Dir (princely state)


Dir was a small Muslim princely state in a subsidiary alliance with British India within the Northwest Frontier Province until August 1947 when the British left the subcontinent. For some months it was unaligned, until February 1948, when its accession to the new Dominion of Pakistan was accepted.
Dir ceased to exist as a state in 1969, when it was incorporated into Pakistan. The territory it once covered, some, is today within the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, forming two districts called Upper Dir and Lower Dir.

Geography

Most of the state lay in the valley of the Panjkora river, which originates in the Hindu Kush mountains and joins the Swat River near Chakdara. Apart from small areas in the south-west, Dir is a rugged, mountainous zone with peaks rising to in the north-east and to along the watersheds, with Swat to the east and Afghanistan and Chitral to the west and north.

History

Early period

Dir took its name from its main settlement, also called Dir, location of the ruler's palace.
The territories surrounding Dir were populated by their current ethnic majority, the Pakhtuns, beginning from the end of the 14th century. The Pakhtun were divided in several clans, often battling one against the other. The three great clans which conquered the zone were the Yusafzai, Tarkanrai > The Dir territory was populated in the 16th century by the Malizai Sub-tribe of the Yusufzai, who took control of the zone assimilating or chasing away the previous inhabitants and within this tribe the most prominent fractions became the Painda khel and Sultan khel.
By the 17th century a section of the Painda khel, coming from the Kohan village in the valley of Nihag, seized the trade routes with Chitral and Afghanistan.

The first ruling khans

The princely state is said to have been established in the 17th century as a Muslim khanate by Akhund Baba, the leader of a Pakhtun clan, and ruled afterwards by his descendants. A member of the Painda khel's leading family, Mulla Ilyas, was recognized as spiritual leader because of his religious merits, who procured him the title of Akhund Baba. Thanks to his charisma, Akhund acquired a prominent position in the Malizai tribe and founded the Dir village. His successors managed to preserve and expand the leadership, giving birth to an embryonal autonomous political entity which would eventually become the princely state. The clan of Mulla Illas Khan would take the name of Akhund khel from the name of its progenitor, and a dynasty stemming from him was recognized as Khans of Dir. However, till the end of the 19th century, the dominion of the family was limited to the upper Dir.

Jandool rule and fort

took the power while killing his brother inside the fort and succeeded as khan of Jandol.
According to the Sultan Alam Khan's his son Sardar Alam Khan "Umara Khan killed his real brother inside the fort, Umara Khan was earlier exile by his elder brother and this came as a revenge with support of his female servant he managed all this", Sardar Alam Khan also add that...
On the high landscape, the Jandool fort shaped large building was built in 1960 by Nawabzada Shahabuddin Khan, the son of Shah Jehan Khan.
The fort is located strategically controlling the four directions with bordering area of Bajaur, which borders Afghanistan.
In 1881 the ruler of Dir, Muhammad Sharif Khan, was chased away by Khan Umra khan of Jandool, who conquered Dir, Swat and the Malakand area. In 1895, however, while the forces of Umara Khan were besieging a British force near Malakand, Muhammad Sharif Khan decided to make his soldiers join the British relief force coming in aid, the Chitral Expedition. During that expedition Sharif Khan made an agreement with the British Government to keep the road to Chitral open in return for a subsidy. The British eventually won the war and exiled Umara Khan. As a reward for his help, Sharif Khan was given the whole of the Dir and also the lower Swat.

