Kandahar[a] is acity in southernAfghanistan, serving as thecapital and largest city ofKandahar Province. It is within the jurisdiction ofKandahar District and has an estimated population of 732,629 settled residents.[4] Mullah Hekmatullah is the currentmayor of the city.[1] His predecessor was Haji Nimatullah Hassan.[5]
The region around Kandahar is one of the oldest known areas of human settlement. A major fortified city existed at the site of Kandahar, probably as early asc. 1000–750 BC,[6] and it became an important outpost of theAchaemenid Empire in the 6th century BC.[7]Alexander the Great laid the foundation of what is nowOld Kandahar (in the southeastern section of the current city) in the 4th century BC and named itAlexandria Arachosia. Many empires have long fought over the city due to its strategic location along the trade routes ofsouthern,central andwestern Asia. In 1709,Mirwais Hotak turned the region into an independent kingdom and made Kandahar the capital of theHotak dynasty. In 1747,Ahmad Shah Durrani, founder of theDurrani dynasty, made Kandahar the capital of theDurrani Empire. It was briefly occupied by theBritish in the 19th century, theSoviets in the 1980s, and recently byNATO forces.
Kandahar is the founding city and spiritual center of theTaliban. Despite the nation's capital being Kabul, where all government ministries and institutions are based, Kandahar is the seat of power in Afghanistan as thesupreme leader and his spiritual advisers are based there. Kandahar has therefore been called thede facto capital of Afghanistan, though the Taliban maintain Kabul as the official capital.[8]
Kandahar is one of the most culturally significant cities of thePashtun community and has been their traditional seat of power for more than 300 years. It is a major industrial and trading center.[9] The region produces some of the finest fruits, especiallygrapes andpomegranates,[10] and the city has plants for canning, drying, and packing fruits.[11][12]
The modern name of the city derives from the name of the original city built here,Alexandria. This city (often referred to asAlexandria in Arachosia to distinguish it fromother Alexandrias) was founded after the invasion ofAlexander the Great in 330 BC. The name "Alexander" in the localPashto language is rendered as "Iskandar". It is believed that over time this transformed into"Scandar", and eventually the modern"Kandahar".[13] The change of the name from"Scandar" to Candar is mentioned by the 16th-century Portuguese historianJoão de Barros in his most famous work,Décadas da Ásia.[14][15]
Afolk etymology offered is that the word "kand" or "qand" inPersian andPashto (the local languages) is the origin of the word "candy". The name "Candahar" or "Kandahar" in this form probably translates to candy area. This probably has to do with the location beingfertile and historically known for producing fine grapes,pomegranates,apricots, melons and other sweet fruits.[citation needed]
Ernst Herzfeld claimed Kandahar perpetuated the name of theIndo-Parthian kingGondophares, who re-founded the city under the name Gundopharron.[16] However, modern historians and linguists generally find this derivation implausible.[13]
Excavations of prehistoric sites by archaeologists such asLouis Dupree and others suggest that the region around Kandahar is one of the oldest known human settlements known so far.
