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Rawalpindi District

Rawalpindi District (Punjabi and Urdu: ضِلع راولپِنڈى) is a district located in the northernmost part of the Punjab province of Pakistan. Parts of the district form part of the Islamabad Rawalpindi metropolitan area. Rawalpindi city is the district capital.

Rawalpindi District
ضِلع راولپِنڈى
Map of Punjab with Rawalpindi District highlighted
Rawalpindi is located in the north of Punjab.
Coordinates: 33°20′N 73°15′E / 33.333°N 73.250°E / 33.333; 73.250
Country Pakistan
Province Punjab
DivisionRawalpindi
HeadquarterRawalpindi
Number of Tehsils5
Government
 • TypeDivisional Administration
 • Commissioner RawalpindiEngineer Aamir Khattak (BPS-20 PAS)
 • District Police Officer (DPO)Khalid Mehmood Hamdani (BPS-19 PSP)
 • District Health OfficerN/A
Area
 • Total4,547 km2 (1,756 sq mi)
Highest elevation
1,800 m (5,900 ft)
Lowest elevation
300 m (1,100 ft)
Population
 (2017)[1]
 • Total5,050,068
 • Density1,100/km2 (2,900/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5 (PKT)
National Assembly Seats (2018)Total 6


  •   PML(N) (0)
  •   PTI (6)
  •   PPP (1)
Punjab Assembly Seats (2018)Total (15)


Websiterawalpindi.punjab.gov.pk

The district has an area of 5,286 km2 (2,041 sq mi). Originally, its area was 6,192 km2 (2,391 sq mi) until the 1960s when Islamabad Capital Territory was carved out of the district, giving away an area of 906 km2 (350 sq mi).[citation needed] It is situated on the southern slopes of the north-western extremities of the Himalayas, including large mountain tracts with rich valleys traversed by mountain rivers. The chief rivers are the Indus and the Jhelum, and it is noted for its milder climate and abundant rainfall due to its proximity to the foothills.[2]

History edit

Ancient history edit

 
Mankiala Stupa 27 kilometres (17 mi) from Rawalpindi city

In ancient times the whole or the greater part of the area between the Indus and the Jhelum seems to have belonged to a Naga tribe called Takshakas, who gave their name to the city of Takshasila. Known as Taxila by the Greek historians, the location of the ancient city has been identified to be in the ruins of Shahdheri in the north-west corner of the District.

At the time of Alexander's invasion Taxila was described by Arrian as a flourishing city, known more for its tourism. Taxila having too weak army, locals of the city had immediately surrendered to Greek army without a battle; adds that the neighbouring country was crowded with inhabitants and was very fertile; and Pliny speaks of it as a famous city situated in a district called Amanda. The invasion of Demetrius in 195 B.C. brought the Punjab under the Graeco-Bactrian kings. Later they were superseded by the Sakas, who ruled at Taxila with the title of Satrap. At the time of Hiuen Tsiang (Chinese explorer), the city was a dependency of Kashmir.[3]

Mughal era edit

Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi passed through the District after his defeat of Anand Pal and capture of Ohind. The first mention of the Gakhars occurs in the memoirs of Babar, who gives an interesting account of the capture of their capital, Paralah. It was strongly situated in the hills, and was defended with great bravery by its chief Hati Khan, who escaped from one gate as the Mughal army marched in at the other. Hati Khan died by poison in 1525 ; his cousin and murderer Sultan Sarang then submitted to Babar, who conferred on him the area of Potwar. From that time on the Gakhar chieftains remained firm allies of the Mughal dynasty, and provided significant aid to the Mughal in their struggle against the house of Sher Shah. Salim Shah attempted in vain to subdue their country.

In 1553 Adam Khan, Sarang's successor, surrendered the rebel prince Kamran to Humayun. Adam Khan was subsequently deposed by Akbar, and his principality given over to his nephew Kamal Khan. During the height of the Mughal empire, the family of Sarang retained its territorial possessions. Its last and Gakhars chief, Mukarrab Khan, ruled over a kingdom which extended from the Chenab to the Indus.[3]

