wheat crop Per capita output of all the crops in the province increased by approximately 45 percent between 1891 and 1921 a growth contrasting to agricultural crises in Bengal Bihar and Orissa during the period 41 The Punjab Agricultural College and Research Institute became the first higher educational agricultural institution in the Punjab when established in 1906 Rapid agricultural growth combined with access to easy credit for landowners led to a growing crisis of indebtedness 42 When landowners were unable to pay down their loans urban based moneylenders took advantage of the law to foreclose debts of mortgaged land 42 This led to a situation where land increasingly passed to absentee moneylenders who had little connection to the villages were the land was located The colonial government recognised this as a potential threat to the stability of the province and a split emerged in the government between paternalists who favoured intervention to ensure order and those who opposed state intervention in private property relations 41 The paternalists emerged victorious and the Punjab Land Alienation Act 1900 prevented urban commercial castes who were overwhelmingly Hindu from permanently acquiring land from statutory agriculturalist tribes who were mainly Muslim and Sikh 43 Accompanied by the increasing franchise of the rural population this interventionist approach led to a long lasting impact on the political landscape of the province The agricultural lobby remained loyal to the government and rejected communalism in common defence of its privileges against urban moneylenders 41 This position was entrenched by the Unionist Party The Congress Party s opposition to the Act led to it being marginalised in the Punjab reducing its influence more so than in any other province and inhibiting its ability to challenge colonial rule locally The political dominance of the Unionist Party would remain until partition and significantly it was only on the collapse of its power on the eve of independence from Britain that communal violence began to spread in rural Punjab 41 Army EditIn the immediate aftermath of annexation the Sikh Khalsa Army was disbanded and soldiers were required to surrender their weapons and return to agricultural or other pursuits 15 The Bengal Army keen to utilise the highly trained ex Khalsa army troops began to recruit from the Punjab for Bengal infantry units stationed in the province However opposition to the recruitment of these soldiers spread and resentment emerged from sepoys of the Bengal Army towards the incursion of Punjabis into their ranks In 1851 the Punjab Irregular Force also known as the Piffars was raised Initially they consisted of one garrison and four mule batteries four regiments of cavalry eleven of infantry and the Corps of Guides totalling approximately 13 000 men 44 The gunners and infantry were mostly Punjabi many from the Khalsa Army whilst the cavalry had a considerable Hindustani presence 44 During the Indian Rebellion of 1857 eighteen new regiments were raised from the Punjab which remained loyal to the East India Company throughout the crisis in the Punjab and United Provinces 45 By June 1858 of the 80 000 native troops in the Bengal Army 75 000 were Punjabi of which 23 000 were Sikh 46 In the aftermath of the rebellion a thorough re organisation of the army took place Henceforth recruitment into the British Indian Army was restricted to loyal peoples and provinces Punjabi Sikhs emerged as a particularly favoured martial race to serve the army 47 In the midst of The Great Game and fearful of a Russian invasion of British India the Punjab was regarded of significant strategic importance as a frontier province In addition to their loyalty and a belief in their suitability to serve in harsh conditions Punjabi recruits were favoured as they could be paid at the local service rate whereas soldiers serving on the frontier from more distant lands had to be paid extra foreign service allowances 48 By 1875 of the entire Indian army a third of recruits hailed from the Punjab 49 In 1914 three fifths of the Indian army came from the Punjab despite the region constituting approximately one tenth of the total population of British India 49 During the First World War Punjabi Sikhs alone accounted for one quarter of all armed personnel in India 47 Military service provided access to the wider world and personnel were deployed across the British Empire from Malaya the Mediterranean and Africa 47 Upon completion of their terms of service these personnel were often amongst the first to seek their fortunes abroad 47 At the outbreak of the Second World War 48 percent of the Indian army came from the province 50 In Jhelum Rawalpindi and Attock the percentage of the total male population who enlisted reached fifteen percent 51 The Punjab continued to be the main supplier of troops throughout the war contributing 36 percent of the total Indian troops who served in the conflict 52 The huge proportion of Punjabis in the army meant that a significant amount of military expenditure went