Peshawar: Difference between revisions
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==FIBIS Resources== | ==FIBIS Resources== | ||
*[http:// | *[http://gallery.fibis.org/index.php?/tags/37-peshawar Images of Peshawar in FIBIS Gallery] | ||
*[http://wiki.fibis.org/index.php/Category:Peshawar_images Images of Peshawar in Fibiwiki] | *[http://wiki.fibis.org/index.php/Category:Peshawar_images Images of Peshawar in Fibiwiki] | ||
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*''Peshawar Monumental Inscriptions II'' by Susan Farrington, 1991. More inscriptions from churches and other cemeteries. 168pp, profusely illustrated and plan | *''Peshawar Monumental Inscriptions II'' by Susan Farrington, 1991. More inscriptions from churches and other cemeteries. 168pp, profusely illustrated and plan | ||
See [ | See [https://www.bacsa.org.uk/product-category/cemetery-record-books/ BACSA Cemetery record books]. | ||
[[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|BACSA]] have put some indexes to its cemetery books online and these indexes are free to browse at [http://bacsa.frontis.co/bin/index.php BACSA Search]. If an indexed name is of interest then application can be made to BACSA for details of the relevant burial inscription - charges apply for this service. | [[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|BACSA]] have put some indexes to its cemetery books online and these indexes are free to browse at [http://bacsa.frontis.co/bin/index.php BACSA Search]. If an indexed name is of interest then application can be made to BACSA for details of the relevant burial inscription - charges apply for this service. | ||
The [[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|BACSA Archive]] at the British Library Mss F370 has items which may also be contained in the above books. See [http://www.bacsa.org.uk/?page_id=697 BACSA Cemetery files] and select Pakistan. | The [[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|BACSA Archive]] at the British Library Mss F370 has items which may also be contained in the above books. See [http://www.bacsa.org.uk/?page_id=697 BACSA Cemetery files] and select Pakistan. | ||
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{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
Revision as of 15:45, 9 March 2021
Peshawar | |
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Presidency: Bengal | |
Coordinates: | 34.015112°N 71.582634°E |
Altitude: | 510 m (1,673 ft) |
Present Day Details | |
Place Name: | Peshawar |
State/Province: | Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, old NWFP |
Country: | Pakistan |
Transport links | |
FibiWiki Maps | |
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See our interactive map of this location showing places of interest during the British period | |
[xxxxx Peshawar] |
During the British period Peshawar was the capital of North West Frontier Province and Peshawar District from 1901 until 1947. It was part of Punjab before then.
Spelling variants
Peshawer, Peshawur, Paishawar, Peyshawurr
FIBIS Resources
Education
- Edwardes College[1]
- Islamia College (now University) (1913)
Churches
- St. John's Church (now Cathedral) (Garrison Church)
Cemeteries
Article "Peshawar’s Gora Qabristan : A Vanishing Landmark" by Dr. Ali Jan written c 2010 www.pakhtun.com. Peshawar's Historic Cemetery by Dr Ali Jan. Contains some of the same text, but also includes information about the 1918 flu pandemic. (archive.org links)
BACSA (British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia) cemetery publications are
- Peshawar Cemetery, Pakistan by Susan Farrington, 1988 (2nd reprint 2001). c900 MIs dating from 1849. 195pp, profusely illustrated and plans
- Peshawar Monumental Inscriptions II by Susan Farrington, 1991. More inscriptions from churches and other cemeteries. 168pp, profusely illustrated and plan
See BACSA Cemetery record books.
BACSA have put some indexes to its cemetery books online and these indexes are free to browse at BACSA Search. If an indexed name is of interest then application can be made to BACSA for details of the relevant burial inscription - charges apply for this service.
The BACSA Archive at the British Library Mss F370 has items which may also be contained in the above books. See BACSA Cemetery files and select Pakistan.
For some memorial inscriptions from Peshawar , see Monuments at Tehkal Cemetery, Peshawar, including
- Monument to those who died No 6 Mountain Battery Royal Garrison Artillery 1914-1921 at Tehkal Cemetery, Peshawar
Also see "Historical books online", below.