British era edit

In 1849 Rawalpindi passed with the rest of the Sikh dominions under British rule; and though tranquillity was disturbed by an insurrection four years later, led by a Gakhar chief with the object of placing a pretended son of Ranjit Singh on the throne, its administration was generally peaceful until the outbreak of the Mutiny in 1857. The Dhunds and other tribes of the Murree Hills, incited by Hindustani agents, rose in insurrection, and the authorities received information from a faithful native of a projected attack upon the station of Murree in time to organise measures for defence. The women near the station, who were present in large numbers, were placed in safety, while the Europeans and police were drawn up in a cordon round the station. The rebels arrived expecting no resistance, but were met with organised resistance and were repelled.[3]

The district of Rawalpindi was created during British rule as part of Punjab province. The district obtained its current boundaries in 1904 when Attock District was created as a separate district. According to the 1901 census of India the population in 1901 was 558,699, an increase of 4.7% from 1891.[2] During the period of British rule, Rawalpindi district increased in population and importance.

Administrative division edit

 
Potohar Plateau in Rawalpindi-District

Rawalpindi district is governed by the Rawalpindi District Council, while several regions sub-divided into one Municipal Corporation, two Cantonment Boards and Seven tehsils:

Sr. Tehsil Headquarters Area
(km2)
Population
(2017)
1 Taxila Taxila 312 678,062
2 Rawalpindi Rawalpindi 1,682 3,256,641
3 Gujar Khan Gujar Khan 1,457 677,558
4 Kallar Syedan Kallar Syedan 459 217,061
5 Kahuta Kahuta 637 220,746
4,547 5,050,068

Demography edit

In 2017 population of Rawalpindi district was 5,402,380. 2,736,180 were male and 2,665,089 were female. 2,396,672 (44.36%) lived in rural areas and 3,005,708 (55.64%) lived in urban areas.

In the divided district, Rawalpindi district had 816,577 households and a population of 5,050,068. Rawalpindi now has a sex ratio of 975 females per 1000 males and a literacy rate of 82.18% - 87.66% for males and 76.61% for females. 2,826,264 (55.96%) lived in urban areas. 1,162,962 (23.03%) were under 10 years of age.[1]

According to the 1998 census of Pakistan, the population of the district was 3,363,911 of which 53.03% were urban,[4] and is the second-most urbanised district in Punjab. The population was estimated to be 4.5 million in 2010.

Religion edit

Religion in Rawalpindi district (2017)[1]
Religion Percent
Islam
97.89%
Christianity
2.02%
Other or not stated
0.09%

According to the 2017 census Muslims were the overwhelming majority religion in residual Rawalpindi district with 97.89%, while Christians were 2.02% of the population, mainly concentrated in urban areas. Ahmadis and Hindus make up the remainder of the population.[1]

Religious groups in Rawalpindi District (British Punjab province era)
Religious
group
1901[5] 1911[6][7] 1921[8] 1931[9] 1941[10]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Islam   803,283 86.32% 458,101 83.62% 470,038 82.58% 524,965 82.76% 628,193 80%
Hinduism  [a] 86,269 9.27% 48,449 8.84% 57,185 10.05% 59,485 9.38% 82,478 10.5%
Sikhism   32,234 3.46% 31,839 5.81% 31,718 5.57% 41,265 6.51% 64,127 8.17%
Christianity   7,614 0.82% 8,320 1.52% 9,286 1.63% 7,486 1.18% 9,014 1.15%
Jainism   1,068 0.11% 1,028 0.19% 954 0.17% 1,077 0.17% 1,337 0.17%
Zoroastrianism   66 0.01% 64 0.01% 41 0.01% 65 0.01% 67 0.01%
Judaism   1 0% 16 0% 0 0% 5 0% 2 0%
Buddhism   0 0% 10 0% 0 0% 9 0% 13 0%
Others 0 0% 0 0% 2 0% 0 0% 0 0%
Total population 930,535 100% 547,827 100% 569,224 100% 634,357 100% 785,231 100%
Note1: British Punjab province era district borders are not an exact match in the present-day due to various bifurcations to district borders — which since created new districts — throughout the historic Punjab Province region during the post-independence era that have taken into account population increases.

Population decrease between 1901 and 1911 census due to creation of Attock district in 1904 by taking Talagang Tehsil from Jhelum District and Pindi Gheb, Fateh Jang and Attock Tehsils from Rawalpindi District.

