Official Name: | Isakhel Tehsil |
Settlement Type: | Tehsil |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Pakistan |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Pakistan |
Subdivision Type1: | Region |
Subdivision Name1: | Punjab |
Subdivision Type2: | District |
Subdivision Name2: | Mianwali District |
Subdivision Type3: | Capital |
Subdivision Name3: | Isakhel |
Subdivision Type4: | Towns |
Subdivision Name4: | 3 |
Subdivision Type5: | Union councils |
Subdivision Name5: | 13 |
Leader Title: | Chairman |
Leader Title1: | Vice Chairman |
Timezone: | PST |
Utc Offset: | +5 |
Isakhel Tehsil (ur|{{Nastaliq|تحصِيل عِيسىٰ خيل), is an administrative subdivision (tehsil) of Mianwali District in the Punjab province of Pakistan. The city of Isakhel is the headquarters of the tehsil which is administratively subdivided into 3 Municipal Committees 13 Union Councils.[1] It is located between 32° 30′ and 33° 14′ N. and 71° 7′ and 71° 44′ E., with an area of 678sqmi and contains the towns of Isakhel, Kammar Mushani and Kalabagh
The tehsil of Isakhel is administratively subdivided into 3 Municipal Committees
and 13 Union Councils, these are:
During British rule Isakhel became part of Mianwali District when the North-West Frontier Province was created in 1901.
According to the 1901 census, it contained the municipalities of Isa Khel (population, 7,630), the headquarters, and Kalabagh (5,824); and 43 villages. The land revenue and cesses in 1903-4 amounted to 1.6 lakhs. Lying on the west bank of the Indus, this tehsil is cut off from the rest of the District, and would seem to belong more properly to the North-West Frontier Province, but is separated even more completely from Bannu by the semicircular fringe of the Chichali and Maidani hills, which leave it open onlyon the river side. These hills drain into Isa Khel and make it fertile. Its extreme northern portion, known as the Bhangi Khel country, is a wild and rugged region, a continuation of the Khattak hills.[2]
The tehsil derives its name from the Isa Khel tribe, sub-tribe of the Niazi Afghans, who, settling here during the sixteenth century, long maintained their independence of the Mughal empire, and at last succumbed to the Nawab of Dera Ismail Khan.[2]
The total population as of the 1998 census was . The main first languages are Punjabi (%), Pashto (%) and Saraiki (%).[3]