Chak 168/171 NB

Chak No. 168/171 NB is a village in Sargodha District, Punjab, Pakistan.[1] It is also known as by its public name Chak Mangla

Chak No. 168/171 NB

چک منگلا
Chak No. 168/171 NB
Location in Pakistan
Coordinates: 31°50′10″N 72°29′45″E
CountryPakistan
ProvincePunjab
DistrictSargodha

History

In the early 1900s, the British government, in order to drive rebels (like Dulla Bhatti) out of the jungles of Punjab, decided to open Sargodha, Lyallpur (now Faisalabad) and Montgomery (now Sahiwal) area for farming and residence. Sir James Broadwood Lyall and his engineers came up with the whole plan of various villages and instead of giving them typical names, the team chose to number them according to their location from water streams derived from the Jehlum River.

The tribe of Mangla was selected to reside in two villages or Check(points) or Chaks: Chak No. 168 and 171. Tribal chiefs requested the local government to allow them to live in the same village, so some changes were made to the maps and they let it be Chak 168/171.

gollark: Er, no.
gollark: NuclearCraft does not actually have these, nor would I want it to.
gollark: Also, what would "harder" involve? Lower output from the collectors would just induce grind.
gollark: What would you actually reasonably use it for anyway other than cooling?
gollark: (Termux is a thing allowing you to run Linux programs like ssh and python and whatever, in a terminal, with some convenient device APIs)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.