Multan Division
Multan Division is an administrative division of Punjab province in Pakistan, consisting of four districts: Khanewal, Lodhran, Multan, and Vehari, with Multan serving as the divisional capital.[1] According to the 2023 Population and Housing Census, the division has a population of 14,085,102.[2] Covering an area of 14,223 square kilometers, it ranks among Punjab's more populous and agriculturally productive regions.[3] The division's economy is predominantly agrarian, with significant production of cotton, wheat, mangoes, sugarcane, and other crops, supported by irrigation from the Indus River system and canals, making it a vital contributor to Pakistan's agricultural output and exports.[4] Multan, the historic core, features ancient archaeological sites and Sufi shrines that underscore its longstanding role as a cultural and religious hub in southern Punjab, though the division as a whole emphasizes modern agricultural research and infrastructure development for sustained productivity.[5]
Geography
Location and Boundaries
Multan Division is situated in the southern portion of Punjab province, Pakistan, forming one of the nine administrative divisions of the province. It encompasses an area primarily within the alluvial plains of the Indus River basin, with its central point near 30° N latitude and 71.67° E longitude. The division's administrative headquarters are in the city of Multan, positioned at coordinates 30°11′N 71°28′E along the eastern bank of the Chenab River.[1][6][7] The division comprises four districts: Khanewal, Lodhran, Multan, and Vehari, covering a collective area that supports extensive cotton and wheat cultivation. Internally, these districts are interconnected through a network of canals derived from the Indus Basin Irrigation System, but the external boundaries define its regional extent. To the north, it adjoins districts of Sahiwal Division; the east similarly interfaces with Sahiwal Division territories.[1] The southern boundary is delineated by the Sutlej River, which separates Multan Division from Bahawalpur Division. In the west, the Chenab River marks the limit with Muzaffargarh District of Dera Ghazi Khan Division, influencing local hydrology and flood patterns. These riverine boundaries have historically shaped settlement patterns and agricultural practices in the region.[8][9]Physical Features and Climate
Multan Division occupies the alluvial plains of southern Punjab, featuring predominantly flat topography with gentle slopes directed from northeast to southwest and a secondary inclination from northwest to southeast.[10] This configuration forms part of the Lower Bari Doab canal irrigation tract, where the landscape derives from fluvial deposits laid down by ancient and modern river courses.[10] The average elevation across the division hovers around 125 meters (410 feet) above sea level, contributing to its low-relief character suited for extensive agriculture.[11] The soils in Multan Division are alluvial in nature, comprising fertile layers of clay overlying sand, with origins traceable to recent sediments from the shifting channels of the Chenab and Ravi rivers.[10] These soils support high agricultural productivity, particularly for cotton, mangoes, and grains, though they exhibit variability in texture, including silty clay and sandy loam in certain districts.[12] The division is bounded by major rivers, with the Chenab River traversing along its northwestern periphery in a northeast-to-southwest flow, providing critical irrigation water via canal systems, while the Sutlej delineates the southeastern edge.[10] [13] The climate of Multan Division is classified as hot semi-arid, marked by extreme summer heat and relatively mild winters, with annual rainfall typically low and concentrated during the monsoon season.[14] Punjab province, encompassing the division, records elevated temperatures, with 2023 averages 0.51°C above historical norms, reflecting broader arid conditions exacerbated by low precipitation outside monsoon periods.[14] Historical data indicate scant annual rainfall, often below 200 mm in southern Punjab locales, underscoring reliance on riverine irrigation amid variable weather patterns influenced by regional atmospheric dynamics.History
Ancient and Medieval History
