Hindu

All you want to know about Hindu

Coordinates: 36°16′23″N, 78°46′50″E

NASA satellite image showing the towns of  Sumgal in Ladakh  and Pusa in southwestern Khotan,  and the Hindu-tash Pass connecting them.  The pass is marked in bright red.
NASA satellite image showing the towns of Sumgal in Ladakh and Pusa in southwestern Khotan, and the Hindu-tash Pass connecting them. The pass is marked in bright red.
Details of a map of Kashmir  (1878) showing the Hindutash Pass and Khotan as well as the northern border regions of the British Indian Empire (which included the Kashmir region).  The international border is shown in the two-toned purple and pink band.  The mountain passes are shown in bright red.  Warning the lat/long information is not everywhere correct.
Details of a map of Kashmir (1878) showing the Hindutash Pass and Khotan as well as the northern border regions of the British Indian Empire (which included the Kashmir region).[1] The international border is shown in the two-toned purple and pink band. The mountain passes are shown in bright red. Warning the lat/long information is not everywhere correct.

Hindutash, also known as Hindu-tagh Pass, is the name of a historical mountain pass in north eastern Kashmir. The pass cuts through the Kunlun Mountains connecting the now-deserted town of Sumgal, (36° 11' 58 N, 78° 46' 50 E) in the Karakash River valley to the town of Pusha, (36.3833° N, 79° E), formerly Bushia, in the Yurungkash River valley, in the territory of Khotan and also connects to the road to the city of Khotan. [1] (See maps on right.) In 1857, the explorer Robert Schlagintweit crossed this pass from camping grounds in Sumgal ( meaning "three fords" in Ladakhi ), on the banks of the Karakash river, approximately 7 miles upstream from Sumgal in Ladakh and estimated its height to be 17,879 feet. At the top of the pass (36° 16' 23 N, 78° 46' 50 E), there is a steep glacier with many crevasses. The eastern Kunlun range, which is in the southern border of the Khotan , is cut by two other passes: the Sanju Pass near the town of Shahidulla, where the Maharaja of Kashmir had built a fort in exercise of his sovereignty in that area of Kashmir northwest of Hindutash, and the Ilchi Pass, southeast of Hindutash in the northern part of the Aksai Chin area in Ladakh (see second map on right). The Hindutash pass has been used historically as the point of entry into India Proper from the ancient Indian Kingdom of Khotan which only explains the literal meaning of the name Hindutash signifying border post . The latter was traversed in 1865 by W. H. Johnson of the Survey of India. W.H. Johnson’s survey established certain important points. Brinjga was in his view the boundary post ( a few miles south east of Karanghu Tagh in Ladakh ), thus implying that the boundary lay along the Kuen Lun Range. Johnson’s findings demonstrated that the whole of the Kara Kash valley was an integral part of the territory of Kashmir . He noted where the Chinese boundary post was accepted. At Yangi Langar, three marches from Khotan, he noticed that there was a few fruit trees at this place which originally was a post or guard house of the Chinese. According to Johnson, “the last portion of the route to Shadulla (Shahidulla) is particularly pleasant, being the whole of the Karakash valley which is wide and even, and shut in either side by rugged mountains. On this route I noticed numerous extensive plateaux near the river, covered with wood and long grass. These being within the territory of the Maharaja of Kashmir, could easily be brought under cultivation by Ladakhees and others, if they could be induced and encouraged to do so by the Kashmeer Government. The establishment of villages and habitations on this river would be important in many points of view, but chiefly in keeping the route open from the attacks of the Khergiz robbers.” "Hindu-tagh" means "Indian Mountain," and "Hindu-tash," "Indian stone" in the Uyghur dialect of East Turkistan.

Contents

Gallery

Maps

Notes

  1. ^ a b (Trotter 1878, p. U8)

References


See also


External links


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