Post by sialkoty on Sept 17, 2008 14:55:35 GMT 10
Pakistan traces its history back to 2,500 years B.C., when a highly developed civilization flourished in the Indus Valley. Excavations at Harrappa, Moenjodaro, Kot Diji and Mehr Garh have brought to light, the evidence of an advanced civilization existing even in more ancient times. Around 1,500 B.C., the Aryans overwhelmed this region and influenced the Hindu civilization, whose centre moved to Ganges valley, further east. Later, the Persians occupied the northern region in the 5th century B.C. up to the 2nd century AD. The Greeks came in 327 B.C., under Alexander of Macedonia, and passed away like a meteor. In 712 AD, the Arabs, led by Muhammad Bin Qasim, landed somewhere near modern Karachi and ruled the lower half of Pakistan for 200 years. During this time, Islam took roots in the soil and influenced the life, culture and traditions of the people.
In the 10th century AD, began the systematic conquest of South Asia by the Muslims from Central Asia, who ruled here up to the 18th century. Then the British came and ruled for nearly 100 years over what is Pakistan now.
The Muslim revival began towards the end of the last century when Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, a renowned Muslim leader and educationist, launched a movement for intellectual renaissance of the Muslims of South Asia. In 1930, the well-known poet-philosopher, Allama Muhammad Iqbal, conceived the idea of a separate state for the Muslims of South Asia. In 1940, a resolution was adopted by the All-India Muslim League, demanding a separate independent home land for the Muslims. After 07 years of un-tiring struggle under the brilliant leadership of Quaid-e-Azam (the great leader) Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Pakistan emerged on the world map as a sovereign state, on 14th August, 1947.
Here is the summary of a few important historical events of the subcontinent.
Ancient Empires
3000-1500 B.C.
Harappan culture in the Indus Valley and elsewhere
500-500 B.C.
Migrations of Aryan-speaking tribes; the Vedic Age
550-486 B.C.
Life of Gautama Buddha, founding of Buddhism
320-180 B.C.
Mauryan Empire; Asoka most famous emperor; spread of Buddhism
180 BC - 150 AD
Saka dynasties in Indus Valley and northwest
78-200 A.D.
Kushan Empire; Gandharan art flourishes
300-700 A.D
Gupta Empire; Classical Age in northern India
Coming of Islam
711
Arab Muslims in Sindh
998-1030
Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni raids into the subcontinent from Afghanistan
1192
Muhammad of Ghori defeats Rajputs
1206
Establishment of Delhi Sultanate
1398
Destruction of Delhi by Timur
Mughal Period
1526
Babur victorious in first Battle of Paniput
1530-1556
Wars of succession
1556
Akbar victorious in second Battle of Paniput
1556-1605
Reign of Akbar the Great
1605-1627
Reign of Jahangir; in 1612 East India Company opens first trading center
1628-1658
Reign of Shah Jahan
1658-1707
Reign of Aurangzeb
1761
Third Battle of Panipat; an Afghan victory over a Maratha army
1707-1858
Decline of the Mughal Empire
British India
1757
Battle of Plassey - British victory over Mughal forces in Bengal; conventional date for beginning of British rule in India
1784
William Pitt's India Act
1799-1839
Sikh kingdom in the Punjab under Maharaja Ranjit Singh
1830s
Institution of British education and other reform measures
1838-1842
First Afghan war
1843
British annex Sindh, Hyderabad and Khairpur
1845-49
Sikh Wars; British annex the Punjab and sell Kashmir, Gilgit, and Ladakh "Package," known as Kashmir
1857-1858
Uprising, variously known as the first war of independence, the Mutiny,and the Sepoy Rebellion
1858
British Raj begins
1878-1880
Second Afghan War
1885
Indian National Congress formed
1893
Durand Line established as boundary between Afghanistan and British India
1905
Partition of Bengal
1906
All-India Muslim League founded
1911
Partition of Bengal annulled
1919
Montague-Chelmsford Reforms; Third Afghan War
1935
Government of India Act of 1935
March 23, 1940
Muslim League adopts Pakistan Resolution
1940-47
Self-less, Tiring stuggle of Muslims for Pakistan
August 14, 1947
Pakistan formed.