Henry
Waterfield, (1875), Memorandum on the Census of British India 1871-72,
London, Eyre and Spottiswoode, p. 17, mention about the “Religious Demography of
Punjab in 1871-72” that;
In
dealing with the population of the Punjab, it is necessary to take into
consideration a third religion, that of the Sikhs, who in this province form an
important element, though in the others they are so few as to be merely
reckoned among the higher castes of the Hindoos.
In
every 100 persons in the Punjab there are, on an average, 53 Mahomedans ,
34 Hindoos, and 6 Sikhs.
Total
Population of Punjab = 17,611,498
Hindoos,
6,125,460
Sikhs,
1,144,090
Buddhists
and Jains, 36,190
Religion not
known , 945,919
Percentage
of the Total Population of Punjab .
Hindoos,
34.78%.
Sikhs,
6.50%.
Buddhists,
0.2%.
Christians,
0.13%.
Religion not
known , 5.37%.
As
might be expected, the Hindoos are most numerous in the more southern divisions
bordering on the North-West Provinces; in Delhi, Hissar, Umballa, and
Jullundhur, they comprise 68, 74, 56, and 58% of the people, while in Umritsur they only form 24%.,
in Mooltan 17, in Lahore 15, in Rawulpindee 10, in the
Derajat 11, and in Peshawur not more than 5%.
The
returns vary, however, some comprising the sweeper castes among Hindoos ,
while some, treating them as out-castes , include them in the "other"
population.
The
Mahomedans muster from 21 to 30%, in the four lower divisions, but in Umritsur,
Lahore, and Mooltan they come up to 51, 57, and 65%.; in Rawulpindee and
the Derajat they have 86 and 87, and in Peshawur no less than 93% of the
population.
The
stronghold of the Sikhs is the country between the rivers Ravee and
Sutlej, including the central districts of Lahore where they form 17, Umritsur
where they are 13% of the people, Umballa where they amount to 9, and
Jullundhur where they are 8%.; in the other districts they range from 3 to 1%.
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