PUNJAB (Farsi,
"five waters"), historic region, NW portion of the
subcontinent of India, now divided into the province of Punjab in
Pakistan and the states of Punjab and Haryana in India. The extreme NE
part of the Punjab region lies in the Himalayan foothills, but most of
the territory is a level plain sloping from an elevation of about 490 m
(about 1600 ft) in the N to less than 61 m (200 ft) in the extreme SW.
The region's name is derived from the five great rivers that traverse
it: the Indus R. and its tributaries and the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, and
Sutlej rivers. The chief cities include Amritsar and Chandigarh, in
India, and Lahore, Multan, Rawalpindi, Gujranwala and Sialkot, in
Pakistan.
Most of the inhabitants are engaged
in agriculture; the Punjab is the most important wheat-growing region of
the subcontinent. The soil is very fertile, but much of it requires
extensive irrigation. Punjabi industry is known for the products of
native artisans, such as handloomed carpets, shawls, and rugs; work in
gold, silver, brass, and copper; glazed tiles and pottery.
The climate of the plains is
excessively hot and dry between April and August, with temperatures as
high as 49° C (120° F). The rains of the monsoon season begin at the
end of June. Winters are cool with some frosts. Annual rainfall ranges
from about 915 mm (about 36 in) in the N to 102 mm (4 in) in the S.
In the Indian portion of the Punjab
region about 65% of the population is Hindu, 30% Sikh, and 2% Muslim. In
the Pakistani portion, about 97% is Muslim.
Punjab proper was annexed by Great
Britain in 1849; for details on the early history of the Punjab, see SIKHS.
Under the terms of the Indian Independence Act of 1947, the Punjab was
divided into the East Punjab province of the Union of India and the West
Punjab province of Pakistan. The area allotted to India was 96,809 sq km
(37,378 sq mi), with a population of about 12,650,000, and the area
given to Pakistan was 160,610 sq km (62,012 sq mi), with a population of
about 18,800,000. The partition line followed the course of the Ravi and
Sutlej rivers, allotting parts of Lahore, Rawalpindi, and Multan
divisions to Pakistan and the remainder of the region to India.
In addition to Punjab proper, the
Punjab region included 34 Indian, or Native, states, known as the Punjab
States, with an area of 98,798 sq km (38,146 sq mi) and a population
(1941) of 5,503,554. Following the partition, most Indian states joined
the Union of India.
Rioting and civil strife among
Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs began even before the 1947 partition, and in
August, when the Punjabi partition was effected, open warfare erupted.
The partition cut the Sikh community in half, and the Sikhs attempted to
eliminate local Muslims, massacring many of them. As a result of the
communal fighting, large numbers of Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs abandoned
their homes in the Punjab and immigrated to friendly territory.
The Pakistani portion of the Punjab
region was amalgamated in 1955 into the province of West Pakistan; in
1970 it was reconstituted as Punjab province. In 1956 the Indian portion
was merged with other provinces to form the present state of Punjab; for
subsequent history, see PUNJAB
(state of India).
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PUNJAB, state,
NW India, bordered on the N by Jammu and Kashmir State and Himachal
Pradesh State, on the E by Uttar Pradesh State, on the S by Haryana
State, on the S and SW by Rajasthan State, and on the W by Pakistan.
Punjab State lies between the great systems of the Indus and Ganges
rivers. Most of the state is an alluvial plain, irrigated by canals; the
arid S border of the state edges on the Great Indian (or Thar) Desert.
The Siwalik Hills rise sharply in the N of the state. Farming is the
leading occupation; the major crops are wheat, maize, rice, pulses,
sugarcane, and cotton. Among the livestock raised are buffalo and other
cattle, sheep, goats, and poultry. The principal industries in the state
include the manufacture of textiles, sewing machines, sports goods,
starch, fertilizers, bicycles, scientific instruments, electrical goods,
and machine tools and the processing of sugar and pine oil.
The state of Punjab was formed on
Nov. 1, 1956, by merging East Punjab States Union with Punjab and
Patiala provinces of India (for earlier history of the area, see PUNJAB,
historic region). Subsequently, the Sikhs in the new state demanded a
Punjabi-speaking state. In 1966 most of Punjab was divided into
Punjabi-speaking Punjab State and Hindi-speaking Haryana State. An
accord with India to expand the boundaries of the Punjab State and make
Chandigarh, formerly capital of both Punjab and Haryana states, the
capital of Punjab only, due in 1986, has been delayed. Area, 50,376 sq
km (19,450 sq mi); pop. (1991) 20,190,795.
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