Multan, the core of what is now Multan Division, exhibits evidence of continuous human habitation from the Indus Valley Civilization's early Harappan phase, dating to approximately 2500 BCE, establishing it as one of South Asia's oldest urban centers.[15] In Vedic and post-Vedic traditions, the city—known as Mūlasthāna, Sāmbapurā, or Prahlādpurī—was revered as a key tīrthakṣetra, linked to the sage Kaśyapa's founding of Kaśyapapurī and serving as the Trigarta Kingdom's capital in the Mahābhārata.[16] It housed prominent Hindu shrines, including the Prahlādpurī temple dedicated to Viṣṇu's Narasiṃha avatāra, commemorating Prahlāda's devotion, and a grand Sun Temple (Sūrya Maṇḍir) central to Sūrya worship as described in the Sāmba Purāṇa and Bhaviṣya Purāṇa.[17][16] The Sun Temple's significance drew early notice from Greek explorers: Skylax referenced it circa 515 BCE, while Herodotus described Multan's idol worship in the 5th century BCE, highlighting its role in regional trade and pilgrimage networks.[16] The Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang, visiting in 641 CE, recorded the temple's opulent idol plated in gold and encrusted with gems, underscoring Multan's pre-Islamic prosperity as a Brahmanical stronghold resistant to prior invasions.[16] In 325 BCE, during his Punjab campaign after defeating Porus, Alexander the Great assaulted Mallian strongholds, besieging and sacking a fortified Brahman city—widely identified as Multan—where he sustained near-fatal wounds before his troops prevailed.[17] The advent of Islamic rule began with Umayyad commander Muhammad bin Qāsim's conquest of Multan in 712–713 CE, following his subjugation of Sindh; he looted the Sun Temple's treasures, reputedly 60 million dirhams in gold and silver, to fund the campaign and establish caliphal authority.[18] Under subsequent Abbasid oversight from the 8th century, Multan functioned as a frontier province, transitioning to semi-independent rule by local dynasties like the Banū Munabbih by the 9th century.[19] By 959 CE, the Ismaili dāʿī Jalam ibn Shayban established the Fatimid-aligned Emirate of Multan, promoting Shīʿa Ismaili doctrines amid a diverse populace, until Mahmud of Ghazni's raids circa 1005 CE dismantled Ismaili control, massacring adherents and reasserting Sunnī dominance.[20][19] Integration into larger Muslim polities followed: after Ghaznavid incorporation, Muhammad of Ghor's forces captured Multan in the 1170s–1180s, folding it into the Delhi Sultanate by the early 13th century, where it served as a strategic Punjab outpost under slave dynasties and Khaljis, blending Islamic administration with lingering Hindu-Buddhist influences until Timurid incursions in the late 14th century.[20] This era saw Multan's evolution into a Sufi hub, with shrines overlaying ancient sites like Prahlādpurī, reflecting layered religious syncretism amid political flux.[17]Colonial and Modern History
The British annexed Multan in 1849 after defeating the Sikh forces in the Second Anglo-Sikh War, integrating the region into the Punjab province of British India as a key district with strategic military importance due to its fortress and location.[21] [22] Colonial administrators focused on revenue extraction and infrastructure, notably expanding irrigation through inundation canals inherited from earlier rulers and constructing perennial systems, which increased cultivable land from sparse arid tracts to extensive wheat and cotton fields by the late 19th century.[23] A pivotal development was the Punjab Canal Colonies project, which designated Multan as a primary site for colonization; the Sidhnai Canal, operationalized between 1886 and 1888, irrigated 176,702 acres, while later initiatives like the Lower Bari Doab and Nili Bar canals further expanded arable land to support export-oriented agriculture and settler allotments preferentially given to loyal Punjabi groups such as Jats and Rajputs.[24] [25] These efforts, peaking by 1917 with over 14 million acres irrigated province-wide, spurred economic growth but exacerbated environmental degradation through salinization and socio-political tensions via land grants that reinforced hierarchical patronage networks.[26] [27] Multan also emerged as an urban administrative hub, with a military cantonment established by the 1890s and reforms in justice, education, and transport enhancing connectivity to Lahore and Karachi ports.