Language edit

At the time of the 1998 census of Pakistan, the following were the demographics of the Rawalpindi district, by first language:[11]

Languages of Rawalpindi district (2017)

  Punjabi (67.15%)
  Pashto (11.51%)
  Urdu (10.64%)
  'Others' (4.22%)
  Hindko (3.25%)
  Kashmiri (1.89%)
  Others (1.34%)

At the time of the 2017 Census of Pakistan, 67.15% of the population spoke Pahari-Pothwari, 11.51% Pashto, 10.64% Urdu, 3.25% Hindko and 1.89% Kashmiri as their first language. 4.22% of the population spoke languages classified as 'Others'.[1]

Education edit

According to the 2015 census, Rawalpindi was ranked number one district of Pakistan in terms of education and school infrastructure facilities. According to official 2014 Public Schools Census data, district Rawalpindi had a total of 1,230 primary, 316 middle, 365 secondary and 40 higher secondary schools.[12] Out of these public sector schools, 911 are male schools while 1,040 are for girls. There were 4,279 teachers teaching at primary level while 3,129, 6,516 and 1,155 teachers are teaching at middle, secondary and higher secondary level, respectively. Out of these teachers, 9,788 are female while 5,291 are male. 24% of the Class 2 students could not read a story in Urdu, 26% could not read a sentence in English and 46% of Class 5 students could not do two digit divisions. 8% of the students dropped out of the school at the primary level.[13]

Agriculture edit

The principal crops were wheat, barley, maize, millets, and pulses. The district was traversed by the main line of the North-Western railway, crossing the Indus at Attock and also by a branch towards the Indus at Kushalgarh.[2]

Notable people edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "District Wise Results / Tables (Census - 2017)". www.pbscensus.gov.pk. Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
  2. ^ a b c Rawalpindi - Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition
  3. ^ a b c Rawalpindi District - Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 21, p. 264.
  4. ^ 1998 Census details 2006-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Census of India 1901. [Vol. 17A]. Imperial tables, I-VIII, X-XV, XVII and XVIII for the Punjab, with the native states under the political control of the Punjab Government, and for the North-west Frontier Province". 1901. p. 34. JSTOR saoa.crl.25363739. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  6. ^ "Census of India 1911. Vol. 14, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables". 1911. p. 27. JSTOR saoa.crl.25393788. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  7. ^ Kaul, Harikishan (1911). "Census Of India 1911 Punjab Vol XIV Part II". p. 27. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  8. ^ "Census of India 1921. Vol. 15, Punjab and Delhi. Pt. 2, Tables". 1921. p. 29. JSTOR saoa.crl.25430165. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  9. ^ "Census of India 1931. Vol. 17, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables". 1931. p. 277. JSTOR saoa.crl.25793242. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  10. ^ "Census of India, 1941. Vol. 6, Punjab". 1941. p. 42. JSTOR saoa.crl.28215541. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  11. ^ 1998 District Census report of Rawalpindi. Census publication. Vol. 23. Islamabad: Population Census Organization, Statistics Division, Government of Pakistan. 1999. p. 44.
  12. ^ . School Education Department. Archived from the original on 16 August 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  13. ^ "Rawalpindi, Punjab". Alif Ailaan. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  14. ^ Najaf Shah
  15. ^ "Profile - Lt. Col (R) Muhammad Shabbir Awan". Provincial Assembly of the Punjab. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  1. ^ 1931-1941: Including Ad-Dharmis

