Gandavah is a town that serves as the headquarters of Jhal Magsi District of Pakistan's Balochistan province. Located on a small hill in the middle of the Kach Gandava plain, Gandava is inhabited by a mix of Sindhi people, Baloch people, Pathan, Brahui people, and Hindu communities. The town has a long history and several old architectural monuments including the Moti Gohram tomb, locally known as "the Taj Mahal of Baluchistan". Gandava also faces significant difficulties with needs like water, electricity, gas, healthcare, and education. As of the 2017 Census of Pakistan, Gandava Municipal Corporation has a population of 7,825 people, in 1,256 households, rising to 24,130 in 2023.
In 711, the Muslims under Muhammad ibn al-Qasim decisively gained control of Qandabil, which became part of Muslim-ruled Sindh. In 720, al-Muhallab's rebelling sons fled to Qandabil, expecting to be given refuge, but their ally Wada' shut the gates and refused them entry and they were killed fighting against their pursuer Hilal ibn Ahwaz al-Tamimi. In 754 Arab tribes occupied Qandabil but they were driven out by the governor of Sindh, Hisham ibn 'Amr. Later, in 837, Qandabil was taken by Muhammad ibn Khalil, but 'Imran, governor of Sindh, recaptured the city and restored order.
Medieval Qandabil was the capital of the district called Budha or Budhiya (which was named not because its inhabitants were but rather because they belonged to the Budh people ethnic group) and had the town of Kizkanan or Kikan, possibly the same as present-day Kalat, as one of its dependencies. The 9th-century writer al-Baladhuri described Qandabil as being on an elevated site in the middle of the plain, which matches the present-day description of Gandava. A century later, Ibn Hawqal described Qandabil as a large city standing alone on a plain where no date palms grew. Also in the 10th century, al-Istakhri described Qandabil as "the central market-place of the Budha hinterland, where 'the Budh people' sold their produce and obtained their supplies". By the late 10th century, palm trees had been planted in the area around Qandabil – the anonymous author of the Hudud al-'Alam wrote that it was "a big city, prosperous and pleasant, producing large quantities of dates."
In the second half of the 15th century, Gandava (as it was now called) became the capital of the Lashari Baloch confederation under alliance with the Samma dynasty. In 1518, Shah Beg Arghun occupied Gandava while on his way to conquer Sindh. The city later came under Mughal Empire rule in 1574 and formed part of the mahalla of Fathpur and was administered from Bukkur.
Gandava was later ruled by the Kalhora dynasty. The city walls were repaired in the early 1700s by a Kalhora officer named Murad and were still standing in the 19th century but are now in ruins. In 1740, Nader Shah conquered the Kalhoras and transferred Gandava to the Khans of Kalat. It remained under their control until 1955 and served as their winter residence.
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