[22] Upon Pakistan's independence in 1947, Multan Division—retained as an administrative unit within West Punjab—witnessed acute partition violence, with riots originating in Lahore and Amritsar extending to the division's rural and urban areas, displacing non-Muslims and prompting retaliatory attacks amid the Radcliffe Award's boundary delineations.[28] Demographic upheaval followed, as the pre-partition Hindu and Sikh minorities (comprising up to 42% in Multan city) largely fled to India, replaced by over a million Muslim refugees from East Punjab, fundamentally homogenizing the population to over 95% Muslim by 1951 and shifting social dynamics toward Urdu-speaking urban elites alongside entrenched Saraiki rural communities. Post-independence, the division's economy leaned on canal-irrigated agriculture, contributing significantly to Pakistan's cotton output (e.g., Multan district alone producing 10-15% of national yields by the 1960s), though uneven land reforms under Ayub Khan's era perpetuated inequalities inherited from colonial allotments.[26] In the late 20th century, administrative flux marked the division: briefly abolished in 2000 under General Musharraf's devolution but restored in 2008, it encompassed four districts (Multan, Khanewal, Vehari, Lodhran) by 2010, fostering localized governance amid challenges like water scarcity from over-irrigation and siltation. Modern developments included modest industrialization, such as textile mills in Multan leveraging colonial-era canals for power and raw materials, alongside infrastructure like the 1970s expansion of Multan airport and highways, yet persistent agrarian dominance— with over 70% of the population engaged in farming—highlighted causal continuities from British hydraulic engineering despite policy shifts toward green revolution inputs in the 1960s-1980s.[24] Regionalist sentiments occasionally surfaced, as locals viewed post-1947 centralization from Lahore as diminishing Multan's historical autonomy, though integration into Punjab's federal structure stabilized administrative functions.Administrative Divisions
Districts
Multan Division administratively encompasses four districts: Multan, Khanewal, Vehari, and Lodhran.[1] These districts were established under the administrative framework of Punjab Province, with Multan serving as the divisional headquarters.[29] The districts vary in size and population, as detailed in the 2023 Pakistan Census conducted by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. Multan District, the largest by population, covers 3,720 square kilometers and has 5,362,305 residents. Khanewal District spans 4,349 square kilometers with a population of 3,364,077. Vehari District occupies 4,364 square kilometers and is home to 3,430,421 people. Lodhran District, the smallest, extends over 2,778 square kilometers with 1,928,299 inhabitants.| District | Area (km²) | Population (2023) |
|---|---|---|
| Multan | 3,720 | 5,362,305 |
| Khanewal | 4,349 | 3,364,077 |
| Vehari | 4,364 | 3,430,421 |
| Lodhran | 2,778 | 1,928,299 |
Tehsils and Local Governance
Multan Division is administratively divided into tehsils, which function as sub-district units responsible for land revenue collection, maintenance of land records, and initial judicial proceedings in civil and criminal matters, under the oversight of a tehsildar appointed by the provincial government. These tehsils also form the basis for local governance structures, integrating elected bodies with bureaucratic administrations to deliver services such as sanitation, water supply, and minor infrastructure maintenance.[31] The division encompasses 14 tehsils distributed across its four districts, as delineated in official provincial records updated as of 2023.| District | Tehsils |
|---|---|
| Multan | Jalalpur Pirwala, Multan City, Multan Saddar, Shujabad |
| Khanewal | Jahanian, Kabirwala, Khanewal, Mian Channu |
| Lodhran | Dunyapur, Kehror Pakka, Lodhran |
| Vehari | Burewala, Mailsi, Vehari |
Demographics
Population and Growth