Hospitals
- Lady Reading Hospital (1924)
Medical terminology
"Peshawur fever" was malaria.[2]
Forts
The hill cantonment at Cherat
Cherat is a cantonment located 34 miles south east from the city of Peshawar at an elevation of 4,500 feet on the west of the Khattak range.
External Links
- Peshawar City Imperial Gazetteer of India
- Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: Town & Places contains information about Peshawar (scroll down). Archived page at May 2016.
- Diocese of Peshawar, Church of Pakistan
- "A possible Peshawar" by Albert J Godlin October 26, 2012 The Friday Times, now an archived webpage. Contains details of the British clubs, including the largest, the Peshawar Club, cinemas and churches.
- Khyber [Masonic] Lodge, Peshawar, now an archived webpage
- "Peshawar Remembered" by Walter Reeve (born 1934) whose father was in the Indian Army, and later the Pakistan Army. The recollections of an English schoolboy growing up in Peshawar around the time of partition. See Murree for the author's memories of Murree.
- PAF [previously RAF] Peshawar globalsecurity.org
- Peshawar Vale Hunt by Dr Ali Jan, now archived.
- Peshawar: Excerpts from Gertrude Bell's Diary (dated 22/01/1903 to 27/01/1903) Sarhad Conservation Network, now archived.
- RAF Peshawar rafweb.org (retrieved 1 July 2014)
Missionaries
- "Thomas Patrick Hughes, Missionary to British India: The Class Ceiling" by Elizabeth Hughes Clark 2002 anglicanhistory.org. Hughes was a missionary in Peshawar 1865-1884 with the Church Missionary Society (CMS). He was the author of Khalid-i-Afghani, Being a Selection of Pushto Prose and Poetry for the Use of Students, 1873, which became the text book for the Pakhto Examination and Notes on Muhammadanism 1875 2nd edition , revised and enlarged 1877 Archive.org. He is also mentioned in the account by the Rev. Worthington Jukes, refer below.
Images
- Visiting Peshawar – Scenes And Pictures Of Pakistan 2009 - Includes photos of St John’s Cathedral and the cemetery
- Plan of the Peshawar Cantonment 1870 page 53 The Bungalow in Twentieth-Century India by Madhavi Desai, Miki Desai, Jon Lang Google Books
- Photograph of Peshawar 1878 A view across the cantonment towards St John's Church and the distant mountains of the Khyber Pass, taken in 1878 by John Burke. (Flickr)
- Photographs: The Peshawar Vale Hunt, 1896: A and B National Army Museum
- Postcard: Soldiers’ Married Quarters Peshawar flickr.com
- From a collection of postcards at the ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, sent by F.G. Prew, a soldier, probably in the 2nd Battalion, Essex Regiment to Adolf Feller of Switzerland
- Peshawar, NWFP, General view of Robert Barracks, post stamped 19.2 1928 with message
- Peshawar, Fort and Wireless Station, NWFP, post stamped 10.9.1930 with message
- Peshawar Cantt, Railway Station post stamped 24.9.1930 with message
- Peshawar, Double Deckers, The Soldiers Bungalows post stamped 1.2.1931 with message
- 1930 riots in Peshawar
- Photographs from the National Army Museum:
- Riots in Peshawar, 1930 A despatch rider was killed and set on fire, his body igniting the armoured car seen burning in this photograph.
- Riots in Peshawar, 1930 showing Troops and armoured car.
- Riot control duties in Peshawar, 1930 showing Troops patrolling.
- Images of articles from The Times 24-28 April 1930 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 militarian.com (retrieved 1 July 2014)[3]
- Photographs from the National Army Museum:
- YouTube videos from the National Army Museum
Historical books online
- "Peshawar" page 548 Central Asia Part I: A contribution towards the better knowledge of the topography, ethnology, resources, & history of the North-West Frontier of British India complied (for political and military reference). Volume II, by C M Macgregor 1873. Archive.org, Digital Library of India Collection.
