Tatur
Tatur, also known as Tator or Tatoor, is a small Pashtun tribe among the larger Lodi/Lohani tribe.[1][2][3] They were nomads for most of their existence before settling in the Gomal plains of present-day Tank District in modern-day Pakistan during the late 1500s, moving into the region through the Gomal Pass.[2][3][4]
Tatur | |
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![]() The position of Tatur among the Lodi/Lohani tribes and the larger Bettani tribal confederacy. | |
Ethnicity | Pashtun |
Location | Tank District, Frontier Region Tank |
Parent tribe | Lohani, Lodi, Bettani |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
History
The Tatur currently exists as a tribe chiefly concentrated in one small village about four miles north-west of Tank city. The village in which the tribe currently resides was also mentioned by H. G. Raverty in his Notes on Afghanistan and part of Baluchistan book published in 1880. The tribe is referred to as Tataur, Tutor, and Tutohr in the book.[4] The tribe was near extinction around 1872-79.[2]
References
- "History of the Afghans. | Library of Congress". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2022-10-13.
- Office, Punjab Settlement Commissioner's; Tucker, H. St George (1879). Report of the Land Revenue Settlement of the Dera Ismail Khan District of the Punjab, 1872-79. W. Ball. pp. 42, 46.
- Yunas, S. Fida (2002). Afghanistan: The Afghans and the rise and fall of the ruling Afghan dynasties and rulers. p. 52.
- Raverty, Henry Raverty (1880). Notes on Afghanistan and Baluchistan. pp. 325, 326. ISBN 978-9693512625.
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