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Jhelum District
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{{Distinguish|text=the Jhelum Valley District of Azad Kashmir}}{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}{{Use Pakistani English|date=October 2019}}







factoids
| native_name_lang = List of districts in Punjab, Pakistan>District of Punjab| image_skyline = {{Photomontage|size = 250|photo1a = Rohtas Fort 1.jpg|photo2a = Tilla Jogyan temple complex inside.jpg}}| imagesize = | image_alt = | image_caption = Top: Rohtas FortBottom: Ruins at Tilla Jogian| image_map = Pakistan - Punjab - Jhelum.svg| mapsize = | map_alt = | map_caption = Map of Punjab with Jhelum District highlighted| subdivision_type = CountryPakistan}}Provinces of Pakistan>ProvincePunjab}}Divisions of Pakistan>DivisionRawalpindi Division>Rawalpindi| established_title = Established| established_date = | founder = | seat_type = HeadquartersJhelum>Jhelum city| parts_type = | government_footnotes = | government_type = District Administration| leader_party = | leader_title = Mayor| leader_name = None (vacant)Deputy Commissioner (Pakistan)>Deputy CommissionerPakistan Administrative Service>BPS-19 PAS)| leader_title2 = District Police OfficerPolice Service of Pakistan>BPS-19 PSP)| unit_pref = Metric| area_footnotes = | area_total_km2 = 3587| population_blank1_title = Demonym| population_blank1 = Jhelumi/Jhelumian| population_total = 1,222,403| population_footnotes = | population_as_of = 2017| population_density_km2 = autoTime in Pakistan>PKT| utc_offset1 = +5List of tehsils of Punjab, Pakistan>Tehsils| blank_info_sec1 = 4| blank1_name_sec1 = TehsilsJhelum Tehsil>JhelumPind Dadan Khan TehsilSohawa Tehsil>SohawaDinaweblink}}| blank2_name_sec1 = | blank2_info_sec1 = }}Jhelum District (Urdu and }}), is partially in Pothohar Plateau, and partially in Punjab Plain of the Punjab province of Pakistan. Jhelum is one of the oldest districts of Punjab. It was established on 23 March 1849.WEB,weblink Jhelum Report, Crprid.org, 2013-01-25, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120314172202weblink">weblink 2012-03-14, Jhelum is known for providing many soldiers to the British and later to the Pakistan armed forces due to which it is also known as 'city of soldiers' or 'land of martyrs and warriors'.NEWS,weblink BBC NEWS – South Asia – Rise of Pakistan's 'quiet man', bbc.co.uk, 17 June 2009, 27 November 2015, The district of Jhelum stretches from the river Jhelum almost to the Indus. Salt is quarried at the Mayo mine in the Salt Range. There are two coal mines in the district from which the North-Western railway obtains parts of its supply. These are the only coal mines in Punjab province which are in working condition. The chief center of the salt trade is Pind Dadan Khan. The district is crossed by the main line of the North-Western railway and also traversed along the south by a branch line.{{EB1911|inline=y|wstitle=Jhelum (town)|display=Jhelum|volume=15|page=413}} It is located in the north of the Punjab province, Jhelum district is bordered by Sargodha and Mandi Bahauddin to its south, Khushab to its southwest, Jhelum River to its south and east, Gujrat to its east, Chakwal to its west, Mirpur to its northeast, and Rawalpindi to its north.

Administration

The district of Jhelum, which covers an area of {{convert|3,587|km2}},weblink" title="archive.today/20080104125052weblink">Jhelum District Overview – Punjab Police Jhelum City is the main city of the district.

