Punial State
Punial State was a princely state (under the British, it was called a "Special Political District" of the Gilgit Agency, not a Princely State) in the northwest part of Pakistan's Northern Areas which existed until 1974. The state bordered the Gilgit District to the south, the former princely state of Yasin to the west, Ishkoman to the north, and Afghanistan's Wakhan Corridor to the northwest. The state capital was the town of Sher Qila. The area of Punial now forms the tehsil of Ghizer District.
Punial was an independent principality for several centuries. The British gained control of the area and the neighbouring valleys by the mid-19th century followed by a military engagement of severe intensity. The first Rah of Punial was Isa Bagdur. He was succeeded by his son Akbar Khan, who in 1913 was deposed by the British and replaced by his son, Anwar Khan. He was succeeded in turn by his son Jan Alam.[1]
This area and other neighbouring states were never ruled directly by Kashmir.
References
- Sack, John (1959). Report from Practically Nowhere. New York: Curtis Publishing Company. pp. 202–216.