Peshawar District

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Peshawar
ضلع پشاور‎
MohabbatKhanMosque.png
View of entry gate of Gorkhatree.jpg
Top: Mahabat Khan Mosque
Bottom: Entrance to Gorkhatri
Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (Pakistan).svg
Country Pakistan
Province Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
DivisionPeshawar
HeadquartersPeshawar
Government
 • TypeDistrict Administration
 • Deputy CommissionerN/A
 • District Police OfficerN/A
 • District Health OfficerN/A
Area
 • Total1,518 km2 (586 sq mi)
Population
 • Total4,331,959
 • Density2,900/km2 (7,400/sq mi)
 • Urban
1,969,823
 • Rural
2,362,136
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
LanguagesPashto, Hindko
Number of Tehsils1
WebsiteOfficial Website

Peshawar District (Pashto: پيښور ولسوالۍ, Hindko: پشور‎, Urdu: ضلع پشاور‎) is a district in Peshawar Division of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan. It is located about 160 km west of the Pakistan's capital Islamabad. The district headquarter is Peshawar, which is also the capital of Khyber Paktunkhwa.[2]

History[edit]

Peshawar is located in Geo-strategically important location and has an enriched history. This district and city has seen the rise and fall of many civilisations. It was once the centre of Gandhara and has subsequently been ruled by Persians, Greeks, Buddhists, Kushans, Afghans, Mughals, Marathas, Sikhs and the British. The original district of Peshawar was a district of the North-West Frontier Province of British India.[3]

After independence in 1947, the old Peshawar District became Peshawar Division containing the current districts of Peshawar District, Charsadda District and Nowshera District. In July 1988, the former Charsadda tehsil was separated and became Charsadda District while former Nowshera tehsil became Nowshera District in 1990.[4] Under the latest revision of Pakistan's administrative structure, promulgated in 2001, Peshawar was also given the status of a city district.

Demographics[edit]

Population[edit]

At the time of the 2017 census the district had a population of 4,331,959, of which 2,229,681 were males and 2,101,649 females.[1] The population of the district over the years is shown in the table below.[5][6][7]

Census Year Population Rural Urban Cantonment Area
1951 390,687 239,252 109,510 41,925
1961 529,158 310,467 171,766 46,925
1972 807,012 534,315 229,223 43,474
1981 1,113,303 547,055 506,896 59,352
1998 2,026,851 1,044,035 914,076 68,740
2017 4,331,959 2,362,136 1,969,823

Rural population was 2,362,136 (54.53%) while the urban population was 1,969,823 (45.47%). The literacy rate was 55.01% - the male literacy rate was 68.78% while the female literacy rate was 40.47%.[1]

Language[edit]

Native languages of Peshawar tehsil
(according to the 1981 census)
Pashto
79.84%
Hindko
12.59%
Urdu
3.81%
Punjabi
3.31%
Others
0.67%
Native languages of Peshawar tehsil
(according to the 2017 census)[1]
Pashto
90.32%
Hindko
5.25%
Urdu
1.93%
Punjabi
1.07%
Others
1.43%

Religion[edit]

Religion Population (1941)[8]: 22  Percentage (1941) Population (2017) Percentage (2017)
Islam Star and Crescent.svg 769,589 90.35% 4,300,937 99.28%
Hinduism Om.svg 51,212 6.01% 1,709 0.04%
Sikhism Khanda.svg 24,030 3.56% 2,561 0.06%
Christianity Christian cross.svg 6,890 0.81% 25,125 0.58%
Judaism 93 0.01% --- ---
Zoroastrianism 824 0% --- ---
Buddhism 218 0% --- ---
Total Population 851,833 100% 4,331,959 100%

1897 Report[edit]

According to 1897 records during British Raj, most people living in Peshawar valley were Pathans and belonged to an agriculture community but there was also large Punjabi and Hindkowan communities living in the valley; all three ethnolinguistic groups religiously belonged to Islam, Hinduism and Sikhism. Most people in Peshawar city spoke and understood Urdu. Elite belonging to small towns such as big feudal Khan families, traders and almost all of Hindus also spoke Urdu. Persian was also spoken by elites of Peshawar city and by traders from Kabul. Majority of the population of the district especially the agriculturists and Pathans only spoke Pashto.