Tehsils

District is administratively divided into four tehsils
  1. Jhelum
  2. Sohawa
  3. Pind Dadan Khan
  4. Dina,Administrative Units of Pakistan {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101230183032weblink |date=30 December 2010 }}

Union Councils

which are divided into 53 Union Councils.Tehsils & Unions in the District of Jhelum -Government of Pakistan {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120209043508weblink |date=9 February 2012 }}

History

File:Tilla Jogian.jpg|thumb|left|220px|Tilla JogianTilla Jogian

Early history

The history of the district dates back to the Hindu mythological period of the Mahabharata. The epic represents the Salt Range as the refuge of the five Pandava brethren during the period of their exile, and every salient point in its scenery is connected with some legend of the national heroes. Modern research has fixed the site of the conflict between Alexander and Porus as within Jhelum district, though the exact spot at which the Macedonian king affected the passage of the Jhelum (or Hydaspes) has been hotly disputed. The Panhwars, Janjuas and Jats, who now hold the Salt Range and its northern plateau respectively, appear to have been the earliest inhabitants.WEB,weblink Imperial Gazetteer2 of India, Volume 14, page 152 – Imperial Gazetteer of India – Digital South Asia Library, uchicago.edu, 27 November 2015, The Janjuas, who appear to represent the oldest breed of Punjab and who still inhabit a large tract in the east of the District; while the Awans and Ghakars who cluster in the western plain, are apparently later invaders, the Janjuas were the dominant race during the before and early Muslim era and they long continued to retain their independence until the time of Sikh invaders, both in Jhelum itself and in the neighboring District of Rawalpindi.

Sultanate era

(File:Mosque in rural Punjab.JPG|thumb|right|250px|A masjid on Jhelum-Pind Dadan Khan Road)In 997 CE, Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi, took over the Ghaznavid dynasty empire established by his father, Sultan Sebuktegin, he conquered the Shahis in Kabul in 1005, and followed it by the conquests of northern Punjab region. The Delhi Sultanate and later Mughal Empire ruled the region. The Punjab region became predominantly Muslim due to missionary Sufi saints whose dargahs dot the landscape of Punjab region, which is also reflected in Jhelum.

British era

During British rule, Jhelum was a district of Rawalpindi Division, and was larger than the current district of Jhelum. On 1 April 1904, the tehsil of Talagang was detached from the District and incorporated with the new District of Attock. According to the Gazetteer of the Jhelum District of 1904, 88.7% of the population were Muslim.Gazetteer of the Jhelum District, 1904, Part 1, Page 129, Sang-e-Meel Publications.The old Jhelum district (minus Talagang) covered an area of 2,813 square miles (7285 km2) and included Chakwal Tehsil – it was bordered by Shahpur and Attock to the west, and by Rawalpindi to the north – the Jhelum River separated it from Kashmir to the north-east and from Gujrat and Shahpur to the south-east and south.

Independence

The predominantly Muslim population supported under the leadership of Raja Ghazanfar Ali khan of PD Khan Muslim League and Partition of India. After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, the minority Hindus and Sikhs migrated to India while the Muslim refugees from India settled in the Jhelum District.{{Citation needed|date = December 2014}}Since independence the agriculture and industry of Jhelum developed and forms part of the economy of Pakistan.{{Citation needed|date = December 2014}}

Topography

Jhelum City

The district capital, Jhelum City, is situated on the right and left bank of the Jhelum River, the left side of Jhelum is known as Sarai Alamgir and it also contains the Military College Jhelum (MCJ). The 16th-century Grand Trunk Road passes through the city. Jhelum city is near the site of the Battle of the Hydaspes between the armies of Alexander and Porus This battle took place a few miles downstream from the city center, along the river banks. Population of the Jhelum city (proper) is about 172,073Population of Jhelum City {{dead link|date=July 2021|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} (2009) and it is the 35th largest city of Pakistan by population. A cantonment was built during the British rule, which has grown up into a strong Garrison, with an Infantry Division commanded by a Major General.