Early peasant farming villages came into existence in Afghanistan ca. 5000 B.C., or 7000 years ago. Deh Morasi Ghundai, the first prehistoric site to be excavated in Afghanistan, lies 27 km (17 mi) southwest of Kandahar (Dupree, 1951). AnotherBronze Age village mound site with multiroomed mud-brick buildings dating from the same period sits nearby at Said Qala (J. Shaffer, 1970). Second millennium B.C. Bronze Agepottery, copper andbronze horse trappings and stone seals were found in the lowermost levels in the nearby cave called Shamshir Ghar (Dupree, 1950). In theSeistan, southwest of these Kandahar sites, two teams of American archaeologists discovered sites relating to the 2nd millennium B.C. (G. Dales,University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 1969, 1971; W, Trousdale,Smithsonian Institution, 1971 – 76). Stylistically the finds from Deh Morasi and Said Qala tie in with those of pre-Indus Valley sites and with those of comparable age on theIranian Plateau and in Central Asia, indicating cultural contacts during this very early age.[17]
British excavations in the 1970s discovered that Kandahar existed as a large fortified city during the early 1st millennium BC; while this earliest period at Kandahar has not been precisely dated viaradiocarbon, ceramic comparisons with the latest period at the majorBronze Age city ofMundigak have suggested an approximate time-frame of 1000 to 750 BC.[6] This fortified city became an important outpost of theAchaemenid Empire in the 6th to 4th centuries BC, and formed part of the province ofArachosia.[7]
The main inhabitants of Arachosia were thePakhtas,[18] an ancient Indo-Iranian tribe, who might have been among the ancestors of today'sPashtuns. Mundigak served as the provincial capital of Arachosia and was ruled by theMedes followed by the Achaemenids until the arrival of the Macedonians. The now called "Old Kandahar" was founded in 330 BC byAlexander the Great, near the site of the ancient city of Mundigak (established around 3000 BC era). Kandahar was namedAlexandria, a name given to some cities that Alexander founded during his conquests.[19]
Kandahar was a frequent target for conquest because of its strategic location in Asia, controlling the main trade route linking theIndian subcontinent with theMiddle East andCentral Asia.[20] The territory became part of theSeleucid Empire after the death of Alexander. The city eventually became part of theGreco-Bactrian Kingdom (250 BC – 125 BC), and continued that way for two hundred years under the laterIndo-Greek Kingdom (180 BC – 10 AD).
It is mentioned byStrabo that a treaty of friendship was established eventually between the Greeks and theMauryas (Indians).[21][22] While theDiadochi were warring amongst themselves, the Mauryas were developing in the northern part ofHindustan. The founder of the empire,Chandragupta Maurya, confronted a Macedonian invasion force led bySeleucus I in 305 BC and following a brief conflict, an agreement was reached as Seleucus cededGandhara and Arachosia and areas south ofBagram to the Mauryas. During the 120 years of the Mauryas in southern Afghanistan, Buddhism was introduced and eventually become one of the major religions alongside Zoroastrianism.
Inscriptions made by EmperorAshoka, a fragment ofEdict 13 in Greek, as well as a full Edict, written in both Greek and Aramaic has been discovered in Kandahar. It is said to be written in excellent Classical Greek, using sophisticated philosophical terms. In this Edict, Ashoka the great used the wordEusebeia ("Piety") as the Greek translation for the ubiquitous "Dharma" of his other Edicts written inPrakrit.
In the 7th century AD,Arab armies conquered the region but failed to convert the entire population to Islam. The leader of the expedition wasAbbad ibn Ziyad, who governedSijistan between 673 and 681.[23] In AD 870,Yaqub ibn Layth Saffari, a local ruler of theSaffarid dynasty, made Islam the official religion of the area. During that time, the Kandahar region was between Persia and Hindustan and ruled by theZunbil dynasty,[24][25] while others claim it was an Eastern Persian realm where the inhabitants practicedZurvanism.
Ghanavids
The region fell toMahmud of Ghazni in the 11th century followed byMuhammad of Ghor. Kandahar appears to have been renamedTeginābād in the 10th–12th centuries, but the origin of the new name is unclear. During this period, nearbyPanjwayi served as the administrative center for the area. However, Kandahar was of much more strategic importance, to the extent thatMinhaj-i-Siraj attributes the downfall of theGhaznavids to the loss of Kandahar. The city's name was changed back to Kandahar by the 13th century, afterAla ad-Din Husayn Jahansuz sackedLashkari Bazar, nearBost. Again, the reason for the name change is not clear.[26]
Kandahar was besieged by aMongol army in 1221, althoughJalal al-Din Mangburni defeated them. In 1251, upon accession to the Mongol throne,Möngke Khan granted Kandahar, along with other lands in Afghanistan, toShams ad-Din Mohammad Kart of theKart dynasty. However, the city is mentioned as being underChagatai control in 1260–61; Kandahar did not come under Kart control until 1281. Later, in 1318, a Chagatai prince raised an army from Kandahar against theIlkhanid governor ofSistan.[27] Kandahar was described byIbn Battuta in 1333 as a large and prosperous town three nights journey fromGhazni.[28]
Timur, founder of theTimurid Empire, captured Kandahar in 1383 and later made his grandsonPir Muhammad the governor of the region.[27] Following his death in 1405, the region was ruled by other Timurid governors. Kandahar was entrusted to theArghuns in the late 15th century, who eventually achieved independence from the Timurids.Guru Nanak, the founder ofSikhism, is believed to have visited the town (c. 1521 AD) during his journey between Hindustan andMecca in Arabia.
