Kishtwār is to the south of Kashmir. From the city of
Kashmir (Srinagar) to the stage of Alkah (?),*
which is the
capital of Kishtwār, the distance is 60 koss by measurement.
On the 10th of the Ilāhī month of Shahriwar, in my 14th year,
Dilāwar K., with 10,000 horse and foot, determined to conquer
Kishtwār. He appointed his son, Ḥasan by name, with Gird
‘Alī Mīr-baḥr (admiral) to guard the city and administer the
territory. And as Gohar Chak and Aiba Chak laid claim to
Kashmir as heirs, and were stirring up strife in Kishtwār, and
were wandering in the valley of confusion and ruin, he left
Haibat, one of his brothers, with a force at Desū, which is
near the kotal of Pīr Panjāl, by way of caution, and, dividing
his forces at that place, he himself hastened with a force by
the road of Sangīnpūr, sending his son Jalāl, with Naṣru-llah
‘Arab, and ‘Alī Malik Kashmīrī, and a band of Jahāngīrī
servants by another road, and his elder son Jamāl with a
band of zealous young men as an advanced guard to his own
force. At the same time he placed two other forces to move
forward on his right and left. As no horses could go on the
road, by way of precaution he took some with him, but left
nearly*
all his sipahis' horses behind, and sent them to Kashmir
(i.e., Srinagar). The young men girded the belt of duty
on their waists, and went up the hills on foot. The ghāzīs
of the army of Islam fought from post to post with the ill-
In Kishtwār there are produced much wheat, barley, lentils,
millet, and pulse. Differing from Kashmir, it produces little
rice. Its saffron is finer than that of Kashmir. About a
hundred hawks and falcons are caught there (annually).
Oranges, citrons, and water-melons of the finest kind are
obtained. Its melons are of the same kind as those of Kashmir,
and other fruits, such as grapes, apricots, peaches, and
sour pears, are grown. If they were cultivated, it is possible
they would improve. A coin*
of the name of sanhasī*
is a
relic of the old rulers of Kashmir, one and a half of which
equal a rupee. In their business transactions they reckon
fifteen sanhasī, or ten rupees, as one pādshāhī muhar. They
call two seers of Hindustani weight a man (maund). It is not
the custom for the Raja to take revenue from cultivation;
he takes annually six sanhasī—that is, four rupees—from each
house. All the saffron is assigned, as pay, to a body of Raj-
On Monday, the 11th, after two watches and four gharis had passed, the royal cortège alighted auspiciously and happily at the buildings lately erected on the bank of the lake (the Dal lake). By order of my father, a very strong fort of stone and lime had been built. It is not quite completed, one side being unfinished. It is hoped that hereafter it will be completed. From Ḥasan Abdāl to Kashmir by the road I came is a distance of 75 koss; this was accomplished in nineteen marches and six halts—that is, in twenty-five days. From Agra to Kashmir, in the space of 168 days, a distance of 376 koss was traversed in 102 marches and 63 halts. By land* and the ordinary route the distance is 304 1/2 koss.
On Tuesday, the 12th, Dilāwar K., according to order, brought the Raja* of Kishtwār, chained, into my presence, and did homage. He (the Raja) is not wanting in dignity. His dress is after the Indian fashion, and he knows both the Hindi and the Kashmiri languages. Contrary to other Zamindars of these regions, he looked like the inhabitant of a town. I told him that, notwithstanding his offences, if he would bring his sons to Court, he should be released from confinement, and might live at ease under the shadow of the eternal State, or else he would be imprisoned in one of the forts of Hindustan. He said that he would bring his people, his family, and his sons to wait on me, and was hopeful of my clemency.