River Jhelum

{{Update-EB|section=y|date=May 2024}}(File:Jhelum River Bridge.JPG|thumb|right|250px|The River Jhelum below the bridge beside Jhelum City)The river Jhelum is navigable throughout the district, which forms the south-eastern portion of a rugged Himalayan spur, extending between the Indus and Jhelum to the borders of the Sind Sagar Doab. Its scenery is very picturesque, although not of so wild a character as the mountain region of Rawalpindi to the north, and is lighted up in places by smiling patches of the cultivated valley. The backbone of the district is formed by the Salt Range, a treble line of parallel hills running in three long forks from east to west throughout its whole breadth.The range rises in precipices, broken by gorges, clothed with brushwood, and traversed by streams which are at first clear but become impregnated with the saline matter over which they pass. Between the line of hills lies a table-land, in which the small lake of Kallar Kahar nestles amongst the minor ridges. North of the Salt Range, the country extends upwards in an elevated plateau, diversified by a number of ravines and fissures, until it loses itself in tangled masses of Rawalpindi mountains. In this rugged tract, cultivation is rare and difficult, the soil being choked with saline matter. At the foot of the Salt Range, however, a small strip of level soil lies along the banks of the Jhelum and is dotted with prosperous villages.The drainage of the district is determined by a low central watershed running north and south at right angles to the Salt Range. The waters of the western portion find their way into the Sohan, and finally into the Indus; those of the opposite slope collect themselves into small torrents and empty themselves into the Jhelum River.

Khewra Salt Mine

File:SaltMosque.JPG|thumb|A small masjidmasjidThe Khewra Salt Mine (or Mayo Salt Mine) is located in Khewra, north of Pind Dadan Khan,BOOK, O.H.K. Spate, Andrew T.A. Learmonth, B.H. Farmer, India, Pakistan and Ceylon: The Regions, Methuen Publishing Ltd, 978-0-416-75530-5, 502, 13 July 1972,weblink 3 April 2012, an administrative subdivision of Jhelum District, which rises from the Indo-Gangetic Plain.JOURNAL, Weller, J. Marvyn, The Cenozoic History of the Northwest Punjab, The Journal of Geology, 36, 4, 362–375, Chicago Journals, 30055696, 1928, 10.1086/623522, 1928JG.....36..362W, 129105623, It is Pakistan's largest and oldest salt mineBOOK, Stanley J. Lefond, Handbook of World Salt Resources,weblink 3 April 2012, 1st, 1 January 1969, Springer, 978-0-306-30315-9, 347, and the world's second largest.BOOK, Camerapix, Spectrum Guide to Pakistan, Interlink Books, 978-1-56656-240-9, 150, July 1998,weblink 8 April 2012, BOOK, Masud ul Hasan, Short encyclopaedia of Pakistan, Ferozsons, B007EU8QHS, 118, 1st, 1975,weblink 8 April 2012, It is a major tourist attraction, drawing up to 40,000 visitors a year.BOOK, Sarah Nabruq, Masquerade, 11 August 2014, AuthorHouse, 9781496988218, 43, Its history dates back to its discovery by Alexander's troops in 320 BC, but it started trading in the Mughal era.BOOK, Sarina Singh, Lindsay Brown, Lindsay Brown, Rodney Cocks, John Mock, Lonely Planet Pakistan and the Karakoram Highway,weblink 3 April 2012, 7th, 1 May 2008, Lonely Planet, 978-1-74104-542-0, 138, The main tunnel at ground level was developed by Dr. H. Warth, a mining engineer, in 1872 during British rule. After independence, the Pakistan Mineral Development Corporation took over the mine, which still remains the largest source of salt in the country, producing more than 350,000 tons per annumNEWS, Pennington, Matthew, Pakistan salt mined old-fashioned way mine,weblink 8 April 2012, The Seattle Times, 25 January 2005, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120725072022weblink">weblink 25 July 2012, of about 99% pure halite.Estimates of the reserves of salt in the mine vary from 82 million tons to 600 million tons.

Tilla Jogian

(File:Tilla Jogian.jpg|thumb|right|Tilla Jogian)Tilla Jogian is the highest peak in the Eastern Salt Range. At 975 meters (3200 ft) above sea level, it is about 25 km to the west of Jhelum City and 10 km west of the model village of Khukha. The view from the top of Tilla is highly rewarding. Rohtas Fort is located to the east of Tilla Jogian at a distance of about 7 km from Dina, a rapidly expanding town on the Grand Trunk Road.

