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sent the writer in the year 934 (1528), "with Rashid Sultan, to Balur, which is a country of infidels [_Kafiristan_], between Badakhshan and Kashmir, where we conducted successfully a holy war [_ghazat_], and returned victorious, loaded with booty and covered with glory." Mirza Haidar gives the following description of Bolor (pp. 384-5): "Balur is an infidel country [_Kafiristan_], and most of its inhabitants are mountaineers. Not one of them has a religion or a creed. Nor is there anything which they [consider it right to] abstain from or to avoid [as impure]; but they do whatever they list, and follow their desires without check or compunction. Baluristan is bounded on the east by the province of Kashgar and Yarkand; on the north by Badakhshan; on the west by Kabul and Lumghan; and on the south by the dependencies of Kashmir. It is four months' journey in circumference. Its whole extent consists of mountains, valleys, and defiles, insomuch that one might almost say that in the whole of Baluristan, not one _farsakh_ of level ground is to be met with. The population is numerous. No village is at peace with another, but there is constant hostility, and fights are continually occurring among them." From the note to this passage (p. 385) we note that "for some twenty years ago, Mr. E.B. Shaw found that the Kirghiz of the Pamirs called Chitral by the name of _Palor_. To all other inhabitants of the surrounding regions, however, the word appears now to be unknown.... "The Balur country would then include Hunza, Nagar, possibly Tash Kurghan, Gilgit, Panyal, Yasin, Chitral, and probably the tract now known as Kafiristan: while, also, some of the small states south of Gilgit, Yasin, etc., may have been regarded as part of Balur.... "The conclusions arrived at [by Sir H. Yule], are very nearly borne out by Mirza Haidar's description. The only differences are (1) that, according to our author, Baltistan cannot have been included in Balur, as he always speaks of that country, later in his work, as a separate province with the name of _Balti_, and says that it bordered on Balur; and (2) that _Balur_ was confined almost entirely, as far as I am able to judge from his description in this passage and elsewhere, to the southern slopes of the Eastern Hindu Kush, or Indus water-parting range; while Sir H. Yule's map makes it embrace Sarigh-Kul and the greater part of the eastern Pamirs." XXXIII., p. 182. "The natives [of Cascar]
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