Book No.8 (Modern India – History)

Book Name British Rule in India and After (V.D. Mahajan)

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1. Sind Frontier

2. The Punjab Frontier

3. The Forward Policy

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The North-Western Frontier Policy

Chapter – 31

Picture of Harshit Sharma
Harshit Sharma

Alumnus (BHU)

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Table of Contents
  • The North-Western Frontier has historically been a source of trouble for India, with various groups such as the Sakas, Hunas, Kushans, Pathans, and Mughals entering India through it.

  • Initially, the British Government was not directly concerned with the North-Western Frontier because Punjab was controlled by the Sikhs and Sind by the Amirs.

  • After the annexation of Sind in 1843 and Punjab in 1849, the North-Western Frontier became a significant issue.

  • The Russian advances in Central Asia and their attempts to influence Afghanistan made the British nervous about the safety of India.

  • The British Government was determined not to allow Russia to gain influence in the region and wanted to maintain law and order along the North-Western Frontier.

  • The Sind frontier was exposed to attacks from the Bugtis, Dombkis, and Jakranis from the Kachchi region, stretching for about 150 miles from Kasmore to the Hala mountains.

  • The Punjab frontier was ill-defined and unscientific, with a vast tribal area between India and Afghanistan that lacked real control.

  • On the Punjab frontier, there was no law as such, and disputes were settled through might and rifles.

  • The British Government faced difficulty in formulating a clear policy for the North-Western Frontier as the situation was constantly changing.

  • Social, political, and geographical factors differed across the North-Western Frontier, making a single policy difficult to apply.

  • The Sind frontier was more accessible, politically integrated, and controlled by Maliks, thus posing fewer problems than the Punjab frontier.

  • The Punjab frontier was long, mountainous, and ill-defined, with Pathan tribes being too intractable and freedom-loving to accept the authority of the Maliks.

  • This led to the creation of two systems of frontier administration: the Sandeman System for Baluchistan and the Close Border System for the Punjab Frontier.

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