Rohtas Fort

Rohtas Fort (Qila Rohtas) is a historical garrison fort located near the city of Jhelum. It was built by Raja Todar Mal, under the orders of the Afghan king Sher Shah Suri, to subdue the rebellious tribes of the northern Punjab region, in the 16th century. This fort is about 4 km in circumference. The Rohtas fort was built to crush the local Gakhar tribes of Potohar, who rebelled against the Sur dynasty after the Mughal emperor Humayun was ousted by the former.It took eight years to build the fort, it was captured by Mughal emperor Humayun in 1555.BOOK,weblink registration, 77, A Brief History of Pakistan, Infobase Publishing, 27 November 2015, 9780816061846, Wynbrandt, James, 2009, Nader Shah, the Turkic ruler of Persia, Afghan ruler Ahmed Shah Abdali and the Maratha army also camped here during their respective campaigns in the Punjab region.{{citation needed|date=January 2016}} Rohtas was also occasionally used for administrative purposes by Maharaja Ranjit Singh of the Sikh Empire, after he captured it in 1825.BOOK,weblink Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707–1813, 27 November 2015, 9781932705546, Mehta, Jaswant Lal, 2005-01-01, Sterling Publishers Pvt., WEB,weblink Rohtas fort — the treasure of Potohar, 18 September 2011, The Express Tribune, 27 November 2015,

Agriculture

{{unreferenced section|date=January 2012}}Jhelum District has a total area of {{convert|858767|acre|km2}}, out of which {{convert|316815|acre|km2}} are cultivated. The area is located on the eastern part of Potohar upland along with River Jhelum.Agriculture in the District Jhelum depends mainly on rainfall. The average rainfall of the area varies from 20 to {{convert|40|in|mm}}. About three-fourths of this precipitation is received in monsoon season and the remaining one-fourth is received during the rest of the year. The irrigated area at present is limited but the emphasis on the construction of small dams is gradually increasing. Wheat remains the main crop.In Tehsil P.D. Khan, salt is the predominant feature that is spoiling the rich agricultural land day by day. There is a long strip of very rich and virgin soil along the river which could be made a paradise of citrus plantation by drip irrigation if the local people are motivated and the Government of Punjab expressed some interest in it.{{Citation needed|date=November 2015}}

Sports

{{unreferenced section|date=January 2012}}(File:Tent pegging champion in Jhelum.jpg|thumb|The fine horse and riders of the Jhelum tract)File:Neza Bazi.jpg|thumb|Tent peggingTent peggingThe main sports of the area are centred on agricultural pursuits and excellence and include bugdar (stone) lifting by young men. A localised version of kabaddi, bull races centered on a Persian water wheel at the villages of Kantrili, Nathwala, and Jada near the suburban town of Kala Gujran. Tent pegging also known as neza bazi which indicates the region's prowess during war and battle and hence the city has attributed the name of the land of martyrs and warriors. Zamir Jaffri Cricket Stadium near Suleiman Park is named after Zamir Jafri, a poet from Jhelum. Hockey is another sport that is common in Jhelum.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

Flora and fauna

{{unreferenced section|date=January 2012}}Vegetation of the forests of Jhelum Forest Division is dry, deciduous shrub type, phulai, Kahu (wild olive), and sanatha are the main species. The stocking, on the whole, is poor and the forests are open. Vegetation is poor on sandstone and red marl. The southern slopes are often devoid of vegetation while northwestern slopes carry good forests. The forests of Jhelum Forests Division are burdened with the right of grazing, browsing, and firewood. Under settlement out of total area {{convert|93566|acre|km2}} only {{convert|5468|acre|km2}} about (45%) are right free. The remaining 55% are open to grazing.The fauna of the district is mostly indigenous restricted, like the vegetation, but similarly varied and interesting. The rugged and rough terrain, low rainfall, the scantly cover of vegetation, and the burning passions of the increasing number of hunters, all have their share in limiting the animal kingdom in the district. The river offers a better environment than elsewhere though the hills support more interesting wildlife. Urial (an animal from a deer family) and chinckara are spot aids while wild boar are found in the Salt Range. Wolves, foxes, and wild cats are also found. Hare is fairly common. Chikor grey and black partridge are also found in the parts of the district. Migratory ducks like teal pintail and mallard and some geese visit during winter.