to Punjabis and in turn resulted in an abnormally high level of resource input in the Punjab 53 It has been suggested that by 1935 if remittances of serving officers were combined with income from military pensions more than two thirds of Punjab s land revenue could have been paid out of military incomes 53 Military service further helped reduce the extent of indebtedness across the Province In Hoshiarpur a notable source of military personnel in 1920 thirty percent of proprietors were debt free compared to the region s average of eleven percent 53 In addition the benefits of military service and the perception that the government was benevolent towards soldiers affected the latter s attitudes towards the British 46 The loyalty of recruited peasantry and the influence of military groups in rural areas across the province limited the reach of the nationalist movement in the province 46 Communications and transport EditIn 1853 the Viceroy Lord Dalhousie issued a minute stressing the military importance of railways across India 54 In the Punjab however it was initially strategic commercial interests which drove investment in railways and communications from 1860 54 Independent railway companies emerged such as the Scinde Punjab and Delhi railways to build and operate new lines In 1862 the first section of railway in the Punjab was constructed between Lahore and Amritsar and Lahore Junction railway station opened Lines were opened between Lahore and Multan in 1864 and Amritsar and Delhi in 1870 54 The Scinde Punjab and Delhi railways merged to form the Scinde Punjab amp Delhi Railway in 1870 creating a link between Karachi and Lahore via Multan The Punjab Northern State Railway linked Lahore and Peshawar in 1883 By 1886 the independent railways had amalgamated into North Western State Railway 54 The construction of railway lines and the network of railway workshops generated employment opportunities which in turn led to increased immigration into cantonment towns 54 As connectivity increased across the province it facilitated the movement of goods and increased human interaction It has been observed that the Ferozpur Lahore and Amritsar began to develop into one composite cultural triangle due to the ease of connectivity between them 54 Similarly barriers of spoken dialects eroded over time and cultural affinities were increasingly fostered 54 Education EditIn 1854 the Punjab education department was instituted with a policy to provide secular education in all government managed institutions 55 Privately run institutions would only receive grants in aid in return for providing secular instruction 55 By 1864 this had resulted in a situation whereby all grants in aid to higher education schools and colleges were received by institutions under European management and no indigenous owned schools received government help 55 In the early 1860s a number of educational colleges were established including Lawrence College Murree King Edward Medical University Government College Lahore Glancy Medical College and Forman Christian College In 1882 Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner published a damning report on the state of education in the Punjab He lamented the failure to reconcile government run schools with traditional indigenous schools and noted a steady decline in the number of schools across the province since annexation 56 He noted in particular how Punjabi Muslim s avoided government run schools due to the lack of religious subjects taught in them observing how at least 120 000 Punjabis attended schools unsupported by the state and describing it as a protest by the people against our system of education 57 Leitner had long advocated the benefits of oriental scholarship and the fusion of government education with religious instruction In January 1865 he had established the Anjuman i Punjab a subscription based association aimed at using a European style of learning to promote useful knowledge whilst also reviving traditional scholarship in Arabic Persian and Sanskrit 58 In 1884 a reorganisation of the Punjab education system occurred introducing measures tending towards decentralisation of control over education and the promotion of an indigenous education agency As a consequence several new institutions were encouraged in the province The Arya Samaj opened a college in Lahore in 1886 the Sikhs opened the Khalsa College whilst the Anjuman i Himayat i Islam stepped in to organise Muslim education 59 In 1886 the Punjab Chiefs College later renamed Aitchison College was opened to further the education of the elite classes Government EditSee also Prime Minister of the Punjab Early administration Edit See also List of Governors of Punjab British India In 1849 a Board of Administration was put in place to govern the newly annexed province The Board was led by a President and two assistants Beneath them Commissioners acted as Superintendents of revenue and police and exercised the civil appellate and the original criminal powers of Sessions Judges whilst Deputy Commissioners were given subordinate