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Kabul
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Kabul , city (1997 est. pop. 1,500,000), capital of Afghanistan and of Kabul prov. and its largest city and economic and cultural center, E Afghanistan, on the Kabul River. It is strategically located in a high narrow valley, wedged between mountain ranges that command the main approaches to the Khyber Pass . A tunnel under the Hindu Kush mountains links Kabul with the Tajikistan border. The city's chief products are woolen and cotton cloth, beet sugar, ordnance, and furniture, but a continuing state of war between 1979 and 1996 limited production, and the city's industry, infrastructure, and economy are still recovering.
Kabul's old section, with its narrow, crooked streets, contains extensive bazaars; the modern section has administrative and commercial buildings. An educational center, Kabul has a university (est. 1931), colleges, and a fine museum. Also in the city are Babur's tomb and gardens; the mausoleum of Nadir Shah; the Minar-i-Istiklal (column of independence), built in 1919 after the Third Afghan War; the tomb of Timur Shah (reigned 1773-93); the fort of Bala Hissar, destroyed by the British in 1879 to avenge the death of their envoy in Kabul; and several important mosques. The royal palace and an ancient citadel stand outside the present city.
Kabul's history dates back more than 3,000 years, although the city has been destroyed and rebuilt on several different sites. Conquered by Arabs in the 7th cent., it was overshadowed by Ghazni and Herat until Babur made it his capital (1504-26). It remained under Mughal rule until its capture (1738) by Nadir Shah of Persia. It succeeded Kandahar as Afghanistan's capital in 1773. During the Afghan Wars a British army took (1839) Kabul. In 1842 the withdrawing British troops were ambushed and almost annihilated after the Afghans had promised them safe conduct; in retaliation another British force partly burned Kabul. The British again occupied the city in 1879, after their resident and his staff were massacred there.
On Dec. 23, 1979, Soviet armed forces landed at Kabul airport to help bolster a Communist government. Kabul became the Soviet command center, but was little damaged by the ten-year conflict. In Feb., 1989, Soviet forces withdrew from the city. In spring of 1992 the government of Mohammad Najibullah collapsed, and Kabul fell to guerrilla armies. Destruction of the city increased as the coalition of guerrilla forces broke into rival warring factions, and much of Kabul was damaged by fighting. The capital has undergone considerable reconstruction since 2002, but many building remain in ruins.
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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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The Lost City Today it is a place of ruins and ghosts - but once it was a glittering metropolis of palaces and pleasure grounds. Are we civilised enough to give Kabul a future?
The Independent - London; 10/12/2001; Philip Hensher; 1363 words
; On the Emperor Babur's tomb, near Kabul, there once stood an inscription: "Drink wine in the citadel of Kabul, and send round the cup without stopping: for it is at once a mountain, a sea, a town, a desert." Babur loved Kabul, and said that "its verdure and flowers render it, in spring, a heaven".
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WORLD RUSHES TO KABUL, CAUSING RENTS TO SKYROCKET
The Boston Globe; 4/21/2002; Marcella Bombardieri, Globe Staff; 892 words
; KABUL, Afghanistan - Post-Taliban Kabul has opened its doors to the world - and is paying a price. An influx of United Nations staff, international aid agencies, and foreign journalists has suddenly made the capital's two premier neighborhoods (the only ones with somewhat reliable electricity and
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Going Back to Kabul, and 1971; The Old Neighborhood Shows Cracks in a Familiar Facade
The Washington Post; 4/2/2002; Thomas E. Ricks; 1752 words
; Iwas a ghost in Kabul last month. On March 23, I went searching for the city I knew 31 years ago, when I was an American teenager living in the Afghan capital and my father was teaching at its university, and there was a sense that the country was on the cusp of good times. My hunt began in the
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Toll of war on Kabul has been great: tens of thousands dead, two-thirds of the city destroyed.(Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 2/5/1997; Kaufman, Marc; 1295 words
; KABUL, Afghanistan _ Two Afghan fighters leaped into the city zoo's lion enclosure last year on a bet. The men succeeded in petting the female's head, but the male attacked. Only one Afghan made it out alive. Seeking revenge, the brother of the dead man came to the zoo the next day with a hand
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In Kabul, a struggle to rebuild a fabled city
International Herald Tribune; 6/28/2005; Carlotta Gall; 934 words
; Carlotta Gall International Herald Tribune 06-28-2005 This was once a fabled city of gardens and fruit orchards beloved by the Mogul emperor Babur and serenaded by Persian poets, but little of its glorious past is evident today. Whole districts remain in ruins from the fighting of the 1990s, and
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Lawlessness unsettling to Afghan peace, Kabul residents.