Mughals and Safavids
Timur's descendant,Babur, the founder of theMughal Empire, annexed Kandahar in 1508. In 1554, Babur's son,Humayun, handed it over to theSafavidShah Tahmasp in return of 12,000 soldiers he received from the Shah to reconquer India. In 1595, Humayun's sonAkbar the Great took back the city by diplomacy. When news about Akbar's death reached the Persian court, Shah Abbas ordered his army to besiege the city which finally failed due to the reinforcements sent by the Mughal EmperorJahangir that forced the Safavid retreat. In theMughal–Safavid War, Kandahar was once again lost to the Safavids. In 1698, Balochs underSamandar Khan and Mir Abdullah Khan Ahmadzai ofKalat State recaptured Kandahar. The city was important to Delhi because it was one of the gateways to Hindustan, and Mughal control over Kandahar helped to prevent foreign intrusions.[29] The memory of the wars fought over Kandahar at this time is preserved in the epic poemQandahār-nāma ("The Campaign Against Qandahār"), a major work ofSaib Tabrizi which is a classic of Persian literature.
Mirwais Hotak, chief of theGhilji tribe, revolted in 1709 by killingGurgin Khan, an ethnicGeorgian subject and governor of the ShiaSafavid Persians. After establishing theHotak dynasty in Kandahar, Mirwais and his Afghan army successfully defeated subsequent expeditions byKay Khusraw and Rustam Khán. It has been said that Mirwais resisted attempts by the Persian government who was seeking to convert the people of Kandahar fromSunni to the Shia sect of Islam. He died of a natural death in November 1715 and was succeeded by his brotherAbdul Aziz, but after being suspected of giving Kandahar's sovereignty back to the Persians he was killed by his nephewMahmud Hotak.[30][31][32]
In 1722, Mahmud led an army of Afghans to the Safavid capitalIsfahan and proclaimed himself King of Persia. TheHotak dynasty was eventually removed from power by a new Persian ruler,Nader Shah. In 1738, Nader Shah invaded Afghanistan and destroyed the nowOld Kandahar, which was held byHussain Hotak and hisGhilji tribes.[33] In the meantime, Nader Shah freedAhmad Khan (laterAhmad Shah Durrani) and his brother Zulfikar who were held prisoners by the Hotak ruler. Before leaving southern Afghanistan for Delhi in India, Nader Shah laid out the foundation for a new town to be built next to the destroyed ancient city, naming it "Naderabad". His rule ended in June 1747 after being murdered by his Persian guards.[34]
This lithograph is taken from plate 23 ofAfghaunistan by LieutenantJames Rattray, 1848. He sketched Kandahar in December 1841 from the rooftop of the former residence of the province's governor, Sirdar Meer Dil Khaun, who was brother to the Emir. Pictured on the left is theMausoleum of Ahmad Shah Durrani and on the right the Bala Hissar (fort) and citadel.Painting byAbdul Ghafoor Breshna depicting the 1747coronation ofAhmad Shah Durrani, who is regarded as thefounding father of Afghanistan (Father of the Nation)
Ahmad Shah Durrani, chief of theDurrani tribe, gained control of Kandahar and made it the capital of his newAfghan Empire in October 1747. Initially, Ahmad Shah had trouble finding land on which to build his city. His own tribe had no extensive lands and others who had, such as the Alikozai and Barakzai, refused to give up their lands. Only the Popalzai finally offered him his pick of their lands. The foundations for the city were laid in June 1761.[35] Once begun, the city was built with grand proportions. It was laid out in the form of a regular rectangle with a circumference of three miles; walls 30 feet thick at the bottom and 15 feet at the top, rose 27 feet high to enclose it. Outside, the walls were ringed by a moat 24 feet wide. Six mammoth gateways pierced these walls: the Eid Gah Gate on the north, the Shikarpur Gate on the south; the Herat and Top Khana Gates on the west; and, the Bar Durrani and Kabul Gates on the east. At its peak, Ahmad Shah's empire included present-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, theKhorasan andKohistan provinces of Iran, along withPunjab in India. In October 1772, Ahmad Shah retired and died from a natural cause.