Chichawatni
Chichawatni is a city in the Sahiwal District of the Punjab province of Pakistan. It is the administrative center of Chichawatni Tehsil, one of the two tehsils of the district. Situated near the old main road called Grand Trunk Road, it lies approximately from the district capital, Sahiwal. According to the 2017 census, Chichawatni's population was 94,733.
History
From the beginning of the 7th century, Rajput Bhatti kingdoms dominated eastern portions of Pakistan and northern India. In 997 CE, Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi, took over the Ghaznavid empire established by his father, Sultan Sebuktegin. In 1005, he conquered the Shahis in Kabul and followed it by the conquests of some of the western Punjab region.Eastern regions of Punjab from Multan to Rawalpindi in the north remained under Rajput rule until 1193. The Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire later ruled the region.
The Punjab region became predominantly Muslim due to the missionary Sufi saints' work among the people of Punjab. Sufi dargahs dot the landscape of Punjab region today. After the decline of the Mughal Empire, the Sikh Empire invaded and occupied Sahiwal District. During the British Raj, Chichawatni was reputedly transformed from a small Punjabi village into a relatively modern city by infrastructure investment and planning decrees, starting after the First World War.
During freedom struggle in 1857-1858, at Chichawatni major Crawford Chamberlain was besieged by a freedom fighter group led by Rai Ahmed Khan Kharal, and housed his cavalry in a caravanserai. He held out until he was relieved by a squadron of reinforcement reaching the place under General John Lawrence three days later.
At the time of independence of Pakistan in 1947, most Indian Muslim families migrated from Punjab towns like Ludhiana, Jalandhar, Amritsar and Firozpur, and settled in towns like Chichawatni, shaping the city's present-day Muslim population. The predominantly Muslim population supported Muslim League and the Pakistan Movement.
After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, the minority Hindus and Sikhs migrated to India from the old northwestern Punjab areas, while the Muslim refugees from the northeastern Punjab areas of India migrated to the northwestern Punjab areas including to the Sahiwal District area as one of them, between the newly drawn national boundaries of Pakistan and India by the departing British.
In other words, old British Punjab province was divided into 2 new Punjabs – 'Muslim-majority Punjab' and 'Sikh and Hindu majority Punjab' in 1947.
Chichawatni is also home to popular wedding halls located on the Grand Trunk Road. Chichawatni is a vast agricultural area producing, Cotton, Corn, Wheat and a vast variety of other fruits and vegetables.