Climate

The climate of the tract is extreme. In winter it is very cold and summer is very hot. The average rainfall varies from 48 to 69 m.m per annum which is much below the required quantity but in the rainy season, the water torrents flow from north to the river Jhelum at a very fast speed and cause damages to the crops, bridges, roads, and are responsible for the soil erosion in the District.Over the years, global climate change has affected Jhelum as well as any other place on Earth and below comparison charts from Weatherbase show the difference in climate between 2008 and 2015:{{Weather box|location = Jhelum, Pakistan|metric first = Yes|single line = Yes|Jan high C = 20|Feb high C = 22|Mar high C = 27|Apr high C = 33|Jul high C = 36|Aug high C = 34|Sep high C = 35|Oct high C = 33|Nov high C = 28|Dec high C = 21|Jan high F = 68|Feb high F = 72|Mar high F = 81|Apr high F = 91|May high F = 100|Jun high F = 104|Jul high F = 97|Aug high F = 93|Sep high F = 95|Oct high F = 91|Nov high F = 82|Dec high F = 70|year high C = 31|year high F = 87|Jan low C = 5|Feb low C = 8|Mar low C = 12|Apr low C = 18|May low C = 22|Jun low C = 26|Aug low C = 25|Sep low C = 23|Oct low C = 17|Nov low C = 10|Dec low C = 6|Jan low F = 41|Feb low F = 46|Mar low F = 54|Apr low F = 64|May low F = 72|Jun low F = 79|Jul low F = 79|Aug low F = 77|Sep low F = 73|Oct low F = 63|Nov low F = 50|Dec low F = 43|year low C = 16|year low F = 62|Jan precipitation mm = 34|Feb precipitation mm = 50|Mar precipitation mm = 60|Apr precipitation mm = 36|May precipitation mm = 32|Jun precipitation mm = 52|Jul precipitation mm = 237|Aug precipitation mm = 221|Sep precipitation mm = 78|Oct precipitation mm = 12|Nov precipitation mm = 10|Dec precipitation mm = 30|Jan precipitation inch = 1.3|Feb precipitation inch = 2|Mar precipitation inch = 2.4|Apr precipitation inch = 1.4|May precipitation inch = 1|Jun precipitation inch = 2|Jul precipitation inch = 9.3|Aug precipitation inch = 8.7|Sep precipitation inch = 3.1|Oct precipitation inch = 0.5|Nov precipitation inch = 0.4|Dec precipitation inch = 1.2|year precipitation cm = 85.2|year precipitation mm = |year precipitation inch = 32.2|source 1 = Weatherbase 2008HTTP://WWW.WEATHERBASE.COM/WEATHER/WEATHER.PHP3?S=415980&REFER=&UNITS=METRIC >TITLE =WEATHERBASE: HISTORICAL WEATHER FOR JHELUM, PAKISTAN YEAR=2008, |date=August 2010}}{{Weather box|location = Jhelum, Pakistan|metric first = Yes|single line = Yes|Jan high C = 19|Feb high C = 21|Mar high C = 27|Apr high C = 33|May high C = 38|Jun high C = 40|Jul high C = 36|Aug high C = 34|Sep high C = 34|Oct high C = 33|Nov high C = 27|Dec high C = 21|Jan high F = 66|Feb high F = 69|Mar high F = 80|Apr high F = 91|May high F = 100|Jun high F = 104|Jul high F = 96|Aug high F = 93|Sep high F = 93|Oct high F = 91|Nov high F = 80|Dec high F = 69|year high C = 30|year high F = 86|Jan low C = 4|Feb low C = 7|Mar low C = 12|Apr low C = 17|May low C = 22|Jun low C = 26|Jul low C = 26|Aug low C = 25|Sep low C = 23|Oct low C = 16|Nov low C = 9|Dec low C = 5|Jan low F = 39|Feb low F = 44|Mar low F = 53|Apr low F = 62|May low F = 71|Jun low F = 78|Jul low F = 78|Aug low F = 77|Sep low F = 73|Oct low F = 60|Nov low F = 48|Dec low F = 41|year low C = 16|year low F = 60|Jan precipitation mm = 35|Feb precipitation mm = 46|Mar precipitation mm = 45|Apr precipitation mm = 32|May precipitation mm = 27|Jun precipitation mm = 51|Jul precipitation mm = 223|Aug precipitation mm = 225|Sep precipitation mm = 79|Oct precipitation mm = 18|Nov precipitation mm = 12|Dec precipitation mm = 25|Jan precipitation inch = 1.4|Feb precipitation inch = 1.8|Mar precipitation inch = 1.8|Apr precipitation inch = 1.2|May precipitation inch = 1|Jun precipitation inch = 2|Jul precipitation inch = 8.8|Aug precipitation inch = 8.9|Sep precipitation inch = 3.1|Oct precipitation inch = 0.7|Nov precipitation inch = 0.5|Dec precipitation inch = 1|year precipitation cm = 81.8|year precipitation mm = |year precipitation inch = 32.2|source 1 = Weatherbase 2015|date=September 2015}}