The ruling Nawabs

The heridatary Nawwab Khan Bahador title was granted in 1897 to Mohammad Sharif Khan and inherited by Sharif's eldest son, Aurangzeb Badshah Khan who ruled between 1904 and 1925. In 1906 his younger brother, Miangul Jan, tried in vain to conquer the power with the assistance of the Khan of Barwa, Sayed Ahmad Khan, a former ally of Mohammad Sharif. A second attempt in 1913 was crowned by success, but for a very short time, as in 1914 Aurangzeb regained the rule over Dir. Also the other son of Mohammad Sharif, Mohammad Isa Khan, attempted around 1915 to seize the Dir throne by allying with the Khan of Barwa, but Aurangzeb managed to conserve the rule.
At Aurangzeb's death, in 1925, the title passed to his eldest son, Mohammad Shah Jahan Khan, who was supported by the British Government against the small rival faction that favored his brother Alamzeb Khan. Alamzeb was exiled in 1928 because of his attempts to take the power. Shah Jahan Khan was loyal to the British, who nominated him KBE in 1933. In 1947, Jahan Khan sent his troops to support Pakistan during the First Kashmir War, and in 1948 united his princely state with the new Dominion of Pakistan. He also nominated his son Muhammad Shah Khan Khusro as successor and other sons governors of different provinces.

Pakistan

On 8 Feb 1948, Dir accedes to the newly created Muslim dominion of Pakistan, initially continuing as one of the surviving princely states of Pakistan.
The politics of the late Nawabs are described as reactionary and harsh. The Italian anthropologist Fosco Maraini, who visited the state in 1959 during an expedition towards Hindu-Kush, reports the opinion of the people as the Nawab Jahan Khan being a tyrannical leader, denying his subjects any freedom of speech and instruction, governing the land with a number of henchmen and seizing for his harem any girl or woman he wanted. Maraini also noticed the lack of schools, sewers and paved roads, and the presence of just a rudimentary newly built hospital. The Nawab was negatively compared to the Wali of Swat, whose liberal politics allowed his state to enter into the modern era.
As a consequence, uprisings began eventually to explode. A repressed revolt in 1959 is reported in Maraini's account. Another insurrection in 1960 led to the death of 200 soldiers and put the Nawab in bad light in the view of the press. General Yahya decided to exile Jahan Khan, who would die in 1968. His throne passed in October 1961 to his eldest son, Mohammad Shah Khosru Khan, educated in India and a serving Major General of Pakistan Army. However, the effective rule of Dir was taken by the Pakistani government's Political Agent.
A few years later, on 28 July 1969, the Dir state was incorporated into Pakistan, ceasing its political existence. The royal status of the Nawabs was abolished in 1972, at the same time as most other princes of Pakistan.

Rulers Timeline

The information for the following table stems from www.worldstatesmen.org and Who's Who in the Dir, Swat and Chitral Agency.
The ruling dates of the first rulers are not reported, as inconsistent between the sources: according to www.worldstatesmen.org, Akhund Baba's tenure began in the 19th century. However, Encyclopædia Britannica and accounts by local people date him back to the 17th century.
TenureRuler
1626–1676Akhund Baba
1676–1752Mulla Ismail
1752–1804Ghulam Khan Baba
1804–1814Khan Zafar Khan
1814–1822Khan Qasim Khan
1822–1868Khan Ghazzan Khan
?Ghasan Khan
1875–1886-
1870–1884Khan Rahmat Allah Khan
1886– deposition 1890Mohammad Sharif Khan
1890– 1895Mohammad Umara Khan, khan of Jandul, who annexed Dhir
1895 – December 1904Nawab Mohammad Sharif Khan, from 1897 Nawwab Bahadur Khan
December 1904 – 1913Nawab Awrangzeb Badshah Khan
1913–1914Nawab Miangul Jan
1914 – February 1925Nawab Awrangzeb Badshah Khan
May 1925 – 9 November 1960Nawab Mohammad Shah Jahan Khan
December 1947 - December 1960Nawabzada Shahabuddin Khan
9 November 1960 – 28 July 1969Nawab Khosru Khan

Demographics

The population of the state in 1911 amounted to about 100,000 people according to Encyclopædia Britannica, rising to 250,000 in 1931 and falling back to 107,000 in 1951.
At the 1947 Partition of India, there was a Muslim majority in Dir with small minorities of Hindus and Sikhs, many of whom left for India during partition.

Flag

The state flag contained several Islamic symbols and three sentences : the top writing is the Bismillah: "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful", the center one is the shahada in urdu language: "There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God". The bottom phrase reads "with the help of God, victory is near" in Arabic language. The flag also existed in a red variant with the same drawings.