CHAPTER V.
The War in Central Asia, 1647.
To the north of Kabul the Hindu Kush Badakhshan. mountain range running north-east and the Oxus river flowing westwards enclose between them two provinces, Balkh and Badakhshan. The eastern half, Badakhshan, is a mere succession of ridges and valleys, with a scanty population and scattered patches of cultivation. The mines of ruby and turquoise which once gave it fame throughout the eastern world, now yield very little. It is a province thrust into a forgotten nook of the world, and hemmed in by fierce mountain tribes; the squalor and poverty of its people is equalled only by their ignorance and helplessness.[1]
Balkh is a more open and fertile country. Balkh. Irrigation canals and numerous streams have given its favoured
- ↑ Leyden's Memoirs of Babar (ed. 1826), xxix, Wood's Journey to the Source of the Oxus (ed. 1872), lxxv-lxxix, 171, 206, 191.