civil criminal and fiscal powers 60 In 1853 the Board of Administration was abolished and authority was invested in a single Chief Commissioner The Government of India Act 1858 led to further restructuring and the office of Lieutenant Governor replaced that of Chief Commissioner Although The Indian Councils Act 1861 laid the foundation for the establishment of a local legislature in the Punjab the first legislature was constituted in 1897 It consisted of a body of nominated officials and non officials and was presided over by the Lieutenant Governor The first council lasted for eleven years until 1909 The Morley Minto Reforms led to an elected members complementing the nominated officials in subsequent councils 61 Punjab Legislative Council and Assembly Edit The Government of India Act 1919 introduced the system of dyarchy across British India and led to the implementation of the first Punjab Legislative Council in 1921 At the same time the office of lieutenant governor was replaced with that of governor The initial Council had ninety three members seventy per cent of which were elected and the rest nominated 61 A president was elected by the Council to preside over the meetings Between 1921 and 1936 there were four terms of the Council 61 Council Inaugurated Dissolved President s First Council 8 January 1921 27 October 1923 Sir Montagu Butler and Herbert CassonSecond Council 2 January 1924 27 October 1926 Herbert Casson Sir Abdul Qadir and Sir Shahab ud Din VirkThird Council 3 January 1927 26 July 1930 Sir Shahab ud Din VirkFourth Council 24 October 1930 10 November 1936 Sir Shahab ud Din Virk and Sir Chhotu RamIn 1935 the Government of India Act 1935 replaced dyarchy with increased provincial autonomy It introduced direct elections and enabled elected Indian representatives to form governments in the provincial assemblies The Punjab Legislative Council was replaced by a Punjab Legislative Assembly and the role of President with that of a Speaker Membership of the Assembly was fixed at 175 members and it was intended to sit for five years 61 First Assembly Election Edit See also 1937 Punjab Provincial Assembly election The first election was held in 1937 and was won outright by the Unionist Party Its leader Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan was asked by the Governor Sir Herbert Emerson to form a Ministry and he chose a cabinet consisting of three Muslims two Hindus and a Sikh 62 Sir Sikandar died in 1942 and was succeeded as Premier by Khizar Hayat Khan Tiwana Position NamePremier Sir Sikandar Hayat KhanRevenue Minister Sir Sundar Singh MajithiaDevelopment Minister Sir Chhotu RamFinance Minister Manohar LalPublic Works Minister Khizar Hayat Khan TiwanaEducation Minister Mian Abdul HayeSecond Assembly Election Edit See also 1946 Punjab Provincial Assembly election The next election was held in 1946 The Muslim League won the most seats winning 73 out of a total of 175 However a coalition led by the Unionist Party and consisting of the Congress Party and Akali Party were able to secure an overall majority A campaign of civil disobedience by the Muslim League followed lasting six weeks and led to the resignation of Sir Khizar Tiwana and the collapse of the coalition government on 2 March 1947 63 The Muslim League however were unable to attract the support of other minorities to form a coalition government themselves 64 Amid this stalemate the Governor Sir Evan Jenkins assumed control of the government and remained in charge until the independence of India and Pakistan 64 Coat of arms Edit Arms of British Punjab Crescat e Fluviis meaning Let it grow from the rivers was the Latin motto used in the Coat of arms for Punjab Province As per the book History of the Sikhs written by Khushwant Singh it means Strength from the Rivers See also EditHistory of Punjab British Raj List of misls of the Sikh Confederacy Punjab region Sikh EmpireReferences Edit a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Punjab Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 653 D R Bhandarkar 1989 Some Aspects of Ancient Indian Culture Sir William Meyers Lectures 1938 39 Archived 7 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Asia Educational Services p 2 A S valdiya River Sarasvati was a Himalayn born river Archived 24 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Current Science Archived 10 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine vol 104 no 01 ISSN 0011 3891 Yule Henry 31 December 2018 Hobson Jobson A glossary of Colloquial Anglo Indian Words and Phrases and of Kindred Terms Etymological Historical Geographical and Discursive dsalsrv02 uchicago edu Archived from the original on 1 December 2018 Retrieved 7 May 2018 Macdonell Arthur Anthony 31 December 2018 A Practical Sanskrit Dictionary with Transliteration Accentuation and Etymological Analysis Throughout dsalsrv02 uchicago edu Archived from the original on 1 December 2018 Retrieved 10 July 2018 H K Manmohan Siṅgh The Punjab The Encyclopedia of Sikhism Editor in Chief Harbans Singh Punjabi University