rawalpindi, district, punjabi, urdu, لع, راولپ, نڈى, district, located, northernmost, part, punjab, province, pakistan, parts, district, form, part, islamabad, rawalpindi, metropolitan, area, rawalpindi, city, district, capital, لع, راولپ, نڈىdistrict, punjabt. Rawalpindi District Punjabi and Urdu ض لع راولپ نڈى is a district located in the northernmost part of the Punjab province of Pakistan Parts of the district form part of the Islamabad Rawalpindi metropolitan area Rawalpindi city is the district capital Rawalpindi District ض لع راولپ نڈىDistrict of PunjabTop Dharmarajika Stupa Taxila Bottom Mankiala StupaMap of Punjab with Rawalpindi District highlightedRawalpindi is located in the north of Punjab Coordinates 33 20 N 73 15 E 33 333 N 73 250 E 33 333 73 250Country PakistanProvince PunjabDivisionRawalpindiHeadquarterRawalpindiNumber of Tehsils5Government TypeDivisional Administration Commissioner RawalpindiEngineer Aamir Khattak BPS 20 PAS District Police Officer DPO Khalid Mehmood Hamdani BPS 19 PSP District Health OfficerN AArea Total4 547 km2 1 756 sq mi Highest elevation1 800 m 5 900 ft Lowest elevation300 m 1 100 ft Population 2017 1 Total5 050 068 Density1 100 km2 2 900 sq mi Time zoneUTC 5 PKT National Assembly Seats 2018 Total 6 PML N 0 PTI 6 PPP 1 Punjab Assembly Seats 2018 Total 15 PML N 0 PTI 13 IND 2 Websiterawalpindi wbr punjab wbr gov wbr pkThe district has an area of 5 286 km2 2 041 sq mi Originally its area was 6 192 km2 2 391 sq mi until the 1960s when Islamabad Capital Territory was carved out of the district giving away an area of 906 km2 350 sq mi citation needed It is situated on the southern slopes of the north western extremities of the Himalayas including large mountain tracts with rich valleys traversed by mountain rivers The chief rivers are the Indus and the Jhelum and it is noted for its milder climate and abundant rainfall due to its proximity to the foothills 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient history 1 2 Mughal era 1 3 British era 2 Administrative division 3 Demography 3 1 Religion 3 2 Language 4 Education 5 Agriculture 6 Notable people 7 ReferencesHistory editAncient history edit nbsp Mankiala Stupa 27 kilometres 17 mi from Rawalpindi city In ancient times the whole or the greater part of the area between the Indus and the Jhelum seems to have belonged to a Naga tribe called Takshakas who gave their name to the city of Takshasila Known as Taxila by the Greek historians the location of the ancient city has been identified to be in the ruins of Shahdheri in the north west corner of the District At the time of Alexander s invasion Taxila was described by Arrian as a flourishing city known more for its tourism Taxila having too weak army locals of the city had immediately surrendered to Greek army without a battle adds that the neighbouring country was crowded with inhabitants and was very fertile and Pliny speaks of it as a famous city situated in a district called Amanda The invasion of Demetrius in 195 B C brought the Punjab under the Graeco Bactrian kings Later they were superseded by the Sakas who ruled at Taxila with the title of Satrap At the time of Hiuen Tsiang Chinese explorer the city was a dependency of Kashmir 3 Mughal era edit Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi passed through the District after his defeat of Anand Pal and capture of Ohind The first mention of the Gakhars occurs in the memoirs of Babar who gives an interesting account of the capture of their capital Paralah It was strongly situated in the hills and was defended with great bravery by its chief Hati Khan who escaped from one gate as the Mughal army marched in at the other Hati Khan died by poison in 1525 his cousin and murderer Sultan Sarang then submitted to Babar who conferred on him the area of Potwar From that time on the Gakhar chieftains remained firm allies of the Mughal dynasty and provided significant aid to the Mughal in their struggle against the house of Sher Shah Salim Shah attempted in vain to subdue their country In 1553 Adam Khan Sarang s successor surrendered the rebel prince Kamran to Humayun Adam Khan was subsequently deposed by Akbar and his principality given over to his nephew Kamal Khan During the height of the Mughal empire the family of Sarang retained its territorial possessions Its last and Gakhars chief Mukarrab Khan ruled over a kingdom which extended from the Chenab to the Indus 3 British era edit In 1849 Rawalpindi passed with the rest of the Sikh dominions under British rule and though tranquillity was disturbed by an insurrection four years later led by a Gakhar chief with the object of placing a pretended son of Ranjit Singh on the throne its administration was generally peaceful until the outbreak of the Mutiny in 1857 The Dhunds