According to the 2023 Pakistan Census conducted by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, Multan Division had a total population of 14,085,102, comprising 7,197,846 males and 6,885,907 females, with a sex ratio of 104.53 males per 100 females.[30] This figure reflects an increase of approximately 1.82 million from the 12,268,173 residents enumerated in the 2017 Census.[37] The average annual population growth rate between 2017 and 2023 was 2.33%, lower than the national average of 2.55% for the same period, attributable to factors such as rural-to-urban migration patterns and varying fertility rates in agrarian districts.[2][38] The division's population is distributed across its four districts, with Multan District accounting for the largest share at 5,362,305 inhabitants, followed by Vehari District at 3,430,421, Khanewal District at 3,364,077, and Lodhran District at 1,928,299.[2] These districts exhibit growth rates ranging from 2.1% in Lodhran to 2.9% in Vehari annually between 2017 and 2023, driven primarily by natural increase in rural areas where agriculture sustains high household sizes averaging 6.17 persons. Urban centers, particularly in Multan city, have seen accelerated growth due to economic opportunities in trade and services, though the division remains predominantly rural with over 70% of the population in non-urban locales as of 2017 data trends.[39] Projections based on census trends suggest continued moderate growth, potentially reaching 15-16 million by 2030 if the 2.33% rate persists, though this could be moderated by improving education and healthcare access influencing fertility declines observed nationally.[38] The division's population density stands at 926 persons per square kilometer across its 15,211 square kilometers, concentrated in fertile alluvial plains conducive to sustained demographic pressures.[30]Ethnic, Linguistic, and Religious Composition
The ethnic composition of Multan Division is predominantly Punjabi, encompassing Saraiki-speaking subgroups and various agricultural and landowning castes such as Jats, Arains, Rajputs, Gujjars, and Baloch tribes, reflecting historical settlement patterns in southern Punjab.[40][41] These groups engage primarily in farming and rural livelihoods, with urban areas showing greater mixing due to migration.[42] Linguistically, Saraiki predominates as the mother tongue, accounting for around 64% of speakers in Multan District according to 2023 census figures, with Urdu at 18% and Punjabi at 16%; comparable distributions apply across the division's rural tehsils in Khanewal, Vehari, and Lodhran Districts, where Saraiki serves as the vernacular for daily communication and cultural expression.[43] Other languages like Pashto and Balochi appear in smaller proportions among migrant communities.[44] Religiously, the division is nearly entirely Muslim, with over 99% adherence—predominantly Sunni Islam—influenced by the region's Sufi heritage; a minor Christian population of approximately 0.8% exists, concentrated in urban pockets with historical missionary ties, while other faiths like Hinduism are negligible post-1947 Partition.[45][39]Education and Literacy Rates
The literacy rate in Multan Division remains below the Punjab provincial average of approximately 66%, with significant gender disparities persisting across districts. The 2023 Population and Housing Census identifies Multan Division as having the largest gender gap in literacy among Punjab's divisions, at 21.81 percentage points, reflecting lower female participation in education historically influenced by socioeconomic factors such as rural agrarian economies and cultural norms prioritizing male schooling.[46] In specific districts, female literacy falls below 50% in Lodhran and Vehari, while overall district-level rates, such as Multan District's 61.41% (67.28% male, 55.27% female), underscore urban-rural divides where urban areas outperform rural ones by up to 20-30 points.[47][48] Educational infrastructure supports basic access but faces challenges in retention and quality. The Punjab Education Statistics 2022-23 report details over 2,900 primary schools, around 900 middle schools, and 700 high schools in the division, with total enrollment exceeding 1.1 million students across primary to secondary levels, including approximately 406,000 boys and 199,000 girls in primary grades alone.[49] Higher education is anchored by institutions like Bahauddin Zakariya University in Multan, alongside 61 government colleges enrolling over 68,000 students, though gender enrollment shows boys slightly outnumbering girls (34,835 vs. 33,360) at the college level.[49] Out-of-school children rates escalate from 12% at primary to 57% at higher secondary, highest in Multan District, exacerbated by inadequate infrastructure like limited playgrounds (20-100% availability varying by tehsil) despite near-universal access to electricity and water.