Rawalpindi Division Explained

Rawalpindi Division
Native Name Lang:pa/ur
Settlement Type:Division
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1: Punjab
Subdivision Type2:Capital
Subdivision Name2:Rawalpindi
Government Type:Divisional Administration
Leader Title:Commissioner
Leader Name:Engineer Aamir Khattak (BPS-20 PAS)
Leader Title1:Regional Police Officer
Leader Name1:Syed Khurram Ali (BPS-20 PSP)
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Total Km2:18,823
Population As Of:2023
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Urban:50.94%
Population Rural:49.06%
Population Total:10,804,250
Demographics Type1:Literacy
Demographics1 Footnotes:[1]
Demographics1 Title1:Literacy rate

Rawalpindi Division is an administrative division of the Pakistani province of Punjab. Rawalpindi serves as the headquarters of the division which consists of 5 districts: Attock, Chakwal, Jhelum, Murree, and Rawalpindi.

Divisions are the third tier of government below the federal and provincial levels. In 2000, local government reforms abolished administrative divisions and raised the districts to become the new third tier of government.[2] But in 2008, the division system was restored again.[3] [4]

List of the Districts

DistrictHeadquarterArea(km²)Pop.(2023)Density(ppl/km²)

(2023)

Lit. rate(2023)
1RawalpindiRawalpindi4,5475,745,9641,868.7983.06%
2JhelumJhelum3,5871,382,308385.780.65%
3AttockAttock6,8582,170,423316.770.22%
4MurreeMurree738372,94748086.01%
5ChakwalChakwal3,5931,132,608314.4279.36%
Rawalpindi Division18,82310,804,250574.5079.9%

List of the Tehsils

TehsilArea(km²)[5] Pop.(2023)Density(ppl/km²)

(2023)

Lit. rate(2023)Districts
1Attock1,002516,277515.2574.80%Attock District
2Fateh Jang1,249374,726300.0266.94%
3Hassan Abdal350253,670724.7770.22%
4Hazro348386,5441,110.7666.45%
5Jand2,043330,328161.6971.59%
6Pindi Gheb1,865308,878165.6270.36%
7Chakwal2,167768,622354.6979.63%Chakwal District
8Choa Saidan Shah473167,537354.2079.28%
9Kallar Kahar953196,449206.1479.23%
10Dina678277,182408.8284.75%Jhelum District
11Jhelum586507,788866.5383.45%
12Pind Dadan Khan1,176371,971316.3073.98%
13Sohawa1,147225,367196.4880.41%
14Rawalpindi1,6823,744,5902,226.2783.97%Rawalpindi District
15Gujar Khan1,457781,578536.4379.72%
16Kahuta637237,843373.3884.05%
17Kallar Syedan459242,709528.7882.23%
18Taxila312739,2442,369.3781.98%
19DaultalaN/AN/AN/AN/A
20Kotli Sattian304120,421396.1288.20%Murree District
21Murree434252,526581.8684.79%

History

British rule

Following the British conquest of the region in 1849, the area around Rawalpindi became a division of the Punjab province of British India, primarily because of the strategic location of the city of Rawalpindi.

The Imperial Gazetteer of India describes the division as follows:

"North-western Division of the Punjab, lying between 31°35' and 34° 1' N. and 70° 37' and 74°29' E. The Commissioner's headquarters are at Rawalpindi and Murree. The total population of the Division increased from 2,520,508 in 1881 to 2,750,713 in 1891, and to 2,799,360 in 1901. Its total area was 25,000 Km Square (15,736) square miles, and the density of the population is 178 persons per square mile, compared with 209 for the Province as a whole"[6]

The division was composed of four districts:

DistrictArea (sq mi)Population (1901)
Shahpur4,840524,259
Jhelum2,813501,424
Rawalpindi2,010558,699
Attock4,022464,430
Total136852,048812

After independence

On independence in 1947, the division was one of four divisions of the province of West Punjab but from 1955 to 1970, the divisions was one of twelve (later thirteen) divisions of West Pakistan province under the One Unit policy. On the dissolution of West Pakistan, the division was restored to the new Punjab province, but parts of the division were transferred with parts of Lahore Division to form the new Gujranwala Division.

Demographics

According to 2023 census, Rawalpindi division had a population of 11,406,496.[7]

See also

References

  1. Web site: Literacy rate, enrolments, and out-of-school population by sex and rural/urban, CENSUS-2023.
  2. http://www.ecp.gov.pk/content/District.html Divisions/Districts of Pakistan
  3. Web site: Division and district wise facilities . health.punjab.gov.pk . en . 2012 . 18 August 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150416005317/http://health.punjab.gov.pk/?q=system%2Ffiles%2FDivision_and_district_wise_facilities.pdf . 2015-04-16.
  4. Web site: Punjab Government Plans to Carve a New District from Lahore . 6 January 2009 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20100603222725/http://www.opfblog.com/6245/punjab-government-plans-to-carve-a-new-district-from-lahore/ . 2010-06-03 .
  5. Web site: TABLE 1 : AREA, POPULATION BY SEX, SEX RATIO, POPULATION DENSITY, URBAN POPULATION, HOUSEHOLD SIZE AND ANNUAL GROWTH RATE, CENSUS-2023, PUNJAB .
  6. https://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/pager.html?objectid=DS405.1.I34_V21_268.gif Rāwalpindi Division - Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 21, p. 262
  7. https://www.pbs.gov.pk/sites/default/files/population/2023/tables/punjab/pcr/table_1.pdf

33.1667°N 73°W