Chicago Tribune (via Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service); 4/5/2002; 931 words
; Byline: Liz Sly KABUL, Afghanistan _ Najiba, 17, was asleep with her parents in their small mud home on the western edge of Kabul when an armed man burst through the front door and demanded guns, money and jewelry. In the moonlight, she could see two other gunmen standing at each of the windows.
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Taliban offensive feared in Kabul; Reports warn of Western recruits, female suicide bombers.(PAGE ONE)
The Washington Times; 6/18/2008; 1261 words
; ... F. Calvert/The Washington Times]; The citizens of Kabul go about their business, with many women clad in blue burqas, even as news of an impending attack reaches the city. Any attack could be economically devastating for the capital. [2 Photos by Mary F. Calvert ...
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Afghanistan's Capital Falls to Muslim Rebels; Rival Groups Seize Key Installations In Hurried, Tense Takeover of Kabul
The Washington Post; 4/26/1992; Steve Coll;William Branigin; 2167 words
; Kabul, symbol of the last and bloodiest battle of the Cold War, has fallen. Exactly 14 years after a Soviet-backed leftist revolution plunged Afghanistan into civil war, thousands of heavily armed Muslim mujaheddin rebels poured into the Afghan capital today, taking control of army garrisons,
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Afghanistan : `YOU ARE NOT HERE TO ENJOY YOURSELF' Welcome to Kabul, a city in thrall to the decrees, and whims, of Taliban fundamentalist mullahs
The Independent - London; 8/4/2001; WORDS MARC EPSTEIN; 2264 words
; ... one for all sinners." The official radio station had given the news that morning: a man and a woman were condemned for having sex ... judges started hitting her. She's not yet 18, said the radio news. Throughout the stadium, the crowd could hear every single thrash ...
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Taliban flees Kabul without a fight; CAMPAIGN: Men shave off beards and music returns to war-ravaged city.(News)
Western Mail (Cardiff, Wales); 11/14/2001; 603 words
; Byline: KATHY GANNON CAPPING their stunning victories in the north, Afghan opposition fighters rolled into Kabul yesterday after Taliban troops slipped away under cover of darkness, abandoning the capital without a fight. The opposition broke through Taliban front lines yesterday after weeks of
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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Kabul
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... capital of Afghanistan . Located on the Kabul River in a valley strategically located ... captured by the Iranian conqueror Nadir Shah . Kabul has been the capital of Afghanistan since ... 1979, it established a military command in Kabul. After the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, factional ...
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Kabul River
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... northwestern Pakistan. Rising west of the city of Kabul , it flows east into Pakistan and, after ... Indus River northwest of Islamabad . The Kabul River valley is a natural route for travel ... course, the river is tapped for irrigation. Kabul River Kabul River Kabul River
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Afghanistan
Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations
... country's facilities are in Kabul, and those needing treatment ... there were 200,000 dwellings in Kabul in the mid-1980s. The latest ... for females. Education is free at all levels. The primary ... the state. The University of Kabul, which is now coeducational ... various collections were formed ... .
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Mohammad Najibullah
Encyclopedia of World Biography
... was born in Afghanistan's capital city, Kabul. Najibullah's father, Akhtar Mohammad Khan ... Wali Khan, consistently supported leftist Kabul regimes in opposition to official Pakistani ... to good advantage. After graduating from Kabul's Habibiya Lycee in 1964, Najibullah entered ...
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Babrak Karmal
Encyclopedia of World Biography
... born into a wealthy Afghan family near Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, January 6 ... was common among those born in or near Kabul. He claimed to be Pushtun (the dominant ... but was initially refused admission to Kabul University because of his outspoken leftist ...
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