[47] Enrollment gender ratios approach parity (near 1:1) in primary and high schools but widen in rural areas, with female dropout linked to early marriage and household duties; Khanewal District shows relatively higher female participation (e.g., 74,071 primary girls).[47] Teaching staff totals around 33,000, with more female educators in primary (5,705 vs. 4,256 male) and middle levels, indicating some progress in female employment in education but persistent gaps in advanced training and rural postings.[49] These patterns align with national trends where empirical data from multiple Pakistan Social and Living Standards Measurement surveys confirm causal links between literacy stagnation and limited vocational integration for women.[50]Economy
Agricultural Sector
Agriculture constitutes the primary economic driver in Multan Division, encompassing the districts of Multan, Khanewal, Vehari, and Lodhran, where over 2 million hectares of arable land support intensive cropping patterns reliant on canal irrigation from the Indus River basin systems, including the Pakpattan, Mailsi, and Sidhnai canals.[51] The division's fertile alluvial soils and subtropical climate enable double-cropping, with kharif (summer) crops like cotton and rice followed by rabi (winter) crops such as wheat, contributing significantly to Punjab's overall agricultural output.[52] In 2023-24, the cropped area across these districts exceeded 2,081 thousand hectares, bolstered by improved watercourses numbering around 6,977, which enhance irrigation efficiency amid regional water constraints.[53] Major field crops dominate production, with cotton and wheat as staples. For the 2023-24 season, cotton cultivation spanned 397 thousand hectares, yielding 1,464 thousand bales, while wheat covered 779 thousand hectares, producing 3,085 thousand tons; sugarcane added 18 thousand hectares under cultivation, with output of 1,365 thousand tons.[53] Earlier data from 2021-22 reflect consistent patterns: wheat area at 738 thousand hectares (2,687 thousand tons), cotton at 312 thousand hectares (1,338 thousand bales), rice at 267 thousand hectares (9,932 thousand tons, though Multan Division's rice focus is secondary to cotton), and sugarcane at 34 thousand hectares (2,397 thousand tons).[52] These figures underscore the division's role in national food security, though yields vary due to factors like seed quality and pest pressures.[51]| Crop | Area (2023-24, thousand ha) | Production (2023-24) | Key Districts Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cotton | 397 | 1,464 thousand bales | Khanewal (450k bales), Lodhran (380k) |
| Wheat | 779 | 3,085 thousand tons | Khanewal (845k tons), Vehari (830k) |
| Sugarcane | 18 | 1,365 thousand tons | Vehari (613k tons) |
Industrial and Commercial Activities
The industrial sector in Multan Division is predominantly agro-based, with manufacturing concentrated in Multan district's Multan Industrial Estate, spanning 743 acres and established in the 1980s as the region's primary hub for industrial operations.[55] Key subsectors include textiles, featuring 20 cotton spinning units that process local cotton output, and food processing, encompassing 42 flour mills, 20 dal mills, 13 vegetable ghee units, 9 solvent oil extraction units, 3 fruit juice facilities, and 1 biscuit factory, alongside a host of smaller units supporting agricultural value addition.[8] The number of agro-industrial units in Multan district expanded from 116 in 2006 to 456 by 2017, reflecting growth tied to the division's fertile lands and crop production.[56] Fertilizer production stands out with Pak Arab Fertilizers Pvt. Ltd., a major facility manufacturing nitrogen- and phosphate-based products for nationwide distribution.[57] Commercial activities revolve around trade in agricultural commodities, leveraging Multan Division's role as a southern Punjab marketplace for cotton, grains, and mangoes, with wholesale operations driving small business dynamism.[58] Traditional bazaars such as Hussain Agahi, Bohar Gate, and Chowk Bazar form the historic core of commerce within Multan's walled city, specializing in textiles, handicrafts, and daily goods, while intra-regional trade historically linked the area to broader networks via canal colonies and rail. Modern extensions include emerging malls like United Mall, but the sector remains anchored in informal and semi-formal markets that facilitate export-oriented dealings in processed foods and fabrics.[59] Small enterprises, integral to economic vitality, often integrate manufacturing with retail, though challenges like intermittent closures—evident in 2020 when only 61 of 235 estate units operated amid lockdowns—underscore vulnerability to external shocks.[60]Infrastructure and Trade