[36] A new city was laid out by Ahmad Shah and is dominated by his mausoleum, which is adjacent to theMosque of the Cloak in the centre of the city. By 1776, his eldest sonTimur Shah had transferred Afghanistan's main capital, due to several conflicts with various Pashtun tribes, from Kandahar to Kabul, where theDurrani legacy continued.[17]
1839 map of Kandahar
From 1818 to 1855, Kandahar was ruled by half-brothers ofDost Mohammad Khan as anindependent principality. In September 1826,Syed Ahmad Shaheed's followers arrived to Kandahar in search of volunteers to help them wagejihad against theSikh invaders to what is now Pakistan. Led byRanjit Singh, the Sikhs had captured several of Afghanistan's eastern territories, including parts of what is nowKhyber Pakhtunkhwa andKashmir. More than 400 local Kandahar warriors assembled themselves for the jihad. Sayed Din Mohammad Kandharai was appointed as their leader.
Kandahar remained peaceful for the next 100 years, except during 1929 when loyalists ofHabibullah Kalakani placed the fortified city on lock-down and began oppressing its population. Nobody was allowed to enter or leave from within the city's tall defensive walls, and as a result of this many people suffered after running out of food supplies. This lasted until October 1929 whenNadir Khan and his Afghan army came to eliminate Kalakani, known as the Tajik bandit from the village ofKalakan inKabul Province.
During the Kingdom ofMohammad Zahir Shah, the city slowly began expanding by adding modern style streets and housing schemes. Although Kandahar remained less international than Kabul, with fewer foreigners in residence and thus no market for coffee, jam or other European products, a modest German community took root there in the 1930s. Engineers and factory managers, accompanied by their spouses, arrived to supervise wool-processing plants. Some American families began arriving to Kandahar in the 1950s.[38][39] A Siemens electrical station powered these emerging industries, signaling a step toward the broader modernization taking shape across Afghanistan during this period.[40]
Street scene in the historical part of the city, 1973
In the 1960s, during the rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union, the United States built theKandahar International Airport. The U.S. also completed several other major projects in Kandahar and in other parts of southern Afghanistan.[38] In the meantime, Soviet engineers were busy building major infrastructures in other parts of the country, such asBagram Airfield andKabul International Airport. Kandahar had become a major stop on theHippie trail from Herat to Kabul. In 1972 the city was in shock after four citizens ofFrance were kidnapped and brutally murdered by local criminals, who were later publicly hanged in front of the victims' family after confessing to their crimes.[41]
During the 1980sSoviet–Afghan War, Kandahar witnessed heavy fighting between theAfghan mujahideen and theDemocratic Republic of Afghanistan.[42] Soviet troops surrounded the city and subjected it to heavy air bombardment in which many civilians were killed.[43] In January 1982 indiscriminate shelling and bombing by the Soviets killed hundreds.[44][45] 300 civilians were killed during Soviet bombings in July 1984.[46] It was under siege again in April 1986.[47] The city's population was reduced from 200,000 before the war to no more than 25,000 residents in 1987.[48] Most have fled to neighboringPakistan andIran.
