Chulichan
Chulichan | |
---|---|
village | |
Location in Ladakh, India | |
Coordinates: 34°39′48″N 76°18′54″E / 34.663323°N 76.315108°E | |
Country | India |
Union Territory | Ladakh |
District | Kargil |
Tehsil | Kargil |
Area | |
• Total | 1.2590 km2 (0.4861 sq mi) |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 912 |
• Density | 720/km2 (1,900/sq mi) |
Languages | |
• Official | Brokskat |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
PIN | 194103 |
Chulichan[a] is a village in the Kargil district of Ladakh, India, close to the Line of Control with Pakistan-administered Kashmir. It is populated by Shia Brokpas and Baltis.
Geography
[edit]Chulichan is on the left bank of the Indus River in a narrow section of Indus valley known as Brog Yul. It is the last village in Indian-administered Ladakh; the next village on the left bank, Natsara, is in Pakistan-administered Baltistan. Chulichan has an area of 125.90 hectares (1.2590 km2) and includes five hamlets: Groung Khril, Groung Stod-I, Groung Stod-II, Sharchey and Grongjuk.[3][4]
History
[edit]Historically, Chulichan and the adjacent regions were populated by Brokpa people. Folklore maintains that they arrived at their current habitat from the Gilgit region.[5] The Brokpa chieftains wielded autonomy in the region, pledging nominal allegiance to the Maqpon rulers of Skardu.[5]
However, things changed in the seventeenth century when Jamyang Namgyal of Ladakh had a conflict with Ali Sher Khan Anchan of Skardu and had to accept Gurgurdho, a hamlet on the opposite bank of the Indus river, as a boundary between their territories.[5] Consequently, Chulichan and villages to the north of it, such as Ganokh and Marol, became part of Baltistan and influenced by Shia Islam.[5] When Robert Barkley Shaw visited the village in 1876, he found Baltis and Brokpas living there, professing Shia Islam.[6]
Nevertheless, the local Brokpas continued to maintain marital relations with their ethnic kin in the Dah Hanu region of Ladakh; such connections would cease only with the latter's acceptance of Buddhism c. late nineteenth century.[5] In the aftermath of the First Kashmir War (1947–1948), with Pakistan annexing territories north of Chulichan, it became the only Brokpa village in India to be primarily composed of Muslims.
Demographics
[edit]According to the latest census of India (2011), the village has 912 inhabitants across 112 households.[3]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Kashmir & Jammu mapsheet 52-b, Survey of India, 1928.
- ^ Bhan 2013, p. 31.
- ^ a b "Directorate of Census Operations, 2011" (PDF). p. 56.
- ^ "Hamlet wise village detail". DISTRICT Statistics & Evaluation office Kargil, Ladakh.
- ^ a b c d e Vohra, Rohit (1982). "Ethnographic Notes on the Buddhist Dards of Ladakh: The Brog-Pā". Zeitschrift für Ethnologie. 107 (1): 72, 81–82. ISSN 0044-2666.
- ^ Shaw, R. B. (1878). Stray Arians in Tibet.
The village of Ganok is entirely inhabited by Musalman Brokpas, while those of Dangel, Marul, Chuli-chan, and singkarmo, are inhabited partly by Musalmun (Shi'ah) Brokpas, and partly by Baltis (Tibetan Musalmans) of the same sect.
- Sources
- Bhan, Mona (2013), Counterinsurgency, Democracy, and the Politics of Identity in India: From Warfare to Welfare?, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-50983-6