Baltistan (بلتستان) , also known as بلتیول (Baltiyul) in the Balti language, is a region in northern Pakistan,bordering Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China. It is situated in the Karakoram mountains just to the south of K2, the world's second highest mountain. It is an extremely mountainous region, with an average altitude of over 3,350 m (11,000 ft). It is inhabited principally by Balti Shi'a Muslims of Tibetan descent who converted from Tibetan Buddhism prior to the 16th century.
Baltistan was an independent state but was occupied by the Raja (King) of Kashmir in the nineteenth century. In 1947 when India and Pakistan gained independence, it was still part of Kashmir. Now the region is divided between Pakistan and India. The districts of Skardu (Skardo) and Ganche, which is a part of the Northern Areas of Pakistan, its main town is Skardu. It contains the highest peaks of the Karakoram, including K2. Indian-controlled Baltistan (the district of Kargil) which is disputed and claimed by Pakistan is located in the north of Indian-administered Kashmir.
Geography
Baltistan is often called "little
Tibet". The adjoining territory of Baltistan forms the west extremity of Tibet, whose natural limits here are the
Indus from its abrupt southward bend in 74 45 E., and the mountains to the north and west, separating a comparatively peaceful Tibetan population from the fiercer
Aryan tribes beyond.
Muslim writers about the 16th century speak of Baltistan as Little Tibet, and of
Ladakh as Great Tibet, thus ignoring the really Great Tibet altogether. The Balti call
Gilgit a Tibet, and Dr Leitner says that the
Chilasi call themselves But or Tibetans; but, although these districts may have been overrun by the Tibetans, or have received rulers of that race, the
ethnological frontier coincides with the geographical one given. Baltistan is a mass of lofty mountains, the prevailing formation being
gneiss. In the north is the
Baltoro Glacier, the largest out of the
arctic regions, 35 miles long, contained between two ridges whose highest peaks to the south are 25,000 ft and to the north 28,265 ft. The Indus, as in Lower Ladakh, runs in a narrow
gorge, widening for nearly 20 m. after receiving the
Shyok. The capital,
Skardu, a scattered collection of houses, stands here, perched on a rock 7250 ft. above the sea. The house roofs are flat, occupied only in part by a second storey, the remaining space being devoted to drying
apricots, the chief staple of the main valley, which supports little cultivation. But the rapid slope westwards is seen generally in the vegetation.
Birch,
plane,
spruce and
Pinus excelsa appear; the fruits are finer, including
pomegranate,
pear,
peach,
vine and
melon, and where irrigation is available, as in the North
Shigar, and at the
deltas of the tributary valleys, the crops are more luxuriant and varied.
See also
Notable People
- Late Colonel Dr Mohammad Yaqoob Wazir- (First doctor from Northern Areas of Pakistan)
- Late Maulana Abdul Khaliq - (Former Magistrate/ Tahseeldaar)
- Nisar Hussien Khan - (Former Joint Secretary)
- Manzoor Hussain Parwana , Chairperson Gilgit Baltistan United Movement
- Prof. Dr Sikander Hayat Khan - (Tamgh-e-Imtiaz) Former Head of Surgery (PIMS Islamabad), Chairman Zubeida Khaliq Memorial Trust providing free medical care in northern areas.
- Dr Shujaat Ali Khan - (Plastic Surgeon) Fortwoth, USA
- G.M Sikandar , Secretary to the Government of Pakistan, Ministry of Social Welfare and Special Education, Islamabad
- Nasir Ali , Researcher,Åbo Akademi,Finland
- Engineer Ghulam Mehdi, Water & Power Department, Skardu , Northern Areas
External links
Explore Pakistan Tourism http://explorepak.com