(literally “the land of five rivers”), a natural and historical region in South Asia, in India and Pakistan. Punjab occupies the northern part of the Indo-Gangetic Plain, which is composed primarily of alluvium. In the west is the sandy Thar Desert. Punjab is drained by the Sutlej, Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, and Beas rivers, which converge to form the Panjnad River, a left tributary of the Indus. The prevailing elevation is from 150 to 350 m, with a gentle gradient (1°-2°). The climate is dry and warm, with sharp drops in temperature; January temperatures range from 13° to 16°C, and the average May temperature is approximately 35°C. Annual precipitation in the west totals approximately 150 mm, and in the east 700 mm; maximum precipitation occurs during the summer monsoon season. The rivers overflow annually and often change their courses. The natural vegetation, desert-savanna with thorny shrubs, survives primarily in the watershed areas. Improved landscapes predominate on 70 to 90 percent of the territory. Punjab has a broad network of irrigation canals. The major cities are Lahore (Pakistan) and Amritsar (India).
L. I. KURAKOVA
In the third through first half of the second millennium B.C., Punjab was included in the territory of one of the world’s oldest civilizations, the Harappa civilization (also Indus or Proto-Indus). Beginning in the second half of the second millennium B.C., the region was gradually settled by Aryan tribes, advancing from the west and northwest and mixing with the local inhabitants, thus forming the Indo-Aryan peoples and tribes, including the Madra, Jartika, and Kekaya. In the late sixth century B.C., a large part of Punjab was included in the ancient Persian Achaemenid state. From 327 to 325 B.C. the lands up to the Hyphasis (Beas) River were captured by Alexander the Great, after whose death Punjab became part of the ancient Indian Maurya empire. From the late second century B.C. to the mid-sixth century A.D., Punjab was successively ruled by the Greeks, the Kushans, the Guptas, and the Ephtalite Huns. After the collapse of the last (567), several small states governed by local rulers arose.
Beginning in the seventh century, Punjab became the object of conquest by the governors-general of the Umayyad Caliphate, which became established in Sind and in what is now Afghanistan. Beginning in the second half of the tenth century, it was subject to invasions by the Muslim emirs of Ghazni. In the early 11th century, it became part of the Ghaznavid state, the rulers of which moved their capital to Lahore. After the late 12th century, Punjab was part of the Ghurid state, the Sultanate of Delhi, and the Mogul Empire. The dominance of Muslim rulers led to the general spread of Islam throughout Punjab.
The fall of the Mogul Empire cleared the way in Punjab for the Iranian conqueror Nadir Shah (1736–47) and then for the Afghanistan shahs of the Durrani dynasty, who added the region to their possessions. The Sikh movement, which developed in Punjab in the early 16th century, led to the formation in the 1760’s of several independent Sikh principalities. In the early 19th century, all the Punjab lands west of the Sutlej River were united into a single independent Punjab state by Ranjit Singh, who ruled from 1799 to 1839. As a result of the Sikh Wars (1845–46 and 1848–49), Punjab was conquered by the British East India Company and divided into Punjab Province and 43 small principalities. In August 1947, with the formation of the dominions of India and Pakistan, Punjab was divided between the two states according to the religious composition of the population—the areas inhabited primarily by Muslims went to Pakistan, and those inhabited primarily by Sikhs and Hindus to India.
IU. V. GANKOVSKII
a state in northwestern India, in the basin of the Sutlej River, a tributary of the Indus. Area, 50,000 sq km. Population, 13.5 million (1971). The administrative center is Chandigarh.
The economy of the state is based on agriculture, and about half of the arable land is irrigated by canals. The main food crops are wheat (approximately 25 percent of India’s total harvest), legumes, barley, corn, and potatoes. Rice is grown on irrigated land. The state also produces 20 percent of India’s cotton, primarily medium-fiber varieties, and about 10 percent of its sugarcane. There are small tea plantations in the Kangra Valley. Livestock raising is also important; the state has about 6 million cattle and more than 1 million sheep and goats.
The leading industries are textiles and food processing, chiefly sugar and tea. The textile centers of Amritsar and Ludhiana produce cotton, wool, and silk cloth. Agricultural implements and sports goods are manufactured at Jullundur. Other enterprises include bicycle assembly plants, a paper factory, cement works, and a heavy water and chemical fertilizer plant (Nangal). Handicrafts include blankets, rugs, wooden articles, and shoes. The Bhakra-Nangal river-valley project is extremely important for the state’s economy.
O. B. OSKOLKOVA
a province in northeastern Pakistan, in the basin of the Indus River and its tributaries (Chenab). Area, 182,000 sq km. Population, 37.4 million (1972). The administrative center is Lahore.
Punjab is Pakistan’s most highly developed region. The mainstay of the economy is irrigated agriculture, although industry is also well developed. The province accounts for 25 percent of Pakistan’s territory and 57.6 percent of its population. Punjab produces more than 77 percent of the nation’s wheat, 43 percent of its rice, and 72 percent of its cotton and sugarcane, as well as 45 percent of its industrial output. Of the province’s roughly 6.5 million hectares of agricultural land, about 5 million hectares are irrigated. There is an extensive network of irrigation canals. The chief crops are wheat (37 percent of the province’s sown area), gram (13 percent), bajra (12 percent), rice (5 percent), jowar, corn, cotton, sugarcane, and oilseeds. Livestock, raised mostly in the north and northwest, includes 9 million sheep and 4 million goats.
The province’s extractive industries produce coal, antimony, rock salt, and petroleum. The leading industries are food processing, textiles, and other light industries. The cotton industry is concentrated in Lyallpur and Multan. Also important are machine building, metalworking (primarily in Lahore and its suburbs), and the manufacture of chemicals and cement. Handicrafts include metal and pottery household articles and art objects carved from ivory.