Rawalpindi is a city in the Potwar Plateau near Islamabad, the current capital of Pakistan. It is the military headquarters of the Pakistan Armed Forces and also served as the nation's capital while Islamabad was being constructed in the 1960s. The city is home to many industries and factories. Islamabad International Airport is actually in Rawalpindi, and it serves the city along with the capital. Rawalpindi is located in the Punjab province, 275 km (171 miles) to the north-west of Lahore. It is the administrative seat of the Rawalpindi District.
Rawalpindi, also
known as Pindi, has a long history spread over several millennia.
Archaeologists believe that a distinct culture flourished on
this plateau as far back as 3000 years. The material remains
found at the site prove the existence of a Buddhist establishment
contemporary to Taxila, but less celebrated than its neighbor.
It appears that
the ancient city went into oblivion as a result of the Hun
devastation. The first Muslim invader, Mahmud of Ghazni (979-1030),
gifted the ruined city to a Gakkhar Chief, Kai Gohar. The town,
however, being on an invasion route, could not prosper and
remained deserted until Jhanda Khan, another Gakkhar Chief,
restored it and named it Rawalpindi after the village Rawal in
1493. Rawalpindi remained under the rule of the Gakkhars till
Muqarrab Khan, the last Gakkhar ruler, was defeated by the Sikhs
in 1765. The Sikhs invited traders from other places to settle
here. This brought the city into prominence.
Following the
British conquest of the Sikhs and their occupation of Rawalpindi
in 1849, the city became a permanent garrison of the British
army in 1851. In the 1880s a railway line to Rawalpindi was
laid, and train service was inaugurated on January 1, 1886.
The need for having a railway link arose after Lord Dalhousie
made Rawalpindi the headquarters of the Northern Command and
Rawalpindi became the largest British military garrison in
British India.
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In 1951, Rawalpindi saw the murder of the first elected Prime Minister
of Pakistan, Liaquat Ali Khan, in Liaquat Garden. Today
Rawalpindi is the headquarters of the Pakistani Army and
Air Force.
The famous Murree Road has been a hot spot for various political
and social events. Nala Lai, famous for its floods, runs in the
middle of the city, dividing it into city area and Cantonment
area. History describes Nala Lai water pure enough to do washing
clothes but now it has become polluted with the waste water
from all sources including factories and houses.
It
is rapidly developing into a large modern city.
It has many good hotels, restaurants, clubs, museums,
playgrounds. It has a number of parks, of which the largest
is Ayub National Park. Rawalpindi is the nearest major city
for the holiday resorts and hill stations of the Galiyat area,
such as Murree, Nathia Gali, and Ayubia. It is also a common
starting point for tourists visiting Abbottabad, Swat, Kaghan,
Gilgit, Hunza, Skardu and Chitral.
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