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A country of southern Asia. Occupying land crisscrossed
by ancient invasion paths, Pakistan was the home of
the prehistoric Indus Valley civilization, which flourished
until overrun by Aryans c. 1500 B.C. After being conquered
by numerous rulers and powers, it passed to the British
as part of India and became a separate Muslim state
in 1947. The country originally included the Bengalese
territory of East Pakistan, which achieved its separate
independence in 1971 as Bangladesh. Pakistan became
a republic in 1956. Islamabad is the capital and Karachi
the largest city. Population: 159,000,000 .
Pak ' i·stan ' i (
-stan ' e, -stä ' ne ) adj. & n.
WORD
HISTORY Many central and south Asian states
and regions end with the element –stan, such
as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Baluchistan, Kurdistan,
and Turkistan. This –stan
is formed from the Iranian root *sta–, “to
stand, stay,” and means “place (where one stays), home,
country.” Iranian peoples have been the principal inhabitants
of the geographical region occupied by these states
for over a thousand years. The names are compounds of
–stan and the name of the people living there.
Pakistan is a bit of an exception; its name was coined
in 1933 using the suffix –istan from Baluch
istan preceded by the initial letters of P
unjab, A fghanistan, and K ashmir.•Interestingly,
a word almost identical in form, etymology, and meaning
to the Iranian suffix –stan is found in Polish,
which has a word stan meaning “state” (in
the senses of both polity and condition). It can be
found in the Polish name for the “United States of America,”
Stany Zjednoczone Ameryki (literally “States
United of America”).
Land
The country has a generally hot and dry climate, with
desert conditions prevailing throughout much of the
area. Along the western border and in a section of the
north are semiarid steppelands and deserts; a subtropical
climate with marked summer rainfall is found in a small
section of the northeast along the Himalayan foothills;
and a mountain climate that varies with altitude is
found in the north.
The Indus is the chief river of Pakistan and is the
nation's lifeline. It flows the length of the country
and is fed by the combined waters of three of the five
rivers of Punjab—the Chenab, Jhelum, and Ravi. The waters
of the other two rivers, the Beas and the Sutlej, are
largely withdrawn for irrigation in India. Along the
Indus and its tributaries are found most of Pakistan's
population, its chief agricultural areas, and its major
hydroelectric power stations.
Pakistan may be divided into four geographic regions—the
plateau of W Pakistan, the plains of the Indus and Punjab
rivers, the hills of NW Pakistan, and the mountains
of N Pakistan. The plateau region of W Pakistan, which
is roughly coextensive with Baluchistan prov., is an
arid region with relatively wetter conditions in its
northern sections. Numerous low mountain ranges rise
from the plateau, and the Hingol and Dasht rivers are
among the largest streams. Large portions of the region
are unfit for agriculture, and although some cotton
is raised, nomadic sheep grazing is the principal activity.
Coal, chromite, and natural gas are found in this area,
and fishing and salt trading are carried on along the
rugged Makran coast. Quetta
, the chief city, is an important railroad center
on the line between Afghanistan and the Indus valley.
East of the plateau region are extensive alluvial plains,
through which flow the Indus and its tributaries. The
region, closely coinciding with Sind and Punjab provinces,
is hot and dry and is occupied in its eastern borders
by the Thar Desert. Extensive irrigation facilities,
fed by the waters of the Indus system, make the Indus
basin the agricultural heartland of Pakistan. A variety
of crops (especially wheat, rice, and cotton) are raised
there. Advances in agricultural engineering have countered
the salinity problems involved in farming the Indus
delta. The irrigated portions of the plain are densely
populated, being the site of many of Pakistan's principal
cities, including Lahore
, Faisalabad
(formerly Lyallpur), Hyderabad
, and Multan
. Karachi
, the nation's chief port, is located west of the
irrigated land at a site accessible to oceangoing vessels.
The higher parts of the plain, in the north, as in the
vicinity of Lahore, have a more humid subtropical climate.
In NW Pakistan, occupying about two thirds of North-West
Frontier Province, is a region of low hills and plateaus
interspersed with fertile valleys. The elevation of
the region tempers the arid climate. It is a predominantly
agricultural area, with wheat the chief crop; fruit
trees and livestock are also raised. Peshawar
and Rawalpindi
, the largest cities of this area, are the only
major manufacturing centers. In the northern section
of the North-West Frontier Province and in the Pakistani-occupied
sector of Kashmir are the rugged ranges and the high,
snowcapped peaks of the Hindu Kush, Himalaya, and Karakorum
mountains; Tirich Mir (25,236 ft/7,692 m) is the highest
point in the country outside Kashmir.

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