Hazara District

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hazara District is now divided into Abbottabad, Mansehra and Haripur districts

Hazara District was a district of Peshawar Division in the North-West Frontier Province of Pakistan. It existed until 1976, when it was split into the districts of Abbottabad and Mansehra,[1] with the new district of Haripur subsequently splitting off from Abbottabad, and Battagram and Torghar – from Mansehra.

Current status

Hazara district was annexed by the British from its former Sikh rulers after the Second Anglo-Sikh War of 1848–1849.[2] In 1853 the district came under the charge of General John Becher for six years - his biographer described the district as “the wildest” in the Punjab.[3]

In the 1871 census of India the population of Hazara District (Huzara) was recorded as 367,218.[4] In the 1901 census of India the total population was recorded as 560,288 and in the 1911 census of India, the total population was recorded as 603,028[5] fifty years later in the 1961 census of Pakistan, the total population was recorded as 1,050,374 of which 535,078 were male and 515,296.[6]

The Hazara District is now divided into Abbottabad, Mansehra and Haripur districts.

Geography

Demographics

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI