Settlements in Nagar
Settlements in Nagar
Settlements in Nagar
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Ethnographical Field-Research on the History and
Culture of Nager: Some Preliminary Remarks on the
Process of Settlement*
by
Jürgen Frembgen
St. Augustin
Introduction
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ETHNOGRAPHICAL FIELD-RESEARCH 23
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24 JÜRGEN FREMBGEN
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ETHNOGRAPHICAL FIELD-RESEARCH 25
in the last 200 years. The areas of Gor and Chilas as the original
home of the oldest Burushaski-speaking clans of Nager refer to the
hypothesis of K. Jettmar that the inhabitants of a part of Bolor
could have lived in the mentioned area and were probably the
ancestors of the Burusho.4 Nevertheless, we don't know anything
about the language of the people of Bolor and of the first settlers in
Nager.
As a date for the immigration of the first clans now living in
Nager, in my opinion, the centuries at the turn of first to second
millennium A. D. can be estimated. The shortage of land and wa-
ter and the population-increase were mentioned as explanation for
leaving Gor and other areas. Could this have been a consequence
of the Shin-migration from the south? The successors of later im-
migrants point sometimes to the fact that they had to flee from
cruel kings with whom they had quarrels.
Before taking land in Nager the ancestors carefully tested the
soil and settled where it was good with regard to water resources.
In this respect the conditions were apparently favourable in
Hopar, but the next downward areas of the recent Uyum Nager
and Sumaiyar had enough water supply, too. The founders of clans
and villages are often connected by name with the construction of
canals. If a family leaves its original home the brothers mostly
separated and migrated to different areas.
As already mentioned some clans came from Baltistan via
Shigar and Hispar. Above all the villages of Sumaiyar and Hispar
were settled in an early period by people from Baltistan. Since the
16th century, Balti and Shina-speaking Dards came as servants in
the bridal parties of different princesses from Baltistan: and that
the Galsiringkuts (Shaiyar), Kasirkuts (Uyum Nager, Askurdas),
Kangkongkuts (Uyum Nager), Malikuts (Uyum Nager) and in-
habitants of Tsaia (= village in Uyum Nager). Further some clans
claim to have migrated to Nager at the time of Tham Kamal Khan
with a group of saints from Kashmir via Baltistan and Hispar. For
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26 JÜRGEN FREMBGEN
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ETHNOGRAPHICAL FIELD-RESEARCH 27
villages. Mythological tales and legends finally show how the olden
times gain a form in the historical awareness of the Nagerkuts.7
The present Mir Shaukat Ali Khan ruled as Tham (king) of
Nager from 1940 to 1972. His father Mohammad Ali Khan, the real
heir of the throne and oldest son of Sikandar Khan, died already in
1922. Sikandar Khan ruled from 1905 to 1940 being installed by the
British officers of the Gilgit Agency, but hold power already since
1892 due to a serious disease of his father Tham Zafar Khan. He
had fought in 1891 on the British side during the Hunza/Nager-
Campaign against his brother Azur Khan II. (Uzr Khan). This son
of Tham Zafar Khan ruled from 1882 until the British conquest and
killed two of his rival brothers (Gauritham and Ding Malik). The
heir of Zafar Khan, his oldest son Mohammad Khan, usurped the
power of the small state in 1880 yet during the lifetime of his
father and was displaced by Azur Khan II. Zafar Khan was prob-
ably the Tham ruling for the longest period in Nager namely from
1839 to 1880 and (only officially) from 1882 to 1904. When he was a
small child and could not yet rule after the death of his father Alif
Khan there was a struggle for power. Habbi Khan (Habib Khan),
the younger brother of Azur Khan I., usurped the throne by the
help of the Musharkuts. But after nearly four years he was killed
by Wazir Holo (Qhutayating). It is said that Rahim Khan (a son of
Alif Khan) and even Tahir Shah (the later king of Gilgit) ruled for a
short time after the death of Habbi Khan. For Alif Khan (ruling
approximately from 1805 to 1833) and his father Azur Khan I.
