People of the Karakoram Range
- Chinese (Pinyin):
- Karakorum Shan or
- (Wade-Giles romanization):
- K’a-la-k’un-lun Shan
The population of the Karakoram Range is concentrated in three towns in the disputed Kashmir region of the northern Indian subcontinent—Gilgit and Skardu in Gilgit-Baltistan (in the Pakistani-administered portion) and Leh in Ladakh union territory (in the Indian-administered portion)—and in small villages throughout the region perched on rocky slopes or beside raging torrents. Most mountain dwellers are Shiʿi Muslims of the Ismāʿīli or Twelver (Ithnā ʿAshariyyah) sects. Tibetan Buddhism is prevalent in Ladakh. Mountain Tajik, who speak Wakhī (an Iranian language), are interspersed with Turkic-speaking Kyrgyz and Uighurs on the northern slopes, while on the southern slopes military troops from lowland India and Pakistan intermingle with Kohistani- (Dardic-) speaking people in the Gilgit district and with the Tibetan-speaking population of Baltistan and Ladakh. On the northern, much drier Karakoram slopes descending to the oases around the Tarim Basin in China, population density is quite low. An enclave of Burushaski-speaking people exists in Hunza and Nagir and in the adjacent valley of Yasin. Their language is not known to be related to any other.
Despite the marginality and remoteness of the Karakoram Range, the local population has undergone considerable movement throughout its history. Raiding by caravans crossing the range and a slave trade sustained by continual warfare caused wide dispersals. Passes for foot traffic across the mountains, no longer used, led northward from Skardu and Leh and from the Vale of Kashmir into western China (Xinjiang) via Taxkorgan (Tash Kurghan) and the ancient trading centres of Yarkand (Shache) and Kashgar (Kashi) and the Tarim Basin oases. Buddhist monasteries formerly exercised great control over subjects and land in the eastern valleys.
Economy
Subsistence agriculture and livestock raising dominate the local economy. Crops are limited to wheat, barley, sweet and bitter buckwheat, corn (maize), potatoes, and pulses. Tree crops, especially apricots and walnuts, were once an important local food source. On the lower slopes up to 7,000 feet (2,100 metres), the growing season is sufficient for double-cropping. At these elevations the days are warm, the nights cool, and the air clear and clean; the aridity of the region, however, precludes cultivation without the intricate irrigation facilities that are a feature of all inhabited areas.
Continual periodic and permanent migration, reliance on central government subsidies, high infant mortality, and chronic malnutrition are symptoms of the difficulty humans have had adapting to this marginal environment. Service in military garrisons provides supplemental income, as do remittances from migrants working elsewhere in India or Pakistan or in the Persian Gulf states.
Three transmontane roads serve the southern slopes of the Karakoram Range—one from the Kullu Valley in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh over several high passes to Leh, another from the Vale of Kashmir also to Leh, and the hard-surfaced Karakoram Highway (completed 1978) following the Indus River gorge from Islamabad to Gilgit and proceeding on to Kashgar. A frontier road from Lhasa, in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, to Kashgar skirts the eastern and northern margins of the Karakorams in China. There are daily commercial flights to Leh from the Indian cities of Delhi and Chandigarh and to Skardu and Gilgit from Islamabad, Pak.
Study and exploration
Both ancient Chinese documents, interpreted in the 19th century by the German explorer Alexander von Humboldt, and medieval Arabic works record the pre-European knowledge of Karakoram geography. Baltistan and its principal town, Skardu, appear on a European map produced in 1680. Early 19th-century European travelers such as the Englishmen William Moorcroft, George Trebeck, and Godfrey Thomas Vigne plotted the locations of major rivers, glaciers, and mountains. The extraordinary topography, along with protracted military tensions in the Karakorams between Russia and Britain and more recently between China, Pakistan, and India, prompted many expeditions in the 19th and 20th centuries. Most English exploration reflected military and political rather than scientific considerations. Three brothers of the German Schlagintweit family pioneered the study of glaciers as indicators of global climate change, techniques of climate measurement, and the representation of mountain terrain on maps.
Other major scientific contributions were made by the Briton Martin Conway and by the seven expeditions led by the Americans Fanny and William Workman in the early 20th century. Later geomorphologic studies include those conducted by Italians, notably Ardito Desio and Giotto Dainelli. Sustained study in the Karakorams in the late 20th and early 21st centuries was undertaken primarily by Canadian, British, and American researchers, the work of Kenneth Hewitt, John Shroder, and Lewis Owen being prominent. As a consequence of this foreign interest and of India’s territorial disputes with both Pakistan and China, the Karakorams are exceedingly well mapped. In addition, several dozen mountaineering expeditions visit the area annually.
Georgy Dmitriyevich Bessarabov Nigel John Roger Allan The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica