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Daulat Beg Oldie: A key post named after the spot where a ruler kicked the bucket

Daulat Beg Oldie: A key post named after the spot where a ruler kicked the bucket 


In 2000, when India's Border Roads Organization (BRO) started the development of 255-km-long Darbuk-Shyokh-Daulat Beg Oldie (DSDBO) all-climate street, the thought was to interface Leh, the capital of Ladakh to Daulat Beg Oldie (DBO), an Indian army installation, situated at the Northernmost tip of India in the Karakoram mountains. In the previous month, the street has come at the front line of the India-China deadlock.

Daulat Beg Oldie is a name hard to overlook. A speedy assessment of the derivation uncovers the fairly extraordinary beginnings of the name, interpreted from Turkic as 'the spot where the rich man passed on'.

The nineteenth century British clinical official, Henry Walter Bellew, who worked in Afghanistan and composed widely on his investigations of the area, deciphered the name 'Daulat Beg Oldie' as where 'the Lord of the state passed on'.

Both the historical backgrounds, be that as it may, are characteristic of a similar individual: Sultan Said Khan, the sixteenth century leader of Yarkent Khanate. The Yarkent Khanate was a state in Central Asia existing somewhere in the range of 1514 and 1705 CE, with its seat of government being arranged at Yarkand, in Xinjiang, China. At its pinnacle, the Yarkent Khanate administered over enormous pieces of Central Asia from Xinjiang. Khan who was the relative of Mongol head Genghis Khan, was the primary leader of the state.

Composed by Adrija Roychowdhury | New Delhi | Updated: June 25, 2020 1:52:39 pm

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In July 1962, a couple of months before the Sino-Indian clash, a runway was charged at DBO. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

In 2000, when India's Border Roads Organization (BRO) started the development of 255-km-long Darbuk-Shyokh-Daulat Beg Oldie (DSDBO) all-climate street, the thought was to associate Leh, the capital of Ladakh to Daulat Beg Oldie (DBO), an Indian army installation, situated at the Northernmost tip of India in the Karakoram mountains. In the previous month, the street has come at the bleeding edge of the India-China deadlock.

Daulat Beg Oldie is a name hard to overlook. A snappy assessment of the historical underpinnings uncovers the fairly intriguing starting points of the name, interpreted from Turkic as 'the spot where the rich man kicked the bucket'.

The nineteenth century British clinical official, Henry Walter Bellew, who worked in Afghanistan and composed widely on his investigations of the district, deciphered the name 'Daulat Beg Oldie' as where 'the Lord of the state passed on'.

Daulat Beg Oldie (DBO) is an Indian army installation, situated at the Northernmost tip of India in the Karakoram mountains. (Source: Google maps)

Both the historical underpinnings, be that as it may, are characteristic of a similar individual: Sultan Said Khan, the sixteenth century leader of Yarkent Khanate. The Yarkent Khanate was a state in Central Asia existing somewhere in the range of 1514 and 1705 CE, with its seat of government being arranged at Yarkand, in Xinjiang, China. At its pinnacle, the Yarkent Khanate controlled over enormous pieces of Central Asia from Xinjiang. Khan who was the relative of Mongol sovereign Genghis Khan, was the principal leader of the state.

In 1531, Khan dispatched his general Mirza Haider to attack Ladakh as an introduction to his bigger arrangement of overcoming Lhasa in Tibet. While Haider was caught up with going up against the leader of Ladakh, Khan himself chose to walk down with an enormous power. Be that as it may, as the ruler's wellbeing got ugly, the campaign of Lhasa was depended to Haider, while he rushed back home. In any case, Khan kicked the bucket on his way back to Yarkand, at the detect that proceeded to be named after him as 'Daulat Beg Oldie'.

Depicting Khan's undertaking in Ladakh, antiquarians Iqtidar A. Khan and Irfan Habib wrote in the book 'History of Civilizations of Central Asia: Development in Contrast: from the Sixteenth to the Mid-Nineteenth Century': "It was, evidently, intended to clear the course connecting Kashmir with Yarkand and make a social base for Chaghatayid rule in the valley, where most of the populace were Sunni Muslims." They included: "Said Khan's demise during the walk again from Ladakh to Yarkand in 1533 and the ensuing unsettling influences in Kashgar, nonetheless, didn't permit adequate time for this plan to happen as intended."

Additionally read: Closer to key DBO, China opens new front at Depsang

The memory of Khan's aspirations, be that as it may, has been held in the detect that has throughout the years procured key significance for India. Under 10 kilometers west of the LAC at Aksai Chin, a military station was made at DBO after the Chinese occupation at Aksai Chin during the Sino-Indian war of 1962. In July 1962, a couple of months before the Sino-Indian clash, a landing strip was charged at DBO. Situated at a rise of 16,614 feet above seal level, it is the most elevated runway on the planet.

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