Demographics

At the time of the 2017 census, Jhelum district had 64,319 households and a population of 1,222,403. Jhelum had a sex ratio of 1032 females per 1000 males and a literacy rate of 78.94% - 86.05% for males and 72.21% for females. 354,297 (28.98%) lived in urban areas. 270,652 (22.14%) were under 10 years of age.WEB, District Wise Results / Tables (Census - 2017),weblink www.pbscensus.gov.pk, Pakistan Bureau of Statistics,

Religion

{{bar box|title=Religion in Jhelum district (2017)|titlebar=#Fcd116|left1=Religion|right1=Percent|float = right|bars={{bar percent|Islam|green|98.92}}{{bar percent|Christianity|dodgerblue|1.00}}{{bar percent|Other or not stated|black|0.08}}}}As per the 2017 census Muslims were the predominant religious group with 98.92% while Christians were 1.00% of the population.{| class="wikitable sortable"|+ Religious groups in Jhelum District (British Punjab province era)! rowspan="2" |Religiousgroup! colspan="2" |1901WEB,weblink saoa.crl.25363739, 23 March 2024, Census of India 1901. [Vol. 17A]. Imperial tables, I-VIII, X-XV, XVII and XVIII for the Punjab, with the native states under the political control of the Punjab Government, and for the North-west Frontier Province., 1901, 34, ! colspan="2" |1911WEB,weblink saoa.crl.25393788, 23 March 2024, Census of India 1911. Vol. 14, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables., 1911, 27, WEB,weblink 23 March 2024, Census Of India 1911 Punjab Vol XIV Part II, 1911, 27, Kaul, Harikishan, ! colspan="2" |1921WEB,weblink saoa.crl.25430165, 23 March 2024, Census of India 1921. Vol. 15, Punjab and Delhi. Pt. 2, Tables., 1921, 29, ! colspan="2" |1931WEB,weblink saoa.crl.25793242, 23 March 2024, Census of India 1931. Vol. 17, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables., 1931, 277, ! colspan="2" |1941WEB,weblink saoa.crl.28215541, 23 March 2024, Census of India, 1941. Vol. 6, Punjab, 1941, 42, !{{abbr|Pop.|Population}}!{{Abbr|%|percentage}}!{{abbr|Pop.|Population}}!{{Abbr|%|percentage}}!{{abbr|Pop.|Population}}!{{Abbr|%|percentage}}!{{abbr|Pop.|Population}}!{{Abbr|%|percentage}}!{{abbr|Pop.|Population}}!{{Abbr|%|percentage}}! Islam (File:Star and Crescent.svg|15px)| 526,725 526725 2 }}| 452,260 452260 2 }}| 422,979 422979 2 }}| 482,097 482097 2 }}| 563,033 563033 2 }}! Hinduism (File:Om.svg|15px){{efn|name=ad-dharmi|1931-1941: Including Ad-Dharmis}}| 51,801 51801 2 }}| 34,261 34261 2 }}| 34,837 34837 2 }}| 36,068 36068 2 }}| 40,888 40888 2 }}! Sikhism (File:Khanda.svg|15px)| 15,070 15070 2 }}| 24,436 24436 2 }}| 18,626 18626 2 }}| 22,030 22030 2 }}| 24,680 24680 2 }}! Christianity (File:Christian cross.svg|15px)| 271 271 2 }}| 450 450 2 }}| 430 430 2 }}| 672 672 2 }}| 893 893 2 }}! Jainism (File:Jain_Prateek_Chihna.svg|15px)| 151 151 2 }}| 163 163 2 }}| 195 195 2 }}| 209 209 2 }}| 159 159 2 }}! Zoroastrianism (File:Faravahar.svg|15px)| 0 0 2 }}| 4 4 2 }}| 1 1 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 3 3 2 }}! Judaism (File:Star_of_David.svg|15px)| 0 0 2 }}| 1 1 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}! Buddhism (File:Dharma_Wheel_(2).svg|15px)| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 2 2 2 }}! Others| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}| 0 0 2 }}! Total population! 594,018! {{Percentage | 594018 | 594018 | 2 }}! 511,575! {{Percentage | 511575 | 511575 | 2 }}! 477,068! {{Percentage | 477068 | 477068 | 2 }}! 541,076! {{Percentage | 541076 | 541076 | 2 }}! 629,658! {{Percentage | 629658 | 629658 | 2 }} class="sortbottom" {{smallBritish Punjab province era district borders are not an exact match in the present-day due to various bifurcations to district borders — which since created new districts — throughout the historic Punjab Province (British India)>Punjab Province region during the post-independence era that have taken into account population increases.}}

