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Peshawar

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Peshawar , city (1998 pop. 988,005), capital of the North-West Frontier Province, NW Pakistan. A road and rail center near the famed Khyber Pass, Peshawar is an important military and communications center, the historical terminus of the Grand Trunk Road of India, and the major depot for trade with Afghanistan. Local handicrafts and farm produce from the surrounding fertile agricultural valley are sold in the many bazaars of the city. Industries include food processing and the manufacture of steel, cigarettes, firearms, textiles, pharmaceuticals, furniture, and paper.

The city, once called Purushapura, was the capital of the ancient Greco-Buddhist center of Gandhara . The Kushan leader Kanishka (2d cent. AD) made it his capital. For centuries, it was the target of successive Afghan, Persian, and Mongol invaders. It was named Peshawar [frontier town] by the Mughal emperor Akbar . A favorite residence (18th cent.) of the Afghan Durrani rulers, it was taken by the Sikhs (early 19th cent.), from whom the British captured it in 1848. It became an important outpost of British India and was a base for British military operations against Pathan tribes. During the decade-long Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979-89) it was the center of relief operations for Afghan refugees and the command center of the coalition of guerrilla groups intent on expelling the Soviet forces from Afghanistan.

Peshawar has a museum containing Buddhist relics and Gandhara sculpture, a 2d-century Buddhist stupa bearing an inscription by Kanishka, and a university (1950) with several affiliated colleges. The Bala Hisar fort, still used as military headquarters in the early 21st cent., dates to at least the 15th cent.

Author not available, PESHAWAR., 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

In Pakistan, the Power of Peshawar; In This City of Intrigue, Warmheartedness and Warfare Go Hand-in-Hand
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Peshawar, Pakistan, a lawless city where anyone _ even bin Laden _ could hide.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
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Crik: India against playing tests in Karachi or Peshawar
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Peshawar
World Encyclopedia Peshawar City in nw Pakistan, 16km (9mi) e of the Khyber Pass . An ancient settlement, it has always had great strategic importance. Brought ... Read more
Peshawar
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia ... century . It was captured by the Muslims in 988. By the 16th century Peshawar was ruled by the Afghans. It was under British control (1849–..bazaar remains a meeting place for foreign merchants and traders. Peshawar Peshawar Peshawar Read more
Pakistan
Cities of the World ... Karachi, 15 inches in Peshawar, and 18 inches in ... Pakistan's first free nationwide elections ... showing a 5-year claim-free record to obtain ... from Islamabad to Peshawar takes about 3 hours ... S. Consulate in Peshawar is located at 11 ... Road, Cantonment, Peshawar, telephone ... Read more
Raj Kapoor
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia (born Dec. 14, 1924, Peshawar, India—died June 2, 1988, New Delhi) Indian film actor and director. In the 1930s Kapoor worked as a clapper boy for Bombay ... Read more
North-West Frontier Province
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ... sq km), NW Pakistan, bounded on the N and W by Afghanistan. Peshawar is the capital. An area of high, barren mountains dissected ... million refugees to flee to the North-West Frontier Province. Peshawar became the military and political center of the Afghan anti-Sovi ... Read more

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Online videos

The streets and bazars of Peshawar in august 1990