Patiala Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 18 August 2015 Gandhi Rajmohan 2013 Punjab A History from Aurangzeb to Mountbatten New Delhi India Urbana Illinois Aleph Book Company p 1 Introduction ISBN 978 93 83064 41 0 Canfield Robert L 1991 Turko Persia in Historical Perspective Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press p 1 Origins ISBN 978 0 521 52291 5 Gandhi Rajmohan 2013 Punjab A History from Aurangzeb to Mountbatten New Delhi India Urbana Illinois Aleph Book Company ISBN 978 93 83064 41 0 Shimmel Annemarie 2004 The Empire of the Great Mughals History Art and Culture London United Kingdom Reaktion Books Ltd ISBN 1 86189 1857 Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th ed vol 20 Punjab p 107 a b c d e f g h i j k Census of India 1911 Vol 14 Punjab Pt 1 Report Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2022 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 af ag ah ai aj ak al CENSUS OF INDIA 1941 VOLUME VI PUNJAB PROVINCE Archived from the original on 31 May 2022 Retrieved 22 July 2022 J S Grewal The Sikhs of the Punjab Volumes 2 3 Cambridge University Press 8 October 1998 p 258 a b c Arvind Pal Singh Mandair Sikhism A Guide for the Perplexed A amp C Black 8 August 2013 p 77 a b N Arielli B Collins 28 November 2012 Transnational Soldiers Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era Springer ISBN 1137296631 Dalrymple William 17 August 2009 The Last Mughal The Fall of Delhi 1857 A amp C Black ISBN 1408806886 Hibbert 2000 p 221 Gupta Narayani 1981 Delhi Between Two Empires 1803 1931 Oxford University Press p 26 Imperial Gazetteer2 of India Volume 20 page 331 Imperial Gazetteer of India Digital South Asia Library uchicago edu Archived from the original on 18 September 2020 Retrieved 20 February 2021 Imperial Gazetteer2 of India Volume 20 page 333 Imperial Gazetteer of India Digital South Asia Library uchicago edu Archived from the original on 18 September 2020 Retrieved 20 February 2021 Imran Ali THE PUNJAB CANAL COLONIES 1885 1940 1979 The Australian National University Canberra p34 Ian Talbot Khizr Tiwana the Punjab Unionist Party and the Partition of India Routledge 16 December 2013 p 55 Saiyid the Muslim Women of the British Punjab p 4 a b c Barrier N Gerald The Punjab Disturbances of 1907 The Response of the British Government in India to Agrarian Unrest Modern Asian Studies vol 1 no 4 1967 pp 353 383 Tan Tai Yong An Imperial Home Front Punjab and the First World War The Journal of Military History 2000 p 64 Influenza in India 1918 Public Health Reports vol 34 no 42 1919 pp 2300 2302 Sarkar 1921 p 137harvnb error no target CITEREFSarkar1921 help Punjab Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 14 June 2013 Retrieved 4 May 2013 http www pap gov pk uploads previous members S 1921 1923 htm Archived 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab The Working Of Dyarchy In India 1919 1928 D B Taraporevala Sons And Company http www pap gov pk uploads previous members S 1924 1926 htm Archived 7 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab http www pap gov pk uploads previous members S 1937 1945 htm Archived 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab a b Pritam Singh Federalism Nationalism and Development India and the Punjab Economy Routledge 19 February 2008 p 54 http www pap gov pk uploads previous members S 1946 1947 htm Archived 7 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Provincial Assembly of the Punjab CCensus of India 1931 Vol 17 Punjab Pt 2 Tables Archived from the original on 6 June 2020 Retrieved 15 August 2021 a b c d e f g Krishan Gopal 2004 Demography of the Punjab 1849 1947 PDF Journal of Punjab Studies 11 1 77 89 Archived PDF from the original on 9 February 2018 Retrieved 8 February 2018 Goud and Mookherjee R Sidda and Manisha 20 April 2014 India and Iran in Contemporary Relations Allied Publishers p 64 ISBN 8184249098 a b c Mir Farina 2010 The Social Space of Language Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab University of California Press pp 35 50 ISBN 0520262697 a b c Mir Farina 2010 The Social Space of Language Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab University of California Press pp 37 50 ISBN 0520262697 a b c d Talbot Ian A 2007 Punjab Under Colonialism Order and Transformation in British India PDF Journal of Punjab Studies 14 1 3 10 Archived PDF from the original on 9 February 2018 Retrieved 8 February 2018 a b Islam M Mufakharul The Punjab Land Alienation Act and the Professional Moneylenders Modern Asian Studies 29 no 2 Robert W Stern Democracy and Dictatorship in South Asia Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 p 53 a b Septimus Smet Thorburn The Punjab in Peace and War William Blackwood and Sons 1904 p 293 Harsh V Pant Handbook of Indian Defence Policy Themes Structures and Doctrines Routledge 6 October 2015 p 18 a b c Rajit K Mazumder The Indian Army and the Making of Punjab Orient Blackswan 2003 p 3 a b c d Robin Cohen The Cambridge Survey of World Migration Darshan Singh Tatla Sikh free and military migration during the