and other tribes of the Murree Hills incited by Hindustani agents rose in insurrection and the authorities received information from a faithful native of a projected attack upon the station of Murree in time to organise measures for defence The women near the station who were present in large numbers were placed in safety while the Europeans and police were drawn up in a cordon round the station The rebels arrived expecting no resistance but were met with organised resistance and were repelled 3 The district of Rawalpindi was created during British rule as part of Punjab province The district obtained its current boundaries in 1904 when Attock District was created as a separate district According to the 1901 census of India the population in 1901 was 558 699 an increase of 4 7 from 1891 2 During the period of British rule Rawalpindi district increased in population and importance Administrative division edit nbsp Potohar Plateau in Rawalpindi DistrictRawalpindi district is governed by the Rawalpindi District Council while several regions sub divided into one Municipal Corporation two Cantonment Boards and Seven tehsils Sr Tehsil Headquarters Area km2 Population 2017 1 Taxila Taxila 312 678 062 2 Rawalpindi Rawalpindi 1 682 3 256 641 3 Gujar Khan Gujar Khan 1 457 677 558 4 Kallar Syedan Kallar Syedan 459 217 061 5 Kahuta Kahuta 637 220 746 4 547 5 050 068 Rawalpindi Metropolitan Corporation Rawalpindi Cantonment Board Chaklala Cantonment BoardDemography editMain article Demography of Rawalpindi District In 2017 population of Rawalpindi district was 5 402 380 2 736 180 were male and 2 665 089 were female 2 396 672 44 36 lived in rural areas and 3 005 708 55 64 lived in urban areas In the divided district Rawalpindi district had 816 577 households and a population of 5 050 068 Rawalpindi now has a sex ratio of 975 females per 1000 males and a literacy rate of 82 18 87 66 for males and 76 61 for females 2 826 264 55 96 lived in urban areas 1 162 962 23 03 were under 10 years of age 1 According to the 1998 census of Pakistan the population of the district was 3 363 911 of which 53 03 were urban 4 and is the second most urbanised district in Punjab The population was estimated to be 4 5 million in 2010 Religion edit Religion in Rawalpindi district 2017 1 Religion Percent Islam 97 89 Christianity 2 02 Other or not stated 0 09 According to the 2017 census Muslims were the overwhelming majority religion in residual Rawalpindi district with 97 89 while Christians were 2 02 of the population mainly concentrated in urban areas Ahmadis and Hindus make up the remainder of the population 1 Religious groups in Rawalpindi District British Punjab province era Religiousgroup 1901 5 1911 6 7 1921 8 1931 9 1941 10 Pop Pop Pop Pop Pop Islam nbsp 803 283 86 32 458 101 83 62 470 038 82 58 524 965 82 76 628 193 80 Hinduism nbsp a 86 269 9 27 48 449 8 84 57 185 10 05 59 485 9 38 82 478 10 5 Sikhism nbsp 32 234 3 46 31 839 5 81 31 718 5 57 41 265 6 51 64 127 8 17 Christianity nbsp 7 614 0 82 8 320 1 52 9 286 1 63 7 486 1 18 9 014 1 15 Jainism nbsp 1 068 0 11 1 028 0 19 954 0 17 1 077 0 17 1 337 0 17 Zoroastrianism nbsp 66 0 01 64 0 01 41 0 01 65 0 01 67 0 01 Judaism nbsp 1 0 16 0 0 0 5 0 2 0 Buddhism nbsp 0 0 10 0 0 0 9 0 13 0 Others 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Total population 930 535 100 547 827 100 569 224 100 634 357 100 785 231 100 Note1 British Punjab province era district borders are not an exact match in the present day due to various bifurcations to district borders which since created new districts throughout the historic Punjab Province region during the post independence era that have taken into account population increases Population decrease between 1901 and 1911 census due to creation of Attock district in 1904 by taking Talagang Tehsil from Jhelum District and Pindi Gheb Fateh Jang and Attock Tehsils from Rawalpindi District Language edit At the time of the 1998 census of Pakistan the following were the demographics of the Rawalpindi district by first language 11 Punjabi 95 Urdu 3 5 Pashto 4 3 Others approx 2 2 Languages of Rawalpindi district 2017 Punjabi 67 15 Pashto 11 51 Urdu 10 64 Others 4 22 Hindko 3 25 Kashmiri 1 89 Others 1 34 At the time of the 2017 Census of Pakistan 67 15 of the population spoke Pahari Pothwari 11 51 Pashto 10 64 Urdu 3 25 Hindko and 1 89 Kashmiri as their first language 4 22 of the population spoke languages classified as Others 1 Education editAccording to the 2015 census Rawalpindi was ranked number one district of Pakistan in terms of education and school infrastructure facilities According to official 2014 Public Schools Census data district Rawalpindi had a total of 1 230 primary 316 middle 365 secondary and 40 higher secondary schools 12 Out of these public sector