Kandahar underwent a complete sociopolitical collapse in the early 1990s, driven in part by the divide-and-rule tactics of the communist governor-general,Nur ul-Haq Ulumi, who manipulated rival mujahideen factions against each other, and by the rampant greed within both the communist and mujahideen militias.[49] After the Soviet withdrawal and the collapse ofMohammad Najibullah's government in 1992, Kandahar fell to local mujahideen commander,Gul Agha Sherzai. However Sherzai lacked authority against other local commanders which led to lawlessness in the city,[42] and fighting in 1993.[50] During this time, banditry, rape, and murder became rampant in Kandahar, creating a demand for a more moral and unified alternative. This led to the rise of thetalibs (students), who eventually formed the Taliban movement. By the spring of 1994, the nucleus of theTaliban emirate had begun to take shape, and that year, they launched operations to dismantle warlord militia checkpoints around the city. The talibs gained considerable popularity and legitimacy during this period by defeating these predatory warlords.[49]
In August 1994,Mullah Omar and hisTaliban forces turned the city into their headquarters afterMullah Naqib and his forces surrendered.[42] The capture of Afghanistan's second-largest city marked the Taliban's transformation from a fledgling militia into an Islamic emirate, solidifying their legitimacy as a governing authority through the imposition of a strict interpretation of Islamic law.[49] Formal education for girls was banned as well as the consumption of TV, films, music with instrumentalaccompaniments, and the playing of sports. In December 1999, a hijackedIndian Airlines Flight 814 plane by Pakistani militants loyal toHarkat-ul-Mujahideen landed at Kandahar International Airport and kept the passengers hostage as part of a demand to release three Pakistani militants from prison in India.
In October 2001, as part ofOperation Enduring Freedom, theUnited States Navy beganhitting targets inside the city byprecision-guidedcruise missiles that were fired from thePersian Gulf. These targets were the Kandahar International Airport and buildings that were occupied by the Taliban, includingArab families who had arrived several years earlier and were residing in the area.[51] About a month later, the Taliban began surrendering in mass numbers to a private militia that had been formed byGul Agha Sherzai andHamid Karzai.[52] Kandahar once again fell into the hands of Sherzai, who had control over the area before the rise of the Taliban. He was transferred toNangarhar Province in 2003 and replaced byYousef Pashtun untilAsadullah Khalid took the post in 2005.
In 2002, members of the United States armed forces took control of the Kandahar International Airport. Years laterNATO'sInternational Security Assistance Force (ISAF) began training members of the newAfghan National Security Forces and provided security for the city. Themilitary of Afghanistan, backed by ISAF, gradually expanded its authority and presence throughout most of the country. The205th Corps of theAfghan National Army was based at Kandahar and provided military assistance to the south of the country. TheCanadian Forces maintained their military command headquarters at Kandahar, heading theRegional Command South of ISAF in Kandahar Province. The Taliban also had supporters inside the city reporting on events.[53]
ISAF gradually expanded the Afghan police force as part of a larger effort that also aimed to deliver services such as electricity and clean drinking water. The most significant battle between ISAF and the Taliban lasted throughout the summer of 2006, culminating inOperation Medusa. The Taliban failed to defeat the Western troops in open warfare, which marked a turn in their tactics towardsIED emplacement. In June 2008, it was reported that over 1,000inmates had escaped fromSarposa prison. In Spring 2010, the province and the city of Kandahar became a target of American operations followingOperation Moshtarak in the neighbouringHelmand Province.[54] In March 2010, U.S. and NATO commanders released details of plans for the biggest offensive of the war against the Taliban insurgency.[55]
In May 2010, Kandahar International Airport became subject of a combined rocket and ground attack by insurgents, following similar attacks on Kabul and Bagram in the preceding weeks. Although this attack did not lead to many casualties on the side of ISAF, it did show that the militants were still capable of launching multiple, coordinated operations in Afghanistan. In June 2010, ashura was held by then-Afghan President Hamid Karzai with tribal and religious leaders of the Kandahar region. The meeting highlighted the need for support of NATO-led forces in order to stabilize parts of the province.
