Tando Bago
Tando Bago is located in Sindh
Tando Bago
Tando Bago
Location in Sindh
Tando Bago is located in Pakistan
Tando Bago
Tando Bago
Tando Bago (Pakistan)
Coordinates: 24°46′56″N 68°58′17″E / 24.78222°N 68.97139°E / 24.78222; 68.97139
CountryPakistan
RegionSindh
DistrictBadin
TalukaTando Bago
Population
 (2017)[1]
  Total17,546
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
  Summer (DST)UTC+6 (PDT)

Tando Bago (Sindhi: ٽنڊو باگو) is a town and union council in Badin District, Sindh, Pakistan. The Tehsil (township) of Tando Bago had a population of 321,818 in 2008.[2] The Sindh government operates approximately 589 schools in Tando Bago.[3]

As of 2017, the town of Tando Bago has a total population of 17,546 people, in 3,663 households.[1]

Tando Bago is located on the left bank of the Shadiwah canal and is connected by road with Hyderabad (via Tando Muhammad Khan), Wanga Bazar, Khairpur, Pangrio, Badin, and Nindo Shahr.[4] The area around Tando Bago is crisscrossed by many small seasonal drainage channels, which mostly derive from the Shahdadpur branch of the Indus, although some come from branches further west.[5]

Tando Bago is home to a prominent Sheedi community, which retains a distinct identity but is also relatively impoverished, mostly living in the ghetto area of Kandri Paro and working as lowly labourers.[6] Kandri Paro's houses are generally small and in disrepair and lack the courtyards found in other parts of town.[6] One notable member of Tando Bago's Sheedi community was Mussafir (a pen name; his given name was Muhammad Siddiq), who Sheedis throughout Sindh venerate as a hero for working to advance the position of Sheedis in society.[6] Mussafir's father Bilal was born in Zanzibar around 1793 and was sold into slavery; eventually he was sold to a stonemason who had just been contracted to build a fort in Tando Bago for the ruling Talpurs.[6] Mussafir himself was born in 1879, when his father was 86 years old.[6] He was childhood friends with Mir Ghulam Muhammad, the heir of the main Talpur ruling family, and Mussafir later got him to help with founding a high school for Sheedis in the old Talpur fort.[6] This school was the first in Pakistan to offer education to Sheedi girls.[6] Mussafir died in Tando Bago and his blue-and-white tomb is an important site for Sheedis in Sindh.[6]

City and people

Ethnicities in Tando Bago include, Talpur, Halepota, Khuwaja, Lohana, Khatti, Aaga Khani, Rajput, Sheedi, Soomro, Memon, Chandio, Baloch, Qureshi, Punjabi, Kaloi, Pathan, Noonari, Bhanbhro, Samoon, Mallah, Kazi, Siyal, Solangi, Baloch, Chalgri, Bhatti, Jokhio, Mughal, Mirza, Unar, Bughio, Umrani, Rind, Leghari tribe, Khaskheli, Rustmani, Lashari, Nizamanri, Abbasi, Dal, Sand, Lakha, Uttwani’s, Jablu Abra, Jablu’s Detha, Kolhi, Meghwar, Bheel, Khosa, Magsi, Sarhandi Pir, Sindhi, Saati, Dahri, Jamali, Authelo, Brohi, Arain, Lashari, Rajput, Syed, Khaledi Qureshi Pir, Malik, Bhangi, Uttwani’s hindu peoples and many Sindhi communities.

Among the people living in the city, 85 percent are native Sindhi speakers; 05 percent speak Urdu; and the other 10 percent speak a different language. A significant number of Punjabi speakers also live in nearby villages.

History

Tando Bago was founded around the year 1734[note 1] by one Mir Bago Talpur.[4] His descendants, the Bagani branch of the Talpur dynasty, remained prominent residents of the town.[4] Tando Bago was first constituted as a municipality on 20 June 1857.[4]

Tando Bago was historically the seat of a pargana, which covered territories that had earlier belonged to the district of Chachgan in the eastern Indus Delta.[7]

Around 1874, Tando Bago was described as the headquarters of a taluka within the deputy collectorate of Tando Muhammad Khan, with a population of 1,033 including 568 Muslims and 465 Hindus.[4] Most of the locals were employed either as farmers, traders, shopkeepers, goldsmiths, lahoris, servants, dyers, and washermen.[4] There was a fairly minor local trade in rice and grain, sugar, cloth, oil, tobacco, and liquor and drugs; there was "little or no transit trade".[4] The town was not noted for its manufactured goods.[4] Tando Bago then had a government vernacular school, a large dharamsala maintained by the municipality, the kacheri of the taluka's mukhtiarkar with an associated jail, and a police thana with 2 officers and 7 constables.[4] The town was visited twice a year by the divisional judge on his circuit.[4]

The 1951 census recorded the village of Tando Bago as having an estimated population of 2,099 people, in 300 houses, and covering an area of 1.1 square miles.[8] It had a Sanitary Committee, a primary school, a high school, a police station, and a post office at that point.[8] The deh of Tando Bago, meanwhile, included a total population of 2,485 people, in 300 houses, and an area of 3.1 square miles.[8]

Notes

  1. "About 140 years ago", according to the British gazetteer written in 1874

References

  1. 1 2 Population and household detail from block to tehsil level (Badin District) (PDF). 2017. p. 42. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  2. "Population Welfare Department, Badin District". Population Welfare Department, Government of Pakistan. 2018.
  3. Schools, Tando Bago. "Tando Bago Schools". SchoolingLog. Archived from the original on 7 September 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Hughes, A.W. (1874). A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh. London: George Bell and Sons. pp. 548, 808–9. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  5. Holmes, D. A. (1968). "The Recent History of the Indus". The Geographical Journal. 134 (3): 367–82. doi:10.2307/1792965. JSTOR 1792965. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Albinia, Alice (2010). Empires of the Indus: The Story of a River. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 68–76. ISBN 978-0-393-33860-7. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  7. Hodivala, Shahpurshah Hormasji (1939). Studies in Indo-Muslim History: A Critical Commentary on Elliot and Dowson's History of India. Bombay. p. 147. Retrieved 6 January 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. 1 2 3 Census of Pakistan, 1951: Village List (PDF). p. 35 in section "Badin District". Retrieved 31 December 2021.


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