colonial period Cambridge University Press 2 November 1995 p 69 Ian Talbot British Rule in the Punjab page 207 a b Ian Talbot Punjab and the Raj 1988 page 41 Kalim Siddiqui Conflict Crisis and War in Pakistan Springer 18 June 1972 p 92 Tan Tai Yong The Garrison State Military Government and Society in Colonial Punjab 1849 1947 SAGE Publications India 7 April 2005 p 291 Tan Tai Yong The Garrison State Military Government and Society in Colonial Punjab 1849 1947 SAGE Publications India 7 April 2005 p 291 a b c Rajit K Mazumder The Indian Army and the Making of Punjab Orient Blackswan 2003 p 23 a b c d e f g Bhupinder Singh Amandeep Kaur 2015 Railway Development in Colonial Punjab Social and Cultural Assimilation Vol 3 Issue 1 International Journal of Social Science and Humanities Research pp 80 84 a b c Robert Ivermee Secularism Islam and Education in India 1830 1910 Routledge 28 July 2015 p 96 Gottlieb William Leitner History of indigenous education in the Punjab since annexation and in 1882 Republican Books 1882 Robert Ivermee Secularism Islam and Education in India 1830 1910 Routledge 28 July 2015 p 97 Robert Ivermee Secularism Islam and Education in India 1830 1910 Routledge 28 July 2015 p 91 Robert Ivermee Secularism Islam and Education in India 1830 1910 Routledge 28 July 2015 p 105 Panjab Administration Report p 24 a b c d The Punjab Parliamentarians 1897 213 Provincial Assembly of the Punjab Lahore Pakistan 2015 Bakhshish Singh Nijjar History of the United Panjab Volume 3 Atlantic Publishers amp Dist 1 January 1996 p 159 David P Forsythe Encyclopedia of Human Rights Volume 1 OUP USA 27 August 2009 p 49 a b Lionel Knight Britain in India 1858 1947 Anthem Press 1 November 2012 p 154 Including Attock District Jhelum District Rawalpindi District and Shahpur District Including Amritsar District Gujranwala District Gujrat District Gurdaspur District Lahore District Lyallpur District Including Dera Ghazi Khan District Jhang District Mianwali District Multan District and Muzaffargarh District Including Firozpur district Hoshiarpur district Jalandhar district Kangra district and Ludhiana district Including Ambala district Delhi district Gurgaon district Hisar district Karnal district Rohtak district and Shimla Later renamed Ambala Division in 1911 following separation of Delhi district from Punjab Province Including Patiala State Jind State Nabha State Bahawalpur State Sirmur State Loharu State Dujana Pataudi State Kalsia Simla Hill States Kapurthala State Mandi State Malerkotla State Suket State Faridkot State Siba State Chamba State and Kahlur Bilaspur Delhi district is made into a separate territory 1941 figure reached by combining total population of all districts Lahore Sialkot Gujranwala Sheikhupura Gujrat Shahpur Jhelum Rawalpindi Attock Mianwali Montgomery Lyallpur Jhang Multan Muzaffargargh Dera Ghazi Khan one tehsil Shakargarh then part of Gurdaspur District and one princely state Bahawalpur in Punjab Province British India as per 1941 census data These districts tehsil and princely state would ultimately make up the subdivision of West Punjab Province Pakistan contemporarily known as Punjab Province Pakistan following the partition of India in 1947 The districts and princely state in 1941 that made up Punjab Province Pakistan have since undergone various bifurcations at several points throughout the post independence era due to the rapid population growth witnessed across the province 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 Including Ad Dharmis 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 Including Jainism Buddhism Zoroastrianism Judaism Tribals others or not stated 1941 figure reached by combining total population of all districts Hisar Rohtak Gurgaon Karnal Jalandhar Ludhiana Firozpur Amritsar Simla Kangra Ambala Hoshiarpur and Gurdaspur minus Shakargarh Tehsil and princely states Loharu Dujana Pataudi Kapurthala Malerkotla Faridkot Patiala Jind Nabha Nahan Simla Hill Mandi Suket Chamba and Kalsia in Punjab Province British India as per 1941 census data These districts and princely states would ultimately make up the subdivision of East Punjab Patiala and East Punjab States Union Chief Commissioner s Province of Himachal Pradesh and Bilaspur State contemporarily known as Punjab India Chandigarh Haryana and Himachal Pradesh immediately following the partition of India in 1947 The districts and princely states in 1941 that made up Punjab Haryana and Himachal Pradesh in India have since undergone various bifurcations at several points throughout the post independence era due to the rapid population growth witnessed across the province a b c d e Western Punjabi languages and dialects including Saraiki Hindko and Pahari Pothwari and other related languages or dialects a b c d e Including Hindustani Hindi and Urdu Braj Bhasha Haryanvi and other related languages or dialects Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Punjab Province British India amp oldid 1131400330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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