Jhelum District
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Jhelum جہلم |
|
| General Information | |
| Country | Pakistan |
| Province | Punjab |
| Location | |
| Altitude | 120 metres AMSL |
| Area | -- km² |
| Calling code | 0544 |
| Time zone | PST (UTC+5) |
| No. of Towns | 9 |
| Estimate | 107,000 (2006) |
| Government | |
| No. of Union Councils | 97 |
| No. of NGOs Working | 8 |
| Website | |
| Jhelum Website | |
The Jhelum district (Urdu: جہلم) is situated in Punjab province of Pakistan. It had a population of 936,957 of which 31.48% were urban in 1998. [1]
Contents |
It is located in the north of the Punjab province, Jhelum district is bordered by Sargodha to its south, Gujrat and the Jhelum River to its south and east, Chakwal to its west, Mirpur to its east, and Rawalpindi to its north.
Jhelum district contains four tehsils: Jhelum, Sohawa, Pind Dadan Khan and Dina. [2] It also contains the city of Jhelum, City of Dina, City of Pind Dadan Khan
Jhelum is hot in summer, and dry and mild in winter. Average annual rainfall is about 900 mm (about 35 inches.)
- Population: 936,957 (1998)
- Population density: 261 people per square kilometer.
- Literacy rate: 71%
The Jhelum City situated on the right bank of the river Jhelum, here crossed by a bridge
The district of Jhelum stretches from the river Jhelum almost to the Indus. Salt is quarried at the Mayo mine in the Salt Range. There are two coal-mines, the only ones worked in the province, from which the North-Western railway obtains part of its supply of coal. The chief centre of the salt trade is Pind Dadan Khan. The district is crossed by the main line of the North-Western railway, and also traversed along the south by a branch line.
The river Jhelum is navigable throughout the district, which forms the south-eastern portion of a rugged Himalayan spur, extending between the Indus and Jhelum to the borders of the Sind Sagar Doab. Its scenery is very picturesque, although not of so wild a character as the mountain region of Rawalpindi to the north, and is lighted up in places by smiling patches of cultivated valley. The backbone of the district is formed by the Salt Range, a treble line of parallel hills running in three long forks from east to west throughout its whole breadth.
The range rises in bold precipices, broken by gorges, clothed with brushwood and traversed by streams which are at first pure, but soon become impregnated with the saline matter over which they pass. Between the line of hills lies a picturesque table-land, in which the beautiful little lake of Kallar Kahar nestles amongst the minor ridges. North of the Salt Range, the country extends upwards in an elevated plateau, diversified by countless ravines and fissures, until it loses itself in tangled masses of Rawalpindi mountains. In this rugged tract cultivation is rare and difficult, the soil being choked with saline matter. At the foot of the Salt Range, however, a small strip of level soil lies along the banks of the Jhelum, and is thickly dotted with prosperous villages.
The drainage of the district is determined by a low central watershed running north and south at right angles to the Salt Range. The waters of the western portion find their way into the Sohan, and finally into the Indus; those of the opposite slope collect themselves into small torrents, and empty themselves into the Jhelum.
The history of the district dates back to the semi-mythical period of the Mahabaharata. Hindu tradition represents the Salt Range as the refuge of the five Pandava brethren during the period of their exile, and every salient point in its scenery is connected with some legend of the national heroes. Modern research has fixed the site of the conflict between Alexander and Porus as within Jhelum district. After this event, we have little information with regard to the condition of the district until the Muslim conquest brought back literature and history to Upper India. The Janjuas and Jats, who now hold the Salt Range and its northern plateau respectively, appear to have been the earliest inhabitants.
- General Asif Nawaz (Former Commander-in-chief of Pakistan Army)
- Lt.General(Retd) Ijaz Azeem
- Major Akram Shaheed "Nishan-e-Haider"
- Lieutenant General Muhammad Masood Aslam, Sitara-e-Jurat
- Chaudhary Muhammad Altaf Hussain (Former Governor of Punjab)
- Raja Ghazanfar Ali Khan
- Raja Muhammad Afzal Khan, (Former MNA)
- Dr. Ghulam Hussain (Former Federal Minister & former Sectery General of Pakistan People Party)
imran malik awan MNA 2002
Maj gen (retd) raja afzal khan ( artilarry corps ) belongs to village chak jani teh pind dadan khan distt jhelum
- Choudry Fazal (Principal Govt. College)
- Khawaja Javed Iqbal (Tanzeem-e-Amal Jhelum) (Khawaja Tent Service)
- Syed Ahmed Ali Shah R/O Village Raiya Chak Maddu, Jhelum
- Best Online Newspaper in Jhelum.
- The Voice of Jhelum & Dina.
- Jhelum Informations
- Jhelum's Official Site Urdu Version
- Jhelum's Official Site English Version
- Humara Jhelum Community
- Jhelum's Mobile Portal
| Administrative Divisions of Punjab (Pakistan) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Capital | Lahore | |
| Districts | Attock | Bahawalnagar | Bahawalpur | Bhakkar | Chakwal | Dera Ghazi Khan | Faisalabad | Gujranwala | Gujrat | Hafizabad | Jhang | Jhelum | Kasur | Khanewal | Khushab | Lahore | Layyah | Lodhran | Mandi Bahauddin | Mianwali | Multan | Muzaffargarh | Nankana Sahib | Narowal | Okara | Pakpattan | Rahim Yar Khan | Rajanpur | Rawalpindi | Sahiwal | Sargodha | Sheikhupura | Sialkot | Toba Tek Singh | Vehari | |