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Arghandab River

Coordinates:31°50′58″N65°53′18″E/ 31.84944°N 65.88833°E/31.84944; 65.88833
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Arghandab River
Mouth of the Arghandar River in Afghanistan
Mouth of the Arghandar River in Afghanistan
Mouth of the Arghandar River in Afghanistan
Native nameArghandaw rod(Pashto)
Location
CountryAfghanistan
CitiesKandahar
Lashkargah
Physical characteristics
Source
• locationNorth ofSang-e-Masha[1]
• coordinates33°26′12″N67°31′00″E/ 33.436630°N 67.516588°E/33.436630; 67.516588
Mouth
• location
Lashkargah[1]
• coordinates
31°25′57″N64°23′01″E/ 31.432381°N 64.383568°E/31.432381; 64.383568
Length400 km (250 mi)
Map

TheArghandabis a river inAfghanistan,about 400 km (250 mi) in length. It rises inGhazni Province,west of the city ofGhazni,and flows southwest, passing near the city ofKandahar,before joining theHelmand River30 km (19 mi) below the town ofGrishk.In its lower course, it is much used for irrigation, under the control of theHelmand and Arghandab Valley Authority,and the valley is cultivated and populous; yet the water is said to be somewhat brackish. It is doubtful whether the ancientArachotusis to be identified with the Arghandab or with its chief confluent theTarnak,which joins it on the left 50 km (31 mi) southwest of Kandahar.[2]The Tarnak, which flows south of Kandahar, is much shorter (length about 320 km or 200 miles) and less copious.

Historical background

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Arachosia in 500 BC

The river was known to the ancient Persians as theHaraxvaitiinAvestanandHarahuvatiin Old Persian, which are cognate withRigvedicSarasvati(as described in its "family books" ). Scholars such as Boyce and Parpola have identified GreekArachosiaas a Hellenization of the name, meaning the land of theHaraxvaiti.[3][4]Rigveda's hymn VI.61.2 describes it with the words:

By means of her gushing and powerful waves, this (Sarasvatī) has crushed the ridge of the mountains, (breaking river banks) like a man who digs for lotus roots; with praises and prayers, we solicit Sarasvatī for her help, (Sarasvatī) who slays the foreigners.[5]

HistorianAsko Parpolastates: "Arghandab [...] descends from a height of nearly four kilometers down to about 700 meters when it joins the Helmand River, which eventually forms shallow lakes."Sarasvatī-is interpreted to mean "full of lakes".[5]

Some historians, however, assert that the AvestanHaraxvaitias well as the RigvedicSarasvatirefer to theHelmand River.The Rigvedic name of Arghandab is then believed to beDrishadvati.[a]

The ruins atUlan Robat,supposed to represent the city ofArachosia,are in its basin; and the lake known asAb-i Istada,the most probable representative of Lake Arachotus, is near the head of the Tarnak, though not communicating with it. The Tarnak is dammed for irrigation at intervals, and almost dries up in the summer.[2]

Upper course

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Helmand–Arghandab basin terrain map

The upper course of the Arghandab river is relatively unexplored. TheHistorical and Political Gazetteer of Afghanistancites the explorations of Major G. Lynch in 1841,[b] according to whom the origin of the Arghandab is 20 to 30 miles north ofSang-e-Masha.This places the source in the mountains southwest of the Nawar basin. Lynch also described the upper course of the river as being a "mountain torrent, dashing over great granite rocks and about 3 feet deep where fordable".[1]

Lower course

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Helmand–Arghandab basin

There is a good deal of cultivation along the river, but few villages. TheKabul-Kandahar Highwaypasses this way (another reason for supposing the Tarnak to be Arachotus), and the people live off the road to avoid the onerous duties of hospitality.[2]

Dahla dam

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In 2008 a project was initiated to rehabilitate theDahla Damand associated irrigation system.[10][11][12][13][14][15]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^
    • Ram Sharan Sharma:"In the Ṛg Veda, the Sarasvati is called the best of the rivers (naditama). It seems to have been a great river with perennial water... The earliest Sarasvati is considered identical with the Helmand in Afghanistan which is called Harakhwati in the Avesta. But the archaeology of the Helmand valley in the second millennium BC needs adequate attention. "[6]
    • Rajesh Kocchar: "The Avestan Harahvaiti, phonetically the same as Sarasvati, was known to the Greeks as Etymander and is now called Arghandab. ThenaditamaSarasvati, however, is to be equated not with the Arghandab but with the Helmand, of which the Arghandab is the main tributary.... There is an uncanny similarity between the Rgvedic description of Sarasvati and Avestan description of the Helmand. "[7]
  2. ^Possibly the British political agentKalat-i-Ghilzai.[8][9]

References

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  1. ^abcAdamec, Historical and Political Gazetteer of Afghanistan, Vol. 5 1980,p. 39.
  2. ^abcOne or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domain:Chisholm, Hugh,ed. (1911). "Arghandab".Encyclopædia Britannica.Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 475.
  3. ^Parpola, The Roots of Hinduism 2015,Ch. 6, p. 97.
  4. ^Boyce, Mary;Grenet, Frantz (1991).A history of Zoroastrianism. Vol. III, Zoroastrianism under Macedonian and Roman rule.Leiden: Brill. p. 125.ISBN9004092714.
  5. ^abParpola, The Roots of Hinduism 2015,Chapter 6.
  6. ^ Sharma, Ram Sharan(1999),Advent of the Aryans in India,Manohar Publishers & Distributors, pp. 35–36,ISBN978-81-7304-263-8
  7. ^ Kochhar, Rajesh (1999),"On the identity and chronology of the Ṛgvedic river Sarasvatī",in Roger Blench; Matthew Spriggs (eds.),Archaeology and Language III; Artefacts, languages and texts,Routledge, pp. 262–263,ISBN0-415-10054-2
  8. ^Buist, George (1843),Outline of the Operations of the British Troops in Scinde and Afghanistan: Betwixt Nov. 1838 and Nov. 1841; with Remarks on the Policy of the War,Times Office, pp. 272–
  9. ^J. W. Fortescue,History of the British Army, Volume XII: 1839–1852,Macmillan and Co, 1927
  10. ^ "Provincial profile for Kandahar Province"(PDF).Regional Rural Economic Regeneration Strategies.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2008-08-28.Retrieved2008-10-07.
  11. ^ Stephen Chase (2008-07-17)."Dahla dam project is potential target: military".The Globe and Mail.Retrieved2008-10-07.
  12. ^ Doug Schmidt(2008-06-11)."Cdn. military to safeguard Afghan dam project".Canwest News Service.Retrieved2008-10-07.
  13. ^ "Signature Project: Dahla Dam and Irrigation System".Government of Canada.Archived fromthe originalon 2013-01-01.Retrieved2008-10-07.
  14. ^ "Dahla Dam -- Summer 2008 (video podcast)".Government of Canada.Archived fromthe originalon 2011-07-06.Retrieved2008-10-07.
  15. ^"Dahla Dam -- Summer 2008".Government of Canada.Retrieved2008-10-07.[permanent dead link]

Bibliography

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31°50′58″N65°53′18″E/ 31.84944°N 65.88833°E/31.84944; 65.88833