Chiliss
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The Chiliss (sometimes spelled Chilis or Chiliṣ) were a small, historically significant ethnic group traditionally associated with the Indus Valley in the Hindu Kush region of what is now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. According to their own oral tradition, the Chiliss originally migrated from Buner (historically “Boneyr”), a mountainous district to the west, before settling in the Indus Valley.
Colonial-era ethnographic research, particularly by John Biddulph in his seminal work Tribes of the Hindoo Koosh, suggested that the Chiliss may have been culturally and linguistically related to the Torwali people of Swat Kohistan (Behrain Tehsil). Over time, the Chiliss appear to have lost much of their distinct identity. According to Biddulph, by the late 19th century their numbers had dwindled, and they had largely assimilated into surrounding communities.[1]
Linguistically the Chiliss speak a dialect closely related to Torwali, underscoring their common origin.[2]