schools 911 are male schools while 1 040 are for girls There were 4 279 teachers teaching at primary level while 3 129 6 516 and 1 155 teachers are teaching at middle secondary and higher secondary level respectively Out of these teachers 9 788 are female while 5 291 are male 24 of the Class 2 students could not read a story in Urdu 26 could not read a sentence in English and 46 of Class 5 students could not do two digit divisions 8 of the students dropped out of the school at the primary level 13 Agriculture editThe principal crops were wheat barley maize millets and pulses The district was traversed by the main line of the North Western railway crossing the Indus at Attock and also by a branch towards the Indus at Kushalgarh 2 Notable people editSyed Asim Munir Ahmed Shah Current Chief of the Army Staff COAS Pakistan Army Raja Zafar ul Haq Chairman PML N Political Party Opposition Leader in Senate Former Leader of house in Senate Former Federal Minister Former Ambassador Shahid Khaqan Abbasi ex Prime Minister of Pakistan Khaqan Abbasi ex Federal Minister for Production Raja Ashfaq Sarwar ex Minister Punjab Raja Pervaiz Ashraf ex Prime Minister of Pakistan Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kayani ex Chief of the Army Staff 2007 2013 Gen Tikka Khan ex Chief of the Army Staff 1972 1976 Governor of East Pakistan 1971 Governor of Punjab 1988 1990 Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan ex Interior minister of Pakistan Sheikh Rashid Ahmad MNA Former Minister for Interior of Pakistan Shoaib Akhtar former Pakistan Cricket Team player and World s Fastest Bowler Wajid Zia Director General of the Federal Investigation Agency Sohail Tanvir Pakistan Cricket Team player Gen Zaheerul Islam director general of the Inter Services Intelligence of Pakistan Muhammad Mahfuz Nishan e Haider Highest Military Award Bilquis Sheikh Pakistani author Rohail Hyatt Pakistani record producer keyboardist and composer Swaran Lata actress Pakistani film actress Azhar Mahmood Cricketer Yasir Arafat Satti Cricketer Najaf Shah Cricketer 14 circular reference Umar Amin Cricketer Raja Muhammad Sarwar Nishan e Haider Highest Military Award Amir Khan boxer Boxer Mohammad Amir Cricketer Sawar Muhammad Hussain Shaheed Nishan e Haider Highest Military Award Khan Ghulam Sarwar Khan Politician from Taxila Former Federal Minister Mohammad Wasim Cricketer Mohammad Akram Cricketer Sawar Khan Ex Vice Chief of the Army Staff Abdul Aziz Mirza Chief of Naval Staff ambassador to Saudi Arabia Dada Amir Haider Khan Communist leader of undivided India and later Pakistan Lt Col R Muhammad Shabbir Awan ex MPA PP2 Punjab Assembly Col Shabbir Awan joined PTI on 19 December 2013 15 Tara Singh Sikh Activist Virender Lal Chopra an Indian biotechnologist geneticist and agriculturalist known to have contributed to the development of wheat production in IndiaReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rawalpindi District a b c d e District Wise Results Tables Census 2017 www pbscensus gov pk Pakistan Bureau of Statistics a b c Rawalpindi Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition a b c Rawalpindi District Imperial Gazetteer of India v 21 p 264 1998 Census details Archived 2006 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Census of India 1901 Vol 17A Imperial tables I VIII X XV XVII and XVIII for the Punjab with the native states under the political control of the Punjab Government and for the North west Frontier Province 1901 p 34 JSTOR saoa crl 25363739 Retrieved 23 March 2024 Census of India 1911 Vol 14 Punjab Pt 2 Tables 1911 p 27 JSTOR saoa crl 25393788 Retrieved 23 March 2024 Kaul Harikishan 1911 Census Of India 1911 Punjab Vol XIV Part II p 27 Retrieved 23 March 2024 Census of India 1921 Vol 15 Punjab and Delhi Pt 2 Tables 1921 p 29 JSTOR saoa crl 25430165 Retrieved 23 March 2024 Census of India 1931 Vol 17 Punjab Pt 2 Tables 1931 p 277 JSTOR saoa crl 25793242 Retrieved 23 March 2024 Census of India 1941 Vol 6 Punjab 1941 p 42 JSTOR saoa crl 28215541 Retrieved 23 March 2024 1998 District Census report of Rawalpindi Census publication Vol 23 Islamabad Population Census Organization Statistics Division Government of Pakistan 1999 p 44 Rawalpindi School Census Data School Education Department Archived from the original on 16 August 2016 Retrieved 16 August 2016 Rawalpindi Punjab Alif Ailaan Retrieved 3 March 2016 Najaf Shah Profile Lt Col R Muhammad Shabbir Awan Provincial Assembly of the Punjab Retrieved 20 October 2019 1931 1941 Including Ad Dharmis nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Rawalpindi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rawalpindi District amp oldid 1219921552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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