(about 1780-1802) we should estimate a ruling-period of nearly 20
or 30 years. According to the statements of some informants Hab-
bi Khan had ruled for three years after the death of his brother
Azur Khan I. Babur, the father of Azur Khan I., is said to have
ruled only for ten or twenty years (about 1765-1780). Before him
Firduz Shah, the second son of Kamal Khan, should have been
king for about three years (about 1762-1765) after being sent back
from Gilgit. His brother Rahim Shah ruled approximately in
Nager since 1720. For Kamal Khan who is very famous for pro-
moting Islam in Nager numerous informants estimate a ruling-
period of nearly 60 years (about 1660-1720). The genealogical list
gives the following names for the kings between Kamal Khan and
7 Frembgen forthcoming.
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28 JÜRGEN FREMBGEN
One of the few clans with a high status, the Musharkuts, migrated
to Nager together with Moghlot who was a descendant of the
Trakhanating of Gilgit. In songs of praise it is mentioned that
Muko, the grandson of Mushar, and foster-father as well as later
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ETHNOGRAPHICAL FIELD-RESEARCH 29
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30 JÜRGEN FREMBGEN
Under the reign of Tham Azur Khan I. and later in the time of his
son Alif Khan there was a remarkable population-increase in the
first decades of the 19th century amongst other things evoked by
the immigration of kinship groups and the foundation of new vil-
lages was becoming necessary. The hard work of colonization was
not always voluntary done but sometimes rather a form of punish-
ment by the king. Azur Khan I. made propaganda for settling in
Nager by sending letters outside the valley. By the way the arri-
val of new farmers meant a considerable increase in taxes for the
Tham. In Uyum Nager the khan of Thol and the little hamlet of
Manal-guts-das were built; in Sumaiyar the fortified villages of
Jator-khan, Rashphari and Dalto were settled. Further Azur
Khan I. ordered the extension of the famous Istakh-canal from
Sumaiyar down the valley which made it possible to found the new
village of Askurdas. Maltash-khan as the oldest part of Askurdas
was first settled by Musharkuts, Potikuts and Boroshkuts. Most of
the 17 descent groups now living in Askurdas came from Uyum
Nager during the reign of Tham Zafar Khan. The khan of Shaiyar
was built under the reign of Tham Alif Khan and also settled
predominantly by farmers from Uyum Nager. Today the popula-
tion of Shaiyar consists of 11 kinship groups. Like in Askurdas and
other newly founded villages it is inhabited by lineages which
separated from their clans to find a sufficient subsistence.
In the time of Tham Zafar Khan many farmers from Hopar and
Uyum Nager settled in the lower villages. Raja Azur Khan II.
allowed the expulsion of Boroshkuts from Hopar to Uyum Nager
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ETHNOGRAPHICAL FIELD-RESEARCH 31
and Chalt because his foster-father Ajdaro and whose son Moham-
mad Shah, the later commanding officer in the Hunza/Nager-Cam-
paign of 1891, were adopted by this clan. After the conquest of
Nager by the combined British/Dogra-forces and during the fol-
lowing period of pacification it was Sikandar Khan who allowed the
people to leave the Nager-khan and to return to their original clan-
quarters in Uyum Nager. A second important reason was the fact
that the khan was threatened of demolition due to its position on a
cliff which collapsed during the next years. Further the hamlets of
Shahman and Payalokushal were settled in the area of this main
village. In Askurdas and Shaiyar farmsteads were built for the
first time outside the khan but still in an compact way as a quarter
and sometimes as detached houses only in the time of Mir Shaukat
Ali Khan. Farmers from Hopar, Uyum Nager and Askurdas mi-
grated to the small unfortified hamlet of Hakuchar which is situ-
ated between Shaiyar and Pheker. It was first settled during the
reign of Tham Zafar Khan and always threatened by attacks from
the Hunzukuts. Shortly after the battle of Nilt in 1891 Sikandar
Khan ordered the building of canals in Lower-Nager and the con-
struction of the new villages of Sikandarabad, Tongdas, Hupai
(near Thol) and Chalt (some parts). In the area of Sumaiyar a part
of the population could leave the overcrowded "Urdorf' of Sumaiy-
ar-khay and the village-fortresses of Jator-khan, Rashphari and
Dalto to build the new unfortified hamlets of Top-khan, Raisman,
Boshat, Yal and Phut-khay. By the way it is an interesting excep-
tion that the people of Sumaiyar who are descendants from Balti
accepted only three small groups from outside as settlers in their
village namely the Saitoting, coming from the Sai-valley in the
time of Moghlot, Konjokuts and Bericho (both from Uyum Nager)
acting above all as Baldakuyo, i.e. load-carriers. The arrival of
new settlers in the lower villages was mostly welcomed by the old
residents because the strangers had to undertake defensive tasks
and inferior services.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Biddulph, J. Tribes of the Hindoo Koosh Calcutta (Repr. Karachi 1977) 1880
Frembgen, J. Die Nagerkuò im Licht der populären Reiseliteratur. Ein Bei-
trag zur Vorurteilsforschung in Nordpakistan in: P. Snoy (ed.), Ethnologie
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32 JÜRGEN FREMBGEN
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