A report on Jammu division, Jammu and Kashmir (union territory) and Kashmiri Pandits
The Jammu division is a revenue and administrative division within Jammu and Kashmir, a union territory of India.
- Jammu divisionThey belong to the Pancha Gauda Brahmin group from the Kashmir Valley, a mountainous region located within the Indian-administered union territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
- Kashmiri PanditsJammu and Kashmir is named after the two regions it encompasses – the Jammu region and the Kashmir Valley.
- Jammu and Kashmir (union territory)A large number settled in the Jammu Division of the State and the National Capital Region of India.
- Kashmiri PanditsMost of Jammu's Hindus are native Dogras, Kashmiri Pandits, Punjabi Hindus migrants and refugees from the Kotli and Mirpur areas which are currently administered by Pakistan.
- Jammu divisionRadio Sharda, a worldwide community radio service for Kashmiri Pandits, was started by Ramesh Hangloo.
- Jammu and Kashmir (union territory)1 related topic with Alpha
Kashmir
0 linksNorthernmost geographical region of the Indian subcontinent.
Northernmost geographical region of the Indian subcontinent.
Today, the term encompasses a larger area that includes the Indian-administered territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh, the Pakistani-administered territories of Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, and the Chinese-administered territories of Aksai Chin and the Trans-Karakoram Tract.
Drafted by a treaty and a bill of sale, and constituted between 1820 and 1858, the Princely State of Kashmir and Jammu (as it was first called) combined disparate regions, religions, and ethnicities: to the east, Ladakh was ethnically and culturally Tibetan and its inhabitants practised Buddhism; to the south, Jammu had a mixed population of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs; in the heavily populated central Kashmir valley, the population was overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim, however, there was also a small but influential Hindu minority, the Kashmiri brahmins or pandits; to the northeast, sparsely populated Baltistan had a population ethnically related to Ladakh, but which practised Shia Islam; to the north, also sparsely populated, Gilgit Agency, was an area of diverse, mostly Shiʻa groups; and, to the west, Punch was Muslim, but of different ethnicity than the Kashmir valley.
It includes almost the whole of the Jammu province.