Multan Division benefits from integration into Pakistan's national motorway network, which supports efficient goods movement for agricultural and textile exports. The Peshawar-Karachi Motorway includes the completed Multan-Sukkur section, spanning approximately 392 kilometers and reducing travel times between southern Punjab and Sindh.[61] Local road developments, such as the Inner Ring Road with six flyovers, Southern Bypass, and improvements to Bosan Road, enhance urban connectivity and freight logistics within Multan city and surrounding districts. Rail infrastructure centers on Multan Cantonment Railway Station, a key junction where lines from southern Pakistan intersect with routes to central and northern regions, facilitating bulk cargo transport like cotton and grains.[62] This station handles significant passenger and freight traffic, underscoring its role in regional trade links under Pakistan Railways' network of over 7,700 kilometers.[63] Air connectivity is provided by Multan International Airport, equipped with a 3,204-meter by 46-meter runway capable of accommodating wide-body aircraft for cargo and passengers.[64] Upgrades completed in 2010 extended the runway to 10,500 feet with ILS systems, enabling direct flights to Middle Eastern hubs and supporting perishable exports.[65] Trade activities leverage the Multan Dry Port Trust for handling imports and exports, processing commodities such as cotton yarn, grey fabrics, leather products, and textile made-ups destined for international markets.[66] The division's strategic location along trade corridors boosts commerce in agricultural goods and light manufacturing, with infrastructure investments under initiatives like CPEC aimed at expanding logistics capacity.[67]Culture and Society
Religious Heritage and Sufi Influence
Multan, the administrative center of Multan Division, is renowned as the "City of Saints" for its concentration of Sufi shrines dating back to the 12th and 13th centuries, which reflect the profound influence of Sufism in shaping the region's religious landscape.[68][69] Sufi orders, particularly the Suhrawardiyya, played a pivotal role in the gradual Islamization of southern Punjab through teachings emphasizing spiritual devotion, ethical conduct, and communal harmony, drawing converts from local Hindu and Buddhist populations without widespread coercion. This heritage persists in annual urs festivals at these sites, where millions of pilgrims gather for qawwali music, prayers, and rituals, underscoring Sufism's enduring appeal amid orthodox Islamic currents.[70] Prominent among these is the shrine of Bahauddin Zakariya (c. 1170–1268 CE), a Suhrawardi Sufi master who established a major khanqah in Multan and propagated mystical practices focused on divine love and asceticism.[71] His mausoleum, constructed shortly after his death in 1268, features intricate brickwork and tile mosaics typical of early Indo-Islamic architecture, serving as a center for spiritual instruction that influenced subsequent generations of saints in the division.[72] The site's annual urs in November draws devotees seeking intercession, highlighting its role in local folk Islam blended with orthodox elements.[73] The Tomb of Shah Rukn-e-Alam (1251–1335 CE), grandson of Bahauddin Zakariya, exemplifies peak Sufi architectural patronage, built between 1320 and 1324 CE by Delhi Sultanate ruler Ghiyas-ud-Din Tughluq as a pre-Mughal octagonal structure with a massive dome—the second largest after Bijapur's Gol Gumbaz—and elaborate glazed tilework depicting floral and geometric motifs.[74] Located atop Multan's ancient fort mound, it symbolizes the saint's legacy of blending Persian mysticism with Punjabi traditions, fostering a syncretic religious culture that integrated local customs like shrine veneration.[75] Recognized on UNESCO's tentative World Heritage list, the tomb continues to host massive gatherings during its February urs, reinforcing Sufi networks across Punjab.[76] Other notable shrines, such as that of Shah Shams Sabzwari (d. 1276 CE), a 12th-century Tabrizi saint whose 1330 CE mausoleum features engraved walls and attracts interfaith visitors, further illustrate Multan Division's role as a Sufi hub extending influence to districts like Vehari and Khanewal through itinerant pirs and madrasas.[70][68] This legacy, rooted in empirical patterns of peaceful propagation rather than conquest, contrasts with more militant Islamic expansions elsewhere, as evidenced by the saints' emphasis on inner purification over external dominance.Traditions, Festivals, and Cuisine
