HERITAGE: THE RUINED FORTS OF KHUZDAR
Described as Choarene by Greek historians, Khuzdar has played a significant role in the history of Balochistan. The city of Khuzdar is situated in a narrow, fertile, well-watered and highly cultivated valley in the Jhalawan area of Balochistan. The original inhabitants of Jhalawan known as Jats called it Kohiar. Khuzdar appears as Chiryan on the 1680 William Baffin and the 1740 Seutter maps of India and as Kordar on the 1715 H. Moll geographer map of India.
In the seventh century AD, when Arab troops conquered the region, Khuzdar came under the influence of Islam. The word Khuzdar has been derived from two Persian words qaz and dar meaning the place of silk. However, according to Sultan Ahmed Shahwani, the station director of Radio Pakistan Khuzdar, Khuz is an Arabic word which means ‘take firmly’ or ‘retain forever’ while dar means place. According to research by the late Maulana Muhammad Din Mareez Hijazi, a local religious scholar, Arabs renamed the city from Qazdar to Khuzdar for its beauty. Shah Abdul Latif Bhitai who travelled through Nal, Khuzdar and Qalat, praises the beauty of Jhau Valley, Khuzdar, in Shah Jo Risalo.
Arab geographer Ibn-i-Hawqal Al Baghdadi (979 AD) writes that “The city of Khuzdar was the capital of Tooran. It was located near the bank of a river. The fort was in the middle of the city, and the surrounding areas were beautiful, with gardens, orchards and other agricultural locations.” (Ancient Pakistan: Vol XXVI, 2015). In 986 AD, Mueen Bin Ahmed, an Arab by origin was the governor of Khuzdar. The city was divided into two parts. One part was used for the governor’s residence while the other part was allocated for general public and merchants. A route from Iran through north-west Balochistan connected Kalat, Khuzdar, Qandabil and Multan. A caravan route also connected Khuzdar with Sehwan in Sindh. When the Arab dynasty declined, Abu Mansoor Nasir-ul-Din Sabuktigin, the founder of the Ghaznavid dynasty (977-997) conquered Khuzdar from the Arabs.
The remains of Balochistan’s second biggest city’s four forts tell a tale of its rich history
There are ruins of four forts in Khuzdar, namely the Kohiar Fort, the Halwai Peak Fort, the Shahi Bagh Fort and Khan Khudadad Khan Fort.
The Kohiar Fort of Khuzdar, located on the Meeri Buth hilltop in Union Council Obhan, was constructed by the Sassanid governors of Sindh with stone and mud, and covered an area of approximately 10 acres, from where the entire city of Khuzdar was clearly visible. The walls were three feet wide which can still be seen. The fort was repaired under the patronage of the Arab governors.
With the passage of time, the fort was destroyed to protect the area, according to the ‘Balochistan District Gazetteer Series, Jhalawan, (1907)’, and a new strong fort was built on Halwai, a mountain peak in the neighbourhood of the city. It later came to be known as the Halwai Peak Fort as it overlooked the valley now known as Halwai. This fort was destroyed by an earthquake and a new fort was built to protect the city walls in the present day Shahi Bagh area.