Shahbandar (Pakistan) Explained

Shahbandar
Other Name:Shāhbandar
Pushpin Map:Pakistan Sindh#Pakistan
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Sindh
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Pakistan
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:Sindh
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Sujawal
Subdivision Type3:Taluka
Subdivision Name3:Shahbandar
Population As Of:2017
Population Total:362
Coordinates:24.1662°N 67.902°W[1]
Timezone:PST
Utc Offset:+5
Timezone Dst:PDT
Utc Offset Dst:+6
Pushpin Relief:o

Shahbandar (Urdu: شاہ بندر|Shāhbandar) is a historical port town in Sujawal District, Sindh, Pakistan. During its heyday in the late 1700s, Shahbandar reportedly was home to as many as 50,000 people, but it soon lost its port access and went into a steep decline.

As of 2017, Shahbandar has a population of 362, in 100 households.[2] Shahbandar is also the name of one of the talukas in Sujawal district.[2]

Name

According to the 1874 British gazetteer of Sindh, the name Shāhbandar means “the king’s port”, because it once served as the home port for the Sindhi navy.[3] The name is variously transliterated, with variants including Shahbunder, Shahbundar, and Shah Bandar.

A different Shahbandar was also founded sometime during the 1550s by Mirza Isa Tarkhan of the Tarkhan dynasty, according to the Tuhfat-ul-Kiram.[4]

History

Shah Bandar was a prominent trading port of Sindh under the Kalhora dynasty. The British East India Company established a trading factory in Shahbandar in 1758 during the Kalhora Dynasty.

According to the Tuhfat-ul-Kiram, Shahbandar was founded in 1759 Mian Ghulam Shah Kalhoro, who built a fort there and “collected all materials of war there”.[4] It was described as being near Shahgarh, his newly founded capital.[4]

In Shahbandar’s heyday, it lay on a distributary channel of the Indus, and the water was deep enough so that ships could reach it.[3] However, the only navigable mouth was the Rechal mouth, which was on a different distributary, so ships had to take a circuitous route to get to Shahbandar.[3] From the Rechal mouth, they would sail up the Hajamro creek to the point where it joined the Bagana creek, and then they would sail downstream on the Bagana to reach Shahbandar.[3]

A “high beacon”, called the Munāra because of its resemblance to a minaret, was built at the Rechal mouth to aid navigation.[3] No trace of it remained by 1837, although a nearby village preserved the name.[3]

When a shift in the course of the Indus left the port of Aurangabandar high and dry, the British factory there was moved to Shahbandar.[3] The Shahbandar factory was closed down in 1775.[3]

In 1778, Shahbandar’s population was reportedly as high as 50,000.[5]

According to the 1874 British gazetteer, Shahbandar went into decline after an earthquake in 1819 caused major flooding which altered the course of the Indus so that Shahbandar no longer lay on the river.[3] On the other hand, according to Amita Paliwal, Shahbandar may have already been in decline earlier, with its harbour being “blocked” in the last quarter of the 1700s.[6] In any case, most of Shahbandar’s population and commercial activity ended up moving to Karachi,[6] and the town itself “dwindled into obscurity”.[3]

A municipality was established at Shahbandar on 20 July 1856.[3] As of 1874, Shahbandar was home to about 400 people, roughly 100 Muslims (mostly Memons, Shikaris, and Mohanas) and 300 Hindus (mostly Lohanos).[3] It served as the headquarters of a taluka and had a police thana with a staff of 13, as well as a staging bungalow and a cattle pound.[3] Shahbandar was also the name of a deputy collectorate at the time, under the Karachi district, but the deputy collector usually lived at Jhirk, not Shahbandar.[3]

The 1951 census recorded the village of Shahbandar as having an estimated population of about 270, in about 100 houses.[7] It had a primary school, post office, and police station at that point.[7]

Demography

The Sindhis form the majority of the population of Shahbandar. There are also Baloch and Kutchi settled in Shahbandar. The population is predominantly Muslim with a small Hindu minority.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Geonames Search. Do a radial search using these coordinates here .
  2. Book: Population and household detail from block to tehsil level (Sujawal District) . 2017 . 18, 21, 23–4 . 1 January 2022.
  3. Book: Hughes . A.W. . A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh . 1874 . George Bell and Sons . London . 738, 762, 770, 779–80 . 1 January 2022.
  4. Book: Mirza Kalichbeg Fredunbeg . History of Sind, Vol. 2: The Mussulman period from the Arab conquest to the beginning of the reign of the Kalhórahs. The reigns of the Kalhórahs and the Tálpurs down to the British conquest. . 1902 . Commissioner's Press . Karachi . 95, 158 . 29 January 2022.
  5. Book: Rudduck . Grenfell . Towns & Villages of Pakistan: A Study . 1964 . 211 . 29 January 2022.
  6. Book: Paliwal . Amita . Sind in the Mughal Empire (1591-1740): A Study of Its Administration, Society, Economy and Culture . 2010 . Aligarh Muslim University . Aligarh . 12 . 28 December 2021.
  7. Book: Census of Pakistan, 1951: Village List . 20 in section "Tatta District" . 1 January 2022.