In July 2011Ahmed Wali Karzai, brother of President Hamid Karzai, was shot by his long time head of security. Soon after theQuetta Shura of the Taliban claimed responsibility. The next day an Islamic cleric (mulla) of the famousRed Mosque in the Shahr-e Naw area of the city and a number of other people were killed by a Taliban suicide bomber who had hidden explosives inside histurban. On 27 July 2011, the mayor of the city,Ghulam Haider Hamidi, was assassinated by another Taliban militant who had hidden explosives in his turban. Twodeputy mayors had been killed in 2010,[56] while many tribal elders and Islamic clerics have also been assassinated in the last several years. The overwhelming majority of the victims in the attacks are ordinary Afghan civilians.[57] On 6 June 2012, at least 21 civilians were killed and 50 others injured when two Taliban suicide bombers on motorcycles blew themselves up in a market area near Kandahar International Airport.[58]
On4 May 2020, a policewoman was assassinated in the centre of Kandahar, making her the fifth policewoman to be killed during the previous two months in Kandahar. No group claimed responsibility for the killing of the policewomen by the end of the day of the reported event.[59]
Kandahar is connected by a road network withTarinkot to the north,Qalat to the northeast,Spin Boldak to the southeast, andGrishk andLashkargah to the west. It is the regional hub in southern Afghanistan, close to the border with Pakistan. Non-built up land use accounts for 59% of the total land area. Within the built-up area, vacant plots occupy a slightly higher percentage of land (36%) than residential land (34%). There is a significant commercial cluster along the road to Pakistan in District 5. In 2015 there were 61,902dwelling units in the city.[3]
Kandahar has ahot semi-arid climate (KöppenBSh),[65] that borders on ahot desert climate (BWh), characterised by little precipitation and high variation between summer and winter temperatures. Summers start in mid-May, last until late September, and are extremely dry. Temperatures peak in July with a 24-hour daily average of around 31.9 °C (89.4 °F). They are followed by dry autumns from early October to late November, with days still averaging in the 20s °C (above 68 °F) into November, although nights are sharply cooler. Winter begins in December and sees most of its precipitation in the form of rain. Temperatures average 5.1 °C (41.2 °F) in January, although lows can drop well below freezing. They end in early March and are followed by a pleasant spring until late April with temperatures generally in the upper 10s °C to lower 30s °C (65–88 °F) range. Sunny weather dominates year-round, especially in summer, when rainfall is extremely rare. The annual mean temperature is 18.6 °C (65.5 °F).
The government-runMilli Bus had a number of buses in Kandahar in the 1970s. The service ended in the 1990s. Most people in the city own a vehicle or have access to one. Others usetaxis,rickshaws,motorcycle,scooters, andbicycles.[68] There are many dealerships on Airport Road importing cars fromDubai,UAE.[69]
The city of Kandahar has an estimated population of 732,629 settled residents.[4] This estimated figure does not include the large number of recent returnees from neighboring countries,[70][71][72] nor does it include the large number of workers and visitors from other areas of the country.
"The major ethnic group living in Khandahar province is Pashtoons. This includes major tribes such asDurrani sub tribes includingBarakzai,Popalzai,Alkozai,Achakzai,Ishaqzai,Noorzai andAlezai.Pashtu is spoken by more than 98% of population and in more than 98% of villages.Dari is spoken in six villages by 4000 people andBalochi is spoken by 8000 people in two villages. 19000 people in nine villages speak some other unspecified language."[73]
Kandahar's economy is based onagriculture,trade,transport, andtourism. The main agricultural products aregrapes andpomegranates, which are also exported to other countries.[10][74][75] There are about 300 factories in the city's several industrial parks,[9] including pharmaceutical companies.[76] More are being built in the near future.[77]
There are a number ofbanks and shopping areas in the city. The following are some of the popular hotels and shopping places.
Afghan Continental Guest House in Ayno Maina
Al-Jadid Rahat Hotel next to Madad Chowk (Madad Square)[78]
The only remaining historical city gate is at Eidgah Gate Square, on Kandahar's main road.[81] TheMausoleum of Ahmad Shah Durrani is located near there, which also houses Durrani's brass helmet and other personal items.[82] In front of the mausoleum is theCloak of Muhammad.[83] The Sacred Cloak is kept locked away, taken out only at times of great crisis.Mullah Omar took it out in November 1996 and displayed it to a crowd ofulema of religious scholars to have himself declaredAmir al-Mu'minin (Commander of the Faithful).[84] Prior to that it was taken out when the city was struck by a cholera epidemic in the 1930s.[85] Durrani's historical residence is also in the city.[86][87]
Just to the north of the city, there is a shrine dedicated to a saint who lived in Kandahar more than 300 years ago. The grave of Hazratji Baba, 7.0 m (23 ft) long to signify his greatness, but otherwise covered solely by rock chips, is undecorated save for tall pennants at its head. TheShahidano Chawk (Martyrs' Square) is located in the center of the city. It was built in the 1940s in honor of the Afghan fighters who died during an attack on British-Indian forces at the Herat Gate.
