KHAIRPUR


Meaning of KHAIRPUR in English

also called Khairpur Mirs, city, Sindh province, south-central Pakistan. The city lies along the Khairpur East Canal, 11 miles (18 km) south of the Indus River. It was founded in 1783 by Mir (chief) Sohrab Khan, who established the Khairpur branch of the Talpur family. The settlement was selected as the seat of the mirs of northern Sindh. A communications centre, it is connected by rail with Peshawar and Karachi and by road with Sukkur and Karachi. After the establishment of Pakistan in 1947, the city developed industrially, with textile, silk, leather, and carpet manufactures and sugar and flour mills. Amenities include several parks, the mir's palace, hospitals, a library, and a stadium. Shah Abdul Latif University was founded as a campus of the University of Sindh in 1975; university status was granted in 1987. The former princely state of Khairpur was recognized in 1832 by the British, who allowed it to retain its political existence after the British annexation of Sindh in 1843. In October 1955 the Khairpur state acceded to Pakistan. Kot Diji, 15 miles (25 km) south of Khairpur, is an archaeological and historical site that reveals primary occupation levels dating from and prior to the Indus Valley civilization (c. 3000 BC). Excavations indicate well-settled communities with structured societies familiar with stone tools and pottery. The inhabitants' linguistic affinities are unknown. On a ridge near the prehistoric site is Talpur, an early 19th-century brick fort. Pop. (1981) city, 61,447.

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