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0071 Serindia : vol.1
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doi: 10.20676/00000183
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CHAPTER II

THROUGH CHITRAL AND MASTÜJ
SECTION I.—CHITRAL IN ETHNOLOGY AND HISTORY

ON May 4 I gained access to Chitral by crossing the Lowarai Pass, still a formidable obstacle at that season, through gorges deeply choked with the snows of avalanches (Fig. 2). Among the alpine territories flanking the main Hindukush range on the south, Chitral with its mountains of barren grandeur, its fertile if narrow valleys, its curiously mixed population, and the manifold indications of an old and relatively well-developed civilization, offers special attractions alike to the student of geography, ethnology, and antiquities. Chapters III and IV of my personal narrative will show how deeply I felt these varied fascinations, and how great my regret was at the very limited range which the unavoidable rapidity of my passage imposed upon my inquiries. The fact that my travel and stay in Chitral were confined to a week will explain why my present account can touch only the main geographical relations of the country, the few early historical data, and such antiquarian observations as I was able to make en route.

The political importance of Chitral, the interesting mixture of its population, and the advanced economic conditions prevailing all find their explanation in the fact that nature has placed Chitral on the line of the nearest, and in many respects the easiest, trade route between Central Asia and the extreme north-west of India proper. A series of natural features combine to favour the line of communication which connects the valleys of the Indus and Oxus through Chitral. The fertile valley of the Kûnar, accessible from the side of the Peshawar and Swat Valleys by a number of passes all considerably lower than the Lowarai, provides an excellent thoroughfare, leading due north without inconvenient détours, which is open to laden traffic at all times of the year. In the case of all routes which lie to the east of it, a succession of high outer ranges have to be surmounted before the main Hindukush watershed is approached, while the valleys are not only narrow and difficult, but are devoid of that surplus produce which in a mountainous region is essential for fostering traffic.'

There is no lack of local resources anywhere in the ascent of the main Kûnar river valley up to the large cluster of villages which forms the Chitral capital, and from which the territory derives its current modern name.2 The same favourable conditions continue in the side valley of Lutkhô,

Arrival in Chitral.

Political importance of Chitral.

Main routes through Chitral.

' It is this want of spare food supplies and fodder which has constituted at all times so serious an obstacle to the use of the routes leading from Kashmir through Gilgit, Yasin, and Hunza, whether for trade or military purposes. It would affect also traffic through the Yârkhlin Valley notwithstanding the easy passage northward afforded by the Barôghil saddle.

2 The old indigenous name, and one still in current use both in the hill state itself and the adjoining territories, is Kâshkâr. This term includes both Chitral proper, or ' Lower Kashkar', and ' Upper Kashkar', comprising the main valley from some distance below Mastüj along with the

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important side valleys which join it from the Hindukush watershed. Cf. Biddulph, Hindoo Koosh, pp. 59 sqq. ; and the explicit statement given by Raverty, Notes on Afghanistan, p. 152, from Mughul Bég's surveys dating from the end of the eighteenth century : ' Under the general name of Kâshkâr are included two tracts of country : one Kâshkâr-i-Pâ'in, or Lower Kâshkâr, also called Chitral, which, on account of I being interchangeable with r, is also called Chitrâr, and the other Kâshkâr-i-B6l6. or Upper Kâshkâr, or Masttich, from its chief town.'

For an early Chinese rendering of the name Kâshkâr, see below, p. 31.

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