Chārsadda (Pashto: چارسده; pronounce (help·info); Urdu: چارسدہ;
pronounce is a town and headquarters of Charsadda District, in the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. It is the eighty fifth-largest city of
Pakistan, according to 2017 census. Located in the Valley of Peshawar,
Charsadda lies about 29 kilometres (18 mi) from the provincial capital of
Peshawar at an altitude of 276 metres (906 ft).The total area of Charsadda
District measures about 996 square Km. The district is geographically organized
into two primary parts: Hashtnagar (Pashto: Ashnaghar) and Do Aaba (Pashto:
Duaba).
The name Chārsadda means "four roads", from the
words chār ("four") and sadda ("road"). An alternate
explanation, given by Munshi Gopaldas in the 1874 Tawarikh-i Peshawar, is that
the city was named after one of the sons of the Pashtun conqueror Ilyas Khan
Muhammadzai.
The earliest archaeological deposits recovered at Charsadda,
in Bala Hisar, are dated to ca. 1400 BCE, when a small community was
established on a low natural mound of clay above the floodplain of the Kabul
and Swat rivers, constructing structures of timber posts slotted into
postholes, in association with ceramic sherds and ash. Subsequent periods
indicate that more permanent structures were built at Charsadda, including
stone-lined pits. Between the 14th century BCE and the 6th century BCE, when an
Achaemenid presence is represented at the site (see below), the inhabitants of
Charsadda developed an iron-working industry and used ceramics that are typical
for this period in the Vale of Peshawar, Swat and Dir. The later history of
Charsadda can be traced back to the 6th century BCE. It was the capital of
Gandhara from the 6th century BCE to the 2nd century CE. The ancient name of
Charsadda was Pushkalavati.The city hosts the ruins of what was once the
ancient Gandharan capital city of Pushkalavati (meaning Lotus City in
Sanskrit), and The father of Sanskrit grammar, Pāṇini was from this area and lived
around 4th century BCE. Many invaders have ruled over this region during
different times of history. These include the Durrani Empire, Alexander the
Great's Macedonians, the Mauryas, the Greco-Bactrians, the Indo-Greeks, the
Indo-Scythians, the Indo-Parthians, the Kushans, the Huns, the Turks, the
Guptas.
There are three rivers flowing in Charsadda: the River
Jindi, the Kabul River and the Swat River; these are the main source of irrigation
for Charsadda. The three rivers then merge and join the Indus River.
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