While the original was lost over time, the Persian version — which was used by the learned Mirza Kalich Beg for his English translation — is still extant.
Now, the Chachnama very categorically tells us that after the fall of Debal, Bin Qasim “ordered the battering rams to be put in boats and taken to the fort of Nerun.” The boat journey from Debal, the famous port of Sindh from the middle of the second millennium BCE, would have entailed a short coasting sail and then up the nearest of the several arms of the Indus in the delta. From the deltaic branch, the fleet would have gone into a major arm of the river and fetched up under the walls of Nerunkot or Hyderabad where the river runs to this day. It needs to be noted that there is no riverine connection between Debal and Rannikot.
Nor, too, is there any description of hauling heavy siege equipment across the desert between Debal and Rannikot. Here we have Jaubat Salmi, the ballista [a projectile weapon somewhat like a mix between a catapult and crossbow] champion who had earlier knocked down the flagpole of Debal, telling us that the distance from Debal to Nerunkot was “about 25 leagues.” A league being 5.5km, this comes to about 135km. In order to keep water at hand, the army would not have marched in a straight line, but along the river. In which case, this would be the distance between the two towns. To Rannikot, if we believe that to be Nerun, the distance from Debal (Bhambore) is about 190km.
According to the measurements of those who took part in the invasion and the Arab historians who came two centuries after them, there is no way we can conclude that Rannikot is the ancient Nerun. However, where one cannot quarrel with Abro is his estimation of the great age of the fortification. He takes immense pains to explore the farthest reaches of the fort and photograph decaying portions that reveal several layers of repair and upgradation. Clearly, the original wall — built perhaps 2,000 years ago — was a mud, brick and clay structure that was added to over the centuries.
One may not agree with Abro’s treatise, but he does tantalise with his scholarship. He raises some essential issues and, above all, brings Rannikot into focus. The fort is a priceless piece of Sindhi heritage and needs immediate notice and care.
With some reservation I say that this book is a treat on two accounts: the superb photography and the comprehensive historical background. My reservation is of course that, because of the incorrect naming of Rannikot, it has altered one little piece of Sindhi geography and history by corrupting the name.
The reviewer is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and author of nine books on travel
Ranikot: the Wall of Sindh
By Badar Abro
Endowment Fund Trust for Preservation of
the Heritage of Sindh, Karachi
ISBN: 978-9699860164
321pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, October 6th, 2019