Daily Almanac for
Jul 5, 2009
Search White Pages
Search: Infoplease Info search tips
Search: Biographies Bio search tips
Encyclopedia

North-West Frontier Province

North-West Frontier Province, province and historic region (1998 pop. 17,554,674), c.41,000 sq mi (106,200 sq km), NW Pakistan, bounded on the N and W by Afghanistan. Peshawar is the capital. An area of high, barren mountains dissected by fertile valleys, it is predominantly agricultural. Wheat is the chief crop; barley, sugarcane, tobacco, cotton, and fruit trees are also cultivated, and livestock is raised. Irrigation works, notably the Warsak project on the Kabul River, supplement the scanty rainfall. Mineral resources include marble, rock salt, gypsum, and limestone. There are some mountain forests. Food processing, cotton and wool milling, papermaking, and the production of cigarettes, textiles, chemicals, and fertilizer are the main industries; handicrafts also flourish. Some Pathan tribes inhabit the province in the plains and lower hills.

The region has been historically and strategically important due to passes leading into India, through which came invaders from central Asia. Alexander the Great conquered the region c.326 B.C., but his garrisons were unable to hold the region. In the early centuries A.D., Kanishka and his Kushan dynasty ruled the area. The Pathans arrived in the 7th cent., and by the 10th cent. conquerors from Afghanistan had made Islam the dominant religion. Under local Pathan rule from the late 12th cent. until Babur annexed it to his Mughal empire, the region paid nominal allegiance to the Mughals in the 16th and 17th cent. After Nadir Shah's invasion (1738), it became a feudatory of the Afghan Durrani kingdom. The Sikhs later held the area, which passed to Great Britain in 1849. The British maintained large military forces and paid heavy subsidies to pacify the Pathan resistance.

Britain separated the region from the Punjab of India in 1901 and constituted the North-West Frontier Province, whose people voted to join newly independent Pakistan in 1947. Following the absorption of the North-West Frontier Province into Pakistan, neighboring Afghanistan engendered the Pushtunistan Controversy (see Afghanistan). From 1955 to 1970 the North-West Frontier Province was a section of the consolidated province of West Pakistan. In 1970, the region was once again granted provincial status.

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan caused over 3 million refugees to flee to the North-West Frontier Province. Peshawar became the military and political center of the Afghan anti-Soviet coalition. The Soviet withdrawal in 1989 raised hopes that the refugees would be repatriated. Although renewed factional fighting in 1992 threatened the process, all Afghan tented refugee camps were closed by 1995.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

    • Cite
    • Print
    • Bookmark

More on North-West Frontier Province from Infoplease:

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Pakistan and Bangladesh Political Geography


Premium Partner Content
HighBeam Research

Related content from HighBeam Research on: North-West Frontier Province

PAKISTAN: Living Islam: Muslim Religious Experience in Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province (The Middle East Journal)

After the mullahs; Pakistan.(A secular party takes over in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province)(Awami National Party) (The Economist (US))

Finally, police in Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province raided 23 cinemas and dozens of video stores. (Brickbats).(Brief Article) (Reason)

Investigation on the prevalence of leukemia in North West Frontier Province of Pakistan (Turkish Journal of Cancer)

Agriculture sector employment and the need for off-farm employment in the North-West Frontier Province.(ISSUES IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT)(Report) (Pakistan Development Review)

Hydel project opportunities and incentives in NWFP. (North West Frontier Province) (Economic Review)

Pakistani Perspectives on Sacrificing One's Life; Two-thirds in NWFP feel it is completely justifiable to sacrifice one's life.(North West Frontier Province )(Survey) (Gallup Poll News Service)

Agriculture and Pastoralism in the Late Bronze and Iron Age, North West Frontier Province, Pakistan.(Book review) (Asian Perspectives: the Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific)

A Growing 'Talibanization' : Along the Afghan border, newly powerful mullahs are spreading a strict gospel.(election of Islamist United Action Council returns North-West Frontier Province, Pakistan to islamic values) (Newsweek International)

The wild frontier; Pakistan.(Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province) (The Economist (US))

Additional search results provided by HighBeam Research, LLC. © Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.