690 Account of the Cabool and Peshawar Territories, &;c. [No. 165. 



The Nepkee khels, called Naipee khels, Mirlee khels, extend twelve 

 kos to the north. They muster 9,000 matchlockmen, and have 

 1 5,000 jarebs. 



Jahkandara has four hujrahs, under Painda khan. 



Kanjoor contains three hujrahs, under Ourang khan and Fazal 

 Shah, and Roshan khan. 



Neem galai, two kos to the south, two hujrahs, under Jamad khan. 



Dehli, one kos to the south, two hujrahs, under Arab Shah. 



Barah Bunda, one and half kos to the south, contains four hujrahs, 

 under Roshan khan, son of Arsalla khan, Neepkee khel. 



Koozamandai contains four hujrahs, under Malah Shah, Meeran 

 Shah and Arab Shah, one kos distant. 



Damghar contains three hujrahs, at one kos to the south-west, in 

 the plain from Barah Banda, under Rahmat Shah. 



Dumgram contains two hujrahs, at one and a half kos, under Ma- 

 hammad Zaman khan. 



Koojkanjoo, one and a half kos to the south of the road in the plain, 

 on the bank of the Swat river, two hujrahs. 



Barkanjoo contains two hujrahs, under Nooran Shah and Shekh 

 Gulpurust. 



Their is a large village, ten kos from Kanjoo, having five hujrahs, 

 under Gulistan khan, Paindah khan, and Shah Beg khan. 



Two kos, on the skirts of the hill to the west, is a village called 

 Seenai, containing three hujrahs, under Yoosaf khan, son of Umar 

 khan. 



Further to the north, is a village called Sar Sodai, two kos from 

 Aleegram, containing four hujrahs, under Jadullah khan, and Faiz- 

 talab khan, Myan Ahmad Noor, Speen Myan Abdullah khan, and 

 Awal khan, in the plain. Their drinking water is from a stream that 

 comes from the Manjuh hills, to the north ; the whole of the lands of 

 Swat depend on the rain. 



There is a village, Mandee, where merchants exchange their salt, 

 cloths, and oil, and cotton, for rice and wheat. The copper coin cur- 

 rent are Mansoorie pais or Mansoor khanee, and they prefer old round 

 Ghunda rupees, indeed no others are current. There are no Hindoo 

 shops throughout the country of the Pingee khels, the only merchants 

 being Paranchas and Mullas, who command great credit ; the people 



