Page:History of Aurangzib (based on original sources) Vol 1.djvu/113

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CHAPTER V.

The War in Central Asia, 1647.

To the north of Kabul the Hindu Kush Badakhshan. mountain range running north-east and the Oxus river flowing westwards enclose between them two provinces, Balkh and Badakhshan. The eastern half, Badakhshan, is a mere succession of ridges and valleys, with a scanty population and scattered patches of cultivation. The mines of ruby and turquoise which once gave it fame throughout the eastern world, now yield very little. It is a province thrust into a forgotten nook of the world, and hemmed in by fierce mountain tribes; the squalor and poverty of its people is equalled only by their ignorance and helplessness.[1]

Balkh is a more open and fertile country. Balkh. Irrigation canals and numerous streams have given its favoured

  1. Leyden's Memoirs of Babar (ed. 1826), xxix, Wood's Journey to the Source of the Oxus (ed. 1872), lxxv-lxxix, 171, 206, 191.