TheChilzina Complex andOld Kandahar are two other tourists attractions.[88][89] The Chilzina Complex contains a rock-cut chamber above the plain at the end of the rugged chain of mountains forming the western defense of Old Kandahar, whereAshoka'sKandahar Bilingual Rock Inscription was found. A forty steps climb leads to the chamber, which is inscribed with an account ofBabur's conquest.
A short distance from the Chilzina Complex, going west on the main road, theMausoleum of Mirwais Hotak appears on the right in the Mirwais Maina neighborhood.[91] The shrine ofBaba Wali Kandhari is also popular for afternoon outings.[92] He was a Muslimpir who had a strange encounter withGuru Nanak atHasan Abdal in what is nowAttock District of Pakistan. The shrine of Baba Wali is important to both Muslims andSikhs.[17][90]
The Sarpuza Fortress in theOld Kandahar area is said to be originally built byMaurya EmperorAshoka in the 3d century BC.[93] Sher Surkh village is where Ahmad Shah Durrani's corronation took place. It is located southeast of the city,[94] near what was once calledNadirabad. TheKandahar Museum is located at the western end of the third block of buildings lining the main road east of Eidgah Gate. It has manyartifacts, including paintings by the now famous Ghiyassuddin. He is acknowledged among Afghanistan's leading artists. There are numerousmosques, shrines, mausoleums, gardens, and public parks in and around the city. The following are only a few of them.
Abu Hanifa Mosque in Ayno Maina (under construction)
Children from the Zarghona Ana High School watching American soldiers in 2012
There are a number ofpublic andprivateschools in the city. Some of the oldest schools are Ahmad Shah Baba High School, Malalai High School, Mirwais Neeka High School, Shah Mahmud High School, Zahir Shah High School and Zarghona Ana High School. Many new schools opened in the last two decades, and more are being built as the city's population is radpily growing with the large returns of Afghans from neighboring countries.[70][71][72]Afghan Turk High Schools is one of the top private schools in the city.
Kandahar has a number ofhospitals andclinics. The following is a list of some of the hospitals in the city. Those seeking advanced medical care travel to faraway cities such as Kabul, Herat or Mazar-i-Sharif. Some apply for medical visa to visit hospitals in foreign countries.
The city of Kandahar is within the jurisdiction ofKandahar District and administratively divided into 15municipal districts (nahias).[3] Everynahia has apolice station and a number of neighborhoods. Mullah Hekmatullah serves as the currentmayor of the city.[1] His predecessor was Haji Nimatullah Hassan.[5] The Kandahar Municipality's structure consists of several departments under the mayor. Like other provincial municipalities in Afghanistan, the Kandahar Municipality deals with city affairs such as infrastructure developments. The city districts collect certain taxes and issue building licenses. Each city district has a district head appointed by the mayor.
The decades of war left Kandahar depopulated and with outdated infrastructure, but in recent years large amount of funds poured in for construction purposes. New townships have been established around the city, and a number of modern style buildings have been constructed. Nearly all residents have access toclean drinking water andelectricity, and the government is working to extend these services to every home. The city currently gets electricity from the severalpower plants in the area. Many homes also havesolar panels. About 30 km (20 mi) north of the city is theDahla Dam, the second largestdam in Afghanistan.
TheAyno Maina is a new township in the northeastern part of the city.[104] Started byMahmud Karzai,[103] the project includes building up to 20,000 single-family homes and associated infrastructure such as roads, water and sewer systems, andcommunity buildings, including schools.[105] It has won 2 awards, theResidential Project andSustainable Project of the Year at the Middle East Architect Awards.[106] Many high-ranking government employees and civil servants as well as wealthy businessmen began living there, which is a more secured community in Kandahar. Work on the next $100 million scheme was initiated in 2011. Construction of Hamidi Township in the Morchi Kotal area of the city also began in August 2011. It is named afterGhulam Haider Hamidi, the mayor of Kandahar who was assassinated in late July 2011.[107] Situated along the Kandahar-Uruzgan Highway in the northeast of the city, the new township will have 2,000 residential and commercial plots. Including new roads, schools, commercial markets, clinics, canals and other facilities.[108]
About 10 km (6.2 mi) southeast of Kandahar is the Shorandamindustrial park, which was established nearly two decades ago.[109] The following is a short and incomplete neighborhood list.
