Jandol State
Pashtun Islamic princely state of the British Raj and later Pakistan
Jandol (also called Jandool or Jandul) was a minor Pashtun princely state at the time of the British Raj.[1] It was established circa 1830, with its capital at Barwa (modern Samarbagh). Umra Khan was probably its most prominent ruler. It became a part of the princely state of Dir and later of Pakistan as a result of the integration of the princely states of Pakistan.[2]
Khans
The Khans include:[3]
- 1791-1820: Hayat Khan
- 1820-?: Abdul Ghafar Khan
- ?-?: Faiz Talab Khan
- ?-1879: Aman Khan
- 1879-1881: Muhammad Zaman Khan
- 1881- c.1904: Umra Khan
- 1947-1969: Nawabzada Shahabuddin Khan
References
- ^ Ernst, Waltraud; Pati, Biswamoy (18 October 2007). India's Princely States: People, Princes and Colonialism. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-11987-5.
- ^ "Relevance of the Partition in the Strategic Relations in Pakistan and India | Pakistan Political Science Review". 2 September 2021.
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(help) - ^ Rehman, Lutfur (2016). "Fall of Napoleon Pathan: Academic Appraisal". NDU Journal: 169–184. ISSN 2073-0926.
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Former princely states in Pakistan, by present province (Italics = Salute states)
Balochistan | Punjab | Sindh | Gilgit-Baltistan | Other Frontier States, notably Khyber Pakhtunkhwa |
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