92% of the total population of Peshawar valley practiced religion of Islam and remainder 8% practiced Hinduism, Sikhism and other religions. People belonging to these minority religions primarily lived in major cities such as Peshawar, Charsadda (now in Charsadda District) and Hoti (now in Mardan District) and mostly in cantonment areas of these cities. 97% of the population living in rural towns practiced Islam.[9]

Education[edit]

University of Peshawar (Public Sector)

Peshawar district is the home of excellent education institutes both in public and private sectors. It has universities for all major disciplines starting from Humanities, General Sciences, Sciences, Engineering Sciences, Medical Sciences, Agriculture Sciences and Management Sciences. Currently, there are 9 Medical Colleges of which 2 in public sector and 7 in private sector, which are recognised and approved by Pakistan medical and dental association[10] plus a medical university, Khyber Medical University in the district.

The first public sector university University of Peshawar[11] was established in 1950. In 1980, University of Engineering and Technology, Peshawar[12] was established while University of Agriculture, Peshawar[13] was inaugurated in 1981. The first private sector university CECOS University of IT and Emerging Sciences,[14] started working in 1986.Soon after another university by name of Brains[15] Institute and post graduate college was established. In 1995, a public sector management institute named as Institute of Management Sciences[16] was established, which became degree awarding institute in 2005.

In 2001, four (4) new private sector universities started working in Peshawar. The name of these universities are Qurtuba University,[17] Sarhad University of Science and IT,[18] Fast University, Peshawar Campus[19] and City University of Science and IT.[20] Gandhara University[21] was established in 2002 while Abasyn University[22] was created in 2007.

City University Peshawar (Private Sector)

In 2007, Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa established first public sector medical university, Khyber Medical University[23][24] and the district also has 2 public sector medical colleges, one is Khyber Medical College[24] and one for girls named as Khyber Girls Medical College.[10]

The first women university was established in 2012, when Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Women University[25] started working while private sector IQRA National University[26] was also established in 2012.

Apart from excellent range of universities, Peshawar district also has huge numbers of further education (Post School) institutes both in public and private sectors. The most renowned are Islamia College Peshawar, which was established in 1913 and was upgraded to become university in 2008 and Edwardes College Peshawar, which is the oldest of all institutions in the district started functioning in 1900.

State of Education in Peshawar[edit]

According to Pakistan District Education Rankings 2017 published by Alif Ailaan, Peshawar ranks 4th in Pakistan in terms of primary school infrastructure while it ranks 52nd in Pakistan for middle school infrastructure. In terms of education score, Peshawar ranks 64th in Pakistan with having a relatively low retention score. Beyond Primary Readiness in Peshawar is on the lower side as it ranks 62nd in Pakistan.

The main issues reported in Taleem Do! App for district Peshawar are overcrowded class rooms and lack of class rooms in schools.

Girls’ education is also one of the most reported issues in the app, with main focus on lesser number of Girls schools and also schools located at long distances.

Issues of lack of teachers, non-availability of science labs and lack of High Schools were also reported.

Issues regarding the high fee collections in private schools was also reported on multiple occasions.

Administration[edit]

The district Peshawar, was divided into 7 Tehsils (1 City Local Government and 6 Tehsil Local Government), which are Peshawar City Tehsil, Shah Alam Tehsil, Mathra Tehsil, Chamkani Tehsil, Badbher Tehsil, Peshtakhara Tehsil & Hassan Kheil Tehsil (FR-Peshawar). There are 30 police stations in the district.[27]..There are 357 Neighbourhood or Village Councils , out of which 227 are Village Councils (rural) and 130 are Neighbourhood Councils (urban).