- Gazetteer Of The Peshawar District 1897-98. A volume in the series Punjab District Gazetteers. Archive.org version, mirror from Digital Library of India.
- N W F Province Gazetteers Peshawar District Vol.a 1931. Archive.org version, mirror from Digital Library of India.
- Peshawur in 1854 page 428 Wall-Street to Cashmere: A Journal of Five Years in Asia, Africa and Europe by John B Ireland 1859 Google Books. (page 436 (missing from the previous file)). The author was an American lawyer born in 1823.
- Selections from the Public Correspondence of the Punjab Government, Volume V, No 2: Papers regarding the Insalubrity of the Peshawur Valley 1859. Archive.org, mirror from PAHAR: Mountains of Central Asia Digital Dataset
- Peshawur page 391 Report of the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Sanitary State of the Army in India : with Abstract of Evidence, and of Reports Received from Indian Military Stations 1864 Archive.org
- Peshawar Vale Hounds c 1870s page 4, Sport and travel in India and Central America by A. G. Bagot late 60th Rifles. 1897 Archive.org.
- Memorials of the life and letters of Major-General Sir Herbert B. Edwardes by his Wife 1886 Archive.org Volume I Volume II. Edwardes was Commissioner of Peshawar during the Indian Mutiny.
- "Peshawur", page 160 The Punjab and Sindh missions of the Church Missionary Society Giving an account of their foundation and progress for thirty-three years, from 1852 to 1884. Second edition, considerably enlarged, of a book entitled "Thirty years of missionary work of the C.M.S. in the Punjab and Sindh" by Robert Clark 1885 Archive.org
- Reminiscences of Missionary Work In Amritsar 1872-1873 and on the Afghan Frontier In Peshawar 1873-1890 by the Rev. Worthington Jukes 1925. anglicanhistory.org.
- "Peshawar District", page 149 A list of inscriptions on Christian tombs or monuments in the Punjab, North-West Frontier Province, Kashmir and Afghanistan possessing historical or archaeological interest Part 1 by Miles Irving (1910) Hathi Trust Digital Library
- Peshawar Riot 23 April 1930 page 16 India in 1930-31 Archive.org
- "Peshawar District 1930", Chapter 10, page 253 Imperial Policing by Major-General Sir Charles W Gwynn 1939 Archive.org, Digital Library of India Collection.
- Peshawar, 1930, page 583 The Way of a Transgressor by Negley Farson 1936 Archive.org Lending Library. 2nd file Archive.org. The India chapters continue to page 591. Negley Farson Wikipedia. The author was then an American foreign correspondent, one of the most renowned of his day.
- Official History of Operations on the N.-W. Frontier of India, 1920-35 by General Staff Army Headquarters, India 1945. Archive.org, mirror from Digital Library of India. Includes some content about the 1930 riots.
- It is also available in a reprint edition[4] which in turn is available as part of an online book on the Ancestry owned pay website fold3.[5]
- Seven Cantonments by Major SEG Ponder c 1938. Archive.org. The author was an Officer in the Royal Artillery, based in the North-West Frontier region, in the c 1930s including Peshawar.
- Peshawar - Historic City of the Frontier by Ahmad Hasan Dani 1969. Pdf download, PAHAR-Mountains of Central Asia Digital Dataset. Archive.org mirror version. 2002 reprint edition Archive.org books to Borrow/Lending Library.
References
- ↑ It is now under the jurisdiction of the Peshawar Diocese of the Church of Pakistan, see External Links above
- ↑ Page 14 Memoirs, with a Full Account of the Great Malaria Problem and its Solution by Ronald Ross 1923 Archive.org
- ↑ Military History Forum thread Peshawar 1930
- ↑ Official History Of Operations On The North-West Frontier Of India 1920-1935 Naval & Military Press
- ↑ Official History of Operations on the NW Frontier of India fold3 (located in Military books/India). Consists of 2 books.