During the medieval era in Punjab, most of the tribes in northern Punjab converted to Islam and various Punjabi tribes, as well as foreign powers, fought for control over the region.
The anthropologist Pnina Werbner have confirmed the continuing strength of tribal feelings among emigrants from Punjab in the United Kingdom.[9] This area was and still is an important source of recruitment into the old colonial British Indian Army, under the martial race designation of the Punjabis in colonial era, and its successor, the Pakistan Army.[10] Official recruitment policies have also encouraged a sense of tribal belonging amongst Punjabis.[11]
^Singh, Kumar Suresh (2003). People of India: Jammu & Kashmir. Anthropological Survey of India. p. xxiii. ISBN978-81-7304-118-1. Gujars of this tract are wholly Muslims, and so are the Khokhar who have only a few Hindu families. In early stages, the converted Rajputs continued with pre-conversion practices.
^Malik, M. Mazammil Hussain (1 November 2009). "Socio-Cultural and Economic Changes among Muslims Rajputs: A Case Study of Rajouri District in J&K". Epilogue. 3 (11): 48. Rajputs Kokhar were the domiciles of India and were originally followers of Hinduism, later on they embraced Islam and with the passage of time most of them settled near Jehlam, Pindadan Khan, Ahmed Abad and Pothar. In Rajouri District, Khokhars are residing in various villages.
^Ruffle, Karen G. (20 April 2021). Everyday Shi'ism in South Asia. Wiley via University of Toronto. p. 42. ISBN9781119357148. This caste of Brahmins trace their origins to the Gandhara region, located in contemporary northwest Pakistan between Peshawar and Taxila. The region has long been associated with governmental administrative and military service. In addition to being referred to as "Husaini" Brahmins for their rituals of devotion to Imam Husain, which will be discussed below, this caste is more formally known as Mohyal.
^The Migration Process: Capital, Gifts and Offerings among British Pakistanis (Berg, 1990 and 2002).
^Mustapha Kamal Pasha, Colonial Political Economy: Recruitment and Underdevelopment in the Punjab, Oxford University Press, 1998, pp. 198–200. ISBN 0 -19-577762-X
^Stephen P. Cohen, The Pakistan Army (1998 edition; paperback), Oxford University Press (July 1, 1998). ISBN0-19-577948-7
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