A view of Mohenjo-daro, an archaeological site in modern Sindh, Pakistan dating back to the Indus Valley Civilisation.

Northwest India was a historical region, geographically located in the northwestern Indian subcontinent. It predominantly constitutes what are now parts of the present-day South Asian republics of Pakistan and India (specifically modern Northwest India and eastern-Pakistan) after the 1947 Partition of British India.[1][2]

History

The Indus Valley Civilisation formed in the northwestern subcontinent over 4000 years ago, with climate change potentially having caused its later decline.[3]

Northwest India was a hub of Buddhism in ancient times.[4][5]

The Umayyad Caliphate conquered Sindh in the 8th century CE,[6] marking the beginning of what was to become a major Islamic presence in the region.[7]

See also

References

  1. Hayreh, Sohan Singh (2018). "Adventure in three worlds". Indian Journal of Ophthalmology. 66 (12): 1678. doi:10.4103/ijo.IJO_1842_18. ISSN 0301-4738. PMC 6256897. PMID 30451165.
  2. "Revisiting the Impacts of the Green Revolution in India". ipg.vt.edu. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  3. "Abrupt weakening of the summer monsoon in northwest India ~4100 yr ago". pubs.geoscienceworld.org. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  4. Verardi, Giovanni (2012). "Buddhism in North-western India and Eastern Afghanistan, Sixth to Ninth Century AD". ZINBUN. 43: 147–183. doi:10.14989/155685. ISSN 0084-5515.
  5. Michon, Daniel (2015-08-12). Archaeology and Religion in Early Northwest India: History, Theory, Practice. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-32458-4.
  6. Formichi, Chiara, ed. (2020), "Islam across the Oxus (Seventh to Seventeenth Centuries)", Islam and Asia: A History, New Approaches to Asian History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 10–41, doi:10.1017/9781316226803.004, ISBN 978-1-107-10612-3, S2CID 238121625, retrieved 2023-11-30
  7. "Do you know how Islam spread in the Indian subcontinent?". EgyptToday. 2017-05-29. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
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