The Khyber Pass

The Khyber Pass
Title The Khyber Pass PDF eBook
Author Paddy Docherty
Publisher Union Square Press
Pages 300
Release 2008
Genre History
ISBN 1402756968

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Thirty miles long, and in places no more than sixteen meters wide, the Pass is the principal route through the great mountain borderlands between India and Central Asia -- and the path of invasion for generations of conquerors. In this ground-breaking book, Paddy Docherty charts its remarkable story -- one which involves so many of the world's great leaders and civilizations, from the influential Persian kings to Alexander the Great, from the White Huns to Genghis Khan, not to mention the Ancient Greeks and countless tribes of nomads and barbarians. He paints an illuminating picture of mountain warriors and religious visionaries, artists, poets and scientists as well as describing how around the Pass emerged three of the great world religions -- Buddhism, Sikhism and Islam. He also depicts the Pass' more modern significance as a lawless region of gunsmiths, drug markets and as a terrorist hideout. Just a few years after the Soviet Union was defeated by the Afghan Mujahideen, many thousands of soldiers from the United States, Britain and other nations are struggling to control Afghanistan. Through his own travels in this true frontier region Paddy Docherty brings this epic history into the twenty-first century.

Beyond the Khyber Pass

Beyond the Khyber Pass
Title Beyond the Khyber Pass PDF eBook
Author John H. Waller
Publisher Random House (NY)
Pages 392
Release 1990
Genre History
ISBN

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Chronicles the wars of the 19th century in India and Afghanistan resulting in the siege of Kabul and the deaths of 16,000 British soldiers and their families.

Beyond Khyber Pass

Beyond Khyber Pass
Title Beyond Khyber Pass PDF eBook
Author Lowell Thomas
Publisher
Pages 402
Release 1925
Genre Afghanistan
ISBN

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Romance of the Khyber Pass

Romance of the Khyber Pass
Title Romance of the Khyber Pass PDF eBook
Author Ahmad Hasan Dani
Publisher Sang-E-Meel Publication
Pages 94
Release 1997
Genre History
ISBN

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Permanent Way Through the Khyber

Permanent Way Through the Khyber
Title Permanent Way Through the Khyber PDF eBook
Author Victor Bayley
Publisher
Pages 248
Release 1939
Genre Khyber Pass
ISBN

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Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879-1898

Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879-1898
Title Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879-1898 PDF eBook
Author Sir Robert Warburton
Publisher London, J. Murray
Pages 418
Release 1900
Genre India
ISBN

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Sir Robert Warburton (1842-99) was a British army officer who served for 18 years as the political officer, or warden, of the Khyber Pass, the most important of the mountain passes connecting Afghanistan and present-day Pakistan. He was born in Afghanistan, the son of a British officer and his wife, a noble Afghan woman who was the niece of Amir Dost Mohammad Khan. Warburton was educated in England, commissioned an officer, and served at posts in British India and in Abyssinia (present-day Ethiopia) before being appointed, in 1879, to his post in the Khyber. Home to the fiercely independent Pushtun Afridi people who resisted external control, the pass frequently had been blocked by the Afridis or by fighting among the hill tribes. Warburton is credited with keeping the frontier peaceful and the pass open, mainly though diplomacy rather than force. He drew upon his Afghan background and his fluent Persian and Pushto to gradually win the trust of tribesmen whose traditions made them deeply suspicious of outsiders. In August 1897, one month after Warburton's retirement, unrest broke out among the Afridis, who seized the pass and held it for several months. Warburton was called back into service and participated in the Tirah expedition of 1897-98, in which Anglo-Indian forces reopened the pass. Warburton was especially proud of the role played in the expedition by the Khyber Rifles, a paramilitary force recruited from Afridi tribesmen that he had raised and commanded. Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879-1898 is Warburton's account of his education and career. It touches upon virtually every individual and event that played a role in relations between Afghanistan and British India during the last quarter of the 19th century. Long in poor health, Warburton returned to England and died before the book was completed. Posthumously published, it is illustrated with a number of striking photographs and includes a detailed fold-out map of the Khyber.

The Khyber Rifles

The Khyber Rifles
Title The Khyber Rifles PDF eBook
Author Dr Jules Stewart
Publisher The History Press
Pages 210
Release 2006-06-22
Genre History
ISBN 0752495585

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Recruited from the Pathan tribes that live in the no-mans land between Pakistan and Afghanistan, the Khyber Rifles fought for the British Raj against their own kith and kin. Jules Stewart tells the story of Colonel Sir Robert Warburton, the man who raised the Khyber Rifles in 1878, and describes the Khyber Rifles in action.