^abJohn E. Hill,Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han dynasty, 1st to 2nd centuries AD. BookSurge, Charleston, South Carolina, 2009.ISBN978-1-4392-2134-1, pp. 517–518. This derivation, as that from Gondophares, was characterised as "philologiquement impossible" by P. Bernard, "Un probleme de toponymie antique dans l'Asie Centrale: les noms anciens de Qandahar",Studia Iranica, tome 3, 1974 andAfghanistan Quarterly, vol.33, no.1, June 1980/Spring 1359, pp.49–62, p59, n.10.
^Barros, João de (1552).Da Asia De Joāo De Barros: Dos Feitos, Que Os Portuguezes Fizeram No Descubrimento, E Conquista Dos Mares, E Terras Do Oriente. Decada Quarta. Parte Segunda (in Portuguese). Na Regia Officina Typografica.Archived from the original on 1 May 2021. Retrieved2 October 2020.Those who go from Persia, from the kingdom of Horaçam (Khorasan), from Bohára, and all the Western Regions, travel to the city which the natives corruptly call Candar, instead of Scandar, the name by which the Persians call Alexander.:ruptamente Candar, havendo de dizer Scandar, nome per que os Perfas chamam Alexandre, por elle (como efcreve Arriano ") edificar efia Cidade, e do feu nome fe chamou Alexandria fituada ...
^Those who go from Persia, from the kingdom of Horaçam (Khorasan), from Bohára, and all the Western Regions, travel to the city which the natives corruptly call Candar, instead of Scandar, the name by which the Persians call Alexander
^Ernst Herzfeld,Archaeological History of Iran, London, Oxford University Press for the British Academy, 1935, p.63; Ernst Herzfeld,The Persian Empire: Studies in Geography and Ethnography of the Ancient Near East, Wiesbaden, Steiner, 1968, p.335.
^abcDupree, Nancy Hatch (1970).An Historical Guide to Afghanistan. Vol. First Edition. Kabul: Afghan Air Authority, Afghan Tourist Organization. p. 492.Archived from the original on 7 May 2021. Retrieved17 June 2012.
^Map of theMedian Empire from the University of Texas in Austin, showingPactyans in what is now Kandahar, Afghanistan ...LinkArchived 4 October 2003 at theWayback Machine
^Mentioned in Bopearachchi, "Monnaies Greco-Bactriennes et Indo-Grecques", p52. Original text in paragraph 19 ofParthian stationsArchived 31 May 2020 at theWayback Machine
^"Last Afghan empire".Louis Dupree, Nancy H. Dupree and others. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.Archived from the original on 30 November 2010. Retrieved24 September 2010.
^Crews, Robert D. (2015). "Seduced by Capital".Afghan Modern: The History of a Global Nation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 161.ISBN978-0-674-49574-6.
^abcMoiz, Ibrahim (2024).The True Story of the Taliban: Emirate and Insurgency, 1994–2021. Kuala Lumpur: The Other Press. pp. 47–53.ISBN9798336042269.OCLC1458059551.
^"Home Free".Time. Archived fromthe original on 24 July 2009. Retrieved9 January 2011.Hamid Karzai dreamed for years of his eventual homecoming. But for both him and his newly reborn nation, the journey has only begun
Hill, John E. (2009)Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han dynasty, 1st to 2nd centuries CE. BookSurge, Charleston, South Carolina.ISBN978-1-4392-2134-1.
Frye, Richard N. (1963).The Heritage of Persia. World Publishing company, Cleveland, Ohio. Mentor Book edition, 1966.
Toynbee, Arnold J. (1961).Between Oxus and Jumna. London. Oxford University Press.
Willem Vogelsang (1985). "Early historical Arachosia in South-east Afghanistan; Meeting-place between East and West."Iranica antiqua, 20 (1985), pp. 55–99.