Language

{{Pie chart|thumb = left|caption = Languages of Jhelum district (2017)Punjabi language>Punjabi color1 = redvalue2 = 7.80 |color2 = plumPashto >value3 = 2.48 |color3 = lightgreenUrdu >value4 = 2.28 |color4 = greenvalue5 = 0.90 |color5 = grey}}At the time of the 2017 Census of Pakistan, 86.54% of the population spoke Punjabi, 2.48% Pashto and 2.28% Urdu as their first language. 7.80% of the population spoke languages classified as 'Others'. The dialects of Punjabi spoken here are Potohari and Majhi.

Development organizations

Rehmat Welfare Foundation Jhelum is a charity project working for poor and needy people of fifty-mile area including Jhelum which cannot afford the expenses of their daily life and very expensive general medical and kidney dialysis treatment.About Rehmat Foundation. RehmatFoundation. Retrieved on 2013-07-12.Civil Society Human and Institutional Development ProgramWEB,weblink Civil Society Human and Institutional Development Programme, chip-pk.org, 27 November 2015, (CHIP) is working in Sohawa Tehsil since 2004, with its field office in the area CHIP has successfully mobilized community people to get organize into Community Based Organizations, Community Citizen Boards and Women Organizations. Further, CHIP has duly built the capacity of these local entities to take new initiatives. These community-level organizations, in collaborative partnerships with CHIP, are working on several development projects. The main focus of these projects is to eliminate illiteracy from villages of Sohawa especially those where government education structure does not exist, make clean drinking water available, provide technical support to the local farmers, raise skill development opportunities for women, and include them in the decision-making process, aiding social inclusion, so as to better represent the communities they live in. The local community-level organizations developed by CHIP are making successful efforts in implementing development projects by deriving funds from local government bodies.

Universities, colleges and schools

{{directory|section|date=October 2020}}{{Clear}}{{div col|colwidth=30em}} {{Div col end}}

Notable people

See also

Villages in Jhelum District

{{div col|colwidth=20em}} {{div col end}}

References

{{Reflist}}{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}{{notelist}}

External links

{{Commons category}} {{Neighbourhoods of Jhelum}}{{Districts of Punjab (Pakistan)}}{{Authority control}}{{Coord|32|56|N|73|44|E|type:adm2nd_source:itwiki|display=title}}

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