Pakpattan (
Urdu:
پاکپتّن), is the capital city of the
Pakpattan District in the
Sahiwal Division in the
Punjab province of Pakistan. Pakpattan is one of the ancient cities of Pakistan. It is the city that has the shrine of
Baba Fareed. Pakpattan is located roughly 40 kilometres (25 mi) from the border with
India, and 184 kilometres (114 mi) by road southwest of
Lahore.
[1]
Language
History
The fort defending the city was once captured by
Sebüktegin in 977–78 and by
Ibrahim Ghaznavi in 1079–80.
[3] The town was besieged by Shaikha; the Khokhar, in 1394, and in 1398 was visited by
Timur,
Mughal Emperor who spared much of the inhabitants that had not fled, out of respect for the shrine of the saint Hazrat Baba Farid who built the nation of pakpattan. The old name of the pakpattan is Ajudhan.
During British rule, Pakpattan Town was the headquarters of the tehsil of the same name in the
Montgomery District, 29 miles south-east of
Montgomery station on the
North-Western Railway. The municipality was created in 1867, the population in 1901 was 6,192. During the ten years ending 1902-3 the income averaged Rs. 7,200, and the expenditure Rs. 7,000. The income in 1903-4 was Rs. 8,400, chiefly derived from
octroi; and the expenditure was Rs. 7,300.
[3]
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Pakpattan is a town of some commercial importance, importing wheat, cotton, oilseeds, and pulses from the surrounding villages, gur and refined sugar from Amritsar, Jullundur, and the United Provinces, piece-goods from Amritsar, Delhi, and Karachi, and fruits from Afghanistan. The exports consist principally of cotton, wheat, and oilseeds. The town has a local manufacture of silk lungis and lacquer-work. It contains a vernacular middle school and a dispensary. From 1849 to 1852 it was the head-quarters of the Districte |