The Baluchistan Agency (also spelt Balochistan Agency) was one of the agencies of British India during the colonial era. It was located in the present-day Pakistani Balochistan province.[2]
The territories of the agency covered an area of 347,064 km2 (134,002 sq mi)[1] and included areas which had been acquired by lease or otherwise brought under direct British control, as well as the princely states.
History
This political agency was established in 1877, following the 1876 treaty signed in Mastung by Baloch leaders by means of which they accepted the mediation of the British authorities in their disputes.[3]
Colonel Sir Robert Groves Sandeman introduced an innovative system of tribal pacification in Balochistan that was in effect from 1877 to 1947. However the Government of India generally opposed his Methods and refused to allow it to operate in India's North West Frontier. Historians have long debated its scope and effectiveness in the peaceful spread of Imperial influence.[4]
The Baluchistan Agency consisted of three princely states:
Kalat khanate, the premier state and only salute state (Hereditary salute of 19-guns; titles Wali, Khan; from 1739 Wali, Begler Begi, Khan), including its Jhalawan, Kacchi and Sarawan administrative divisions
while Makran (title Nazem, later Nawwab) is quoted as either another division, a vassal state or autonomous
In addition to the princely states, the north of the agency was administered as the Chief Commissioner's Province. This consisted of the following districts:
^Christian Tripodi, "'Good for one but not the other': The 'Sandeman System' of Pacification as Applied to Baluchistan and the North-West Frontier, 1877-1947." Journal of Military History 73#3 (2009): 767-802. online