Rajanpur
Rajanpur (Urdu: راجن پُور), is a city and the headquarters of Rajanpur District in the far southwestern part of Punjab, Pakistan. The district lies entirely west of the Indus River. it is a narrow, 32 kilometres (20 mi) to 64 kilometres (40 mi) wide strip of land sandwiched between the Indus River on the east and the Sulaiman Mountains on the west.
Rajanpur 
    راجن پور  | |
|---|---|
| District Rajanpur, Pakistan | |
![]() Gateway of Rajanpur's Harand Fort  | |
![]() Rajanpur ![]() Rajanpur  | |
| Coordinates: 29°6′15″N 70°19′29″E | |
| Country | Pakistan | 
| Province | Punjab | 
| Division | Dera Ghazi Khan | 
| District | Rajanpur | 
| Foundation of Old City | 1770s | 
| Government | |
| • Type | Municipal Committee | 
| • Chairman | Kunawar Kamal Akhtar | 
| • Vice Chairman | Ch. Naeem Saqib Advocate | 
| • Chief Officer | Syed Masood-ur-Rauf Ahmad Rizvi Qazi | 
| • Municipal Officer (Finance) | Muhammad Akram Bari | 
| • Computer Section | Abdullah Hussain Dreshak | 
| Population | |
| • City | 99,089 | 
| Time zone | UTC+5 (PST) | 
| • Summer (DST) | +6 | 
| Postal code | 33500  | 
| Dialling code | 604[3] | 
| Acronym | RJP | 
| Demonym | Rajanpuri | 
| Highways | |
| Website | http://www.mcrajanpur.lgpunjab.org.pk/ | 
History
    
Rajanpur was founded in 1732-33 by Makhdoom Sheikh Rajan Shah,[4][5] from whom the city's name derives.[6] Sheikh Rajan established Rajanpur in an area that he had captured from Nahar tribesmen.[4] The settlement remained a largely unimportant village until flooding in 1862 severely damaged the nearby district headquarters at Mithankot - leading to the transfer of government offices to Rajanpur.[4] A small dispensary clinic was established in Rajanpur that same year.[7] Rajanpur was then constituted as a municipality in 1873.[4]
References
    
- "Municipal Committee Rajanpur". Local Government Punjab. Retrieved 2018-04-24.
 - "Punjāb (Pakistan): Province, Major Cities, Municipalites & Towns - Population Statistics, Maps, Charts, Weather and Web Information".
 - "National Dialing Codes". Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
 - Imperial gazetteer of India: provincial series. Supt. of Govt. Print. 1908.
 - Rashid, Haroon (2008). History of the Pathans: The Ghurghushti, Beitani and Matti tribes of Pathans. Haroon Rashid.
 - (Firm), Cosmo Publications (2000). The Pakistan gazetteer. Cosmo Publications. ISBN 9788170208822.
 - Punjab District Gazetteers: Ibbetson series, 1883-1884]. Compiled and published under the authority of the Punjab government. 1883.
 


