Dijkot

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Dijkot
ڈجکوٹ
City
Dijkot is located in Punjab, Pakistan
Dijkot
Dijkot
Coordinates: 31°13′3″N 72°59′45″E / 31.21750°N 72.99583°E / 31.21750; 72.99583Coordinates: 31°13′3″N 72°59′45″E / 31.21750°N 72.99583°E / 31.21750; 72.99583
CountryPakistan
ProvincePunjab
DistrictFaisalabad District
Elevation
174 m (571 ft)

Dijkot (Punjabi, Urdu: ڈجکوٹ) is a city in the Faisalabad District of Punjab, Pakistan.[1][2]

Demographics[]

Dijkot has a population of 200,000

Geography[]

The area of Dijkot is 700 kanal, or .35 km2. It is situated on the Sumandri road, 26 km from Faisalabad and 3460.44 km from Mecca.

History[]

old water supply system Dijkot

Dijkot was once named the “State of Dijkot.” The name "Dijkot" is derived from the word ‘ditch,’ which roughly translates to 'fort,' or 'city inside a fort'.[3]

Dijkot is named after a warrior tribe. The city was destroyed in 326 BC, when it was attacked by the army of Alexander the Great and as a result, the population declined significantly.[3]

The city was eventually re-inhabited and ruled by Chandragupta Maurya, who brought the town back to some significance. In 712 AD, Muhammad bin Qasim attacked Sindh, in southeast Pakistan. Qasim reached Chiniot, a city in Punjab, where he was subsequently arrested.

Dijkot was attacked in 1460 by local tribes and once again destroyed. It was rebuilt for second time by saint Baba Sher Shah, who lived south of the state. In 1908, a police station was established in Dijkot, along with a government high school during the British empire period in India.[3]

Education[]

  • Government Primary Schools
  • Government Higher Secondary Schools (for males & females)
  • Government College for Boys
  • Government Post Graduate College for Women

Health[]

  • Civil Hospital, Dijkot[3]

References[]

  1. ^ PAF (Pakistan Air Force) aircraft crashes in Dijkot Dawn (newspaper), Published 18 April 2008, Retrieved 18 April 2021
  2. ^ Online learner traffic licence branch set up in Dijkot The News International (newspaper), Published 28 December 2020, Retrieved 18 April 2021
  3. ^ a b c d Muhammad Hassan Miraj (20 May 2013). "The Alexander of Samundri (scroll down to mid-article to read about Dijkot)". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 18 April 2021.

External links[]

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