Multan Division's traditions are deeply rooted in its Sufi heritage and artisanal crafts, with the region renowned for producing blue-glazed pottery featuring intricate floral and geometric motifs, a practice dating back centuries and centered in Multan city.[77] Camel-skin lamps, hand-stitched with colorful patterns, represent another hallmark craft, often illuminated during evening gatherings at shrines and homes.[77] Metalwork, including engraved brassware and jewelry like pattoli thread necklaces tied at the ends with traditional knots, reflects the area's historical trade influences and skilled craftsmanship passed through generations.[78] Folk music in Saraiki dialect, accompanied by instruments like the algoza (double flute) and dhol drum, features in communal dances such as jhumar, performed during weddings and harvest seasons to celebrate agricultural abundance.[79] Festivals in Multan Division center on urs commemorations at Sufi shrines, marking the death anniversaries of saints as spiritual weddings (urs deriving from Arabic uroos, meaning wedding feast).[80] The annual urs of Bahauddin Zakariya, held at his 13th-century shrine in Multan, spans three days starting on the 9th of Safar in the Islamic calendar, drawing pilgrims for qawwali performances, prayers, and langar (communal feasts).[81] Similarly, the urs of Shah Rukn-e-Alam occurs in Jumada al-Thani, featuring devotional music, floral tributes, and gatherings of up to hundreds of thousands, emphasizing the saints' role in promoting tolerance and mysticism.[82] These events, organized by shrine custodians and local authorities, include dhamaal (ecstatic dancing) and poetry recitals, reinforcing communal bonds amid the division's 90% Muslim population.[83] Cuisine of Multan Division embodies Saraiki-Punjabi flavors, characterized by robust spices, ghee, and slow-cooked meats suited to the arid climate. Signature dishes include siri paye, a breakfast stew of trotters simmered with spices like coriander and ginger, often paired with naan and consumed as sohbat (traditional morning meal).[84] Sohan halwa, a dense confection of ghee, wheat flour, sugar, and nuts like pistachios, originates from Multani confectioners and is molded into golden slabs, prized for its rich texture during festivals.[85] Savory staples feature Multani karahi—goat or beef cooked in a wok with tomatoes, green chilies, and yogurt—and doli ki roti, a layered flatbread baked in earthen pots, reflecting nomadic influences from the region's pastoral history.[86] These preparations prioritize local ingredients such as mustard oil and river fish, with street vendors in Multan markets serving them year-round, though peaking during urs langars.[84]Politics and Governance
Electoral Constituencies
The Multan Division comprises 15 National Assembly constituencies of Pakistan, distributed across its four districts as delimited by the Election Commission of Pakistan based on the 2017 census and subsequent adjustments finalized in 2023.[87] These constituencies elect members to the lower house of the federal parliament, with boundaries reflecting population densities primarily in urban Multan and rural agrarian areas of the other districts. Khanewal District accounts for four seats, Multan District for six, Lodhran for two, and Vehari for three.[87]| District | National Assembly Constituencies |
|---|---|
| Khanewal | NA-144 (Khanewal-I), NA-145 (Khanewal-II), NA-146 (Khanewal-III), NA-147 (Khanewal-IV)[88][87] |
| Multan | NA-148 (Multan-I), NA-149 (Multan-II), NA-150 (Multan-III), NA-151 (Multan-IV), NA-152 (Multan-V), NA-153 (Multan-VI)[88][87] |
| Lodhran | NA-154 (Lodhran-I), NA-155 (Lodhran-II)[88][87] |
| Vehari | NA-156 (Vehari-I), NA-157 (Vehari-II), NA-158 (Vehari-III)[88][87] |