Mailsi
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Mailsi (میلسی) is a city in southern Punjab, Pakistan. It is the headquarters of Jallah Jeem-Mailsi Tehsil, an administrative subdivision of Vehari District.Sutlej-Jeemi river flows in the East.
Key Information
Description
[edit]It is one of the largest tehsil of Vehari District; the cities of Lodhran and Vehari were created from Mailsi in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Vehari, now a district, was sub-tehsil of Mailsi. Mailsi is well known because of its cotton crops. Mailsi is known for the Jhandhir Library and Siphon at the Sutlej river. The Mailsi Siphon was constructed by the Gamon construction company in 1964 to control the water flow between the Sutlej river and the Sindhnai Link canal.
Malsian Tradition
[edit]Malsian is notorious as the headquarters of Mohammadan Sunars who were engaged in the manufacture of coins and coins of ancient mintage for many of the principal cities of India. Malsian is also said to have excelled in making wooden stamps for printing cotton. It also made buttons from shells from the river, and dyeing of wool is another of the trades carried out.
Demographics
[edit]Population
[edit]| Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
|---|---|---|
| 1951 | 10,242 | — |
| 1961 | 13,617 | +2.89% |
| 1972 | 21,318 | +4.16% |
| 1981 | 33,652 | +5.20% |
| 1998 | 55,434 | +2.98% |
| 2017 | 82,322 | +2.10% |
| 2023 | 125,431 | +7.27% |
| Sources:[3] | ||
According to 2023 census, Mailsi had a population of 125,431.
Geography and climate
[edit]Mailsi is located in the Indus Valley near the city of Multan in central Pakistan. The area around the city is a flat, alluvial plain ideal for agriculture. The canals which cut across the tehsil provide irrigation. The Indus Water Treaty sold the water in the Sutlej river to India; the reduced water flow in the river had had a pronounced effect on the flora and fauna of the area. The Mailsi Siphon was built to control the water flow in the Sidhnai Link Canal and Sutlej river under this same Indus Water Treaty.
Mailsi features an arid climate with hot summers and mild winters. The city witnesses some of the most extreme weather in the country. The highest recorded temperature is 54 °C (129 °F), and the lowest recorded temperature is −1 °C (30.2 °F). The average rainfall is 127 millimeters (5.0 in). Dust storms are a common occurrence within the city.
It is located 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) away from Jallah Jeem,915 kilometres (569 mi) away from Karachi, 346 kilometres (215 mi) away from Lahore, 258 kilometres (160 mi) away from Faisalabad, 84 kilometres (52 mi) away from Multan, 78 kilometres (48 mi) away from Bahawalpur, 42 kilometres (26 mi) away from Vehari, 34 kilometres (21 mi) away from Kahror Pakka, 62 kilometres (39 mi) away from Lodhran, 51 kilometres (32 mi) away from Dunyapur and 37.92 kilometres (23.56 mi) away from Hasilpur.[4] It is located at 29°48'1N 72°10'33E at an altitude of 126 m (416 ft).[5] Mailsi Canal is also named after this city.
Agriculture
[edit]Farming is the primary economic activity in Mailsi and exports include cotton, wheat, sugarcane, rice, and henna. Since independence, the amount of cultivated land has increased. Irrigation systems have been affected by the shortage of water in Sutlej River. There are three canals, Mailsi Link, Faddah and Dhamakki, There are many sub-canals and a number of streams for irrigation is also there.
Mailsi-Jallah Jeem lies in the temperate zone of Pakistan. The climate is arid, characterized by hot summers and cool winters, and wide variations between extremes of temperature at given locations.
Mailsi-Jallah Jeem has four seasons: a cool, dry winter from December through February; a hot, dry spring from March through May; the southwest monsoon period, from June through September; and the retreating monsoon period of October and November. The onset and duration of these seasons vary somewhat according to location.
Government
[edit]Mailsi is a Tehsil Headquarters of the city of Mailsi-Jallah Jeem and one of the Tehsil/administrative areas of the Vehari district. The city of Mailsi is also the headquarters of Mailsi Tehsil, and the city of Mailsi is administratively subdivided into 31 Union Councils. The city of Mailsi is also has a Combined Military Hospital.Pakistan Army Medical Corps
Education
[edit]The first Government Primary School was established in 1864 during British Raj after failed freedom war of 1858. In 1920, a primary school was given the status of middle school. Later, in 1942, it became a high school. The first girls’ high school was established in 1890, which later became a middle high school in 1972.
in 1949, Islamic Educational Institute Jamia Taleem Ul QUran, Multan Road Mailsi was established by Mufti Muhammad Kaleemullah, Where 1000+ students learned Islamic studies.
In 1976, Inter College for boys was established and in 1980, a girls' college was established. In 1986, Commercial Training Institute was established. In 1995, both colleges were converted into degree granting institutions. In 1980, the Federal Government established F.G public school, as the first English medium school for the citizens of Mailsi. There is a student name as Traala (22 Wheeler) who is the student of it in session 20221-2023 Now there are several private English medium schools. There are two Government Degree Colleges, one for boys and another for girls, five higher secondary schools and 596 government schools, including 32 high schools.
Education was primarily a government affair before the late 1970s. On 2 January 1972, the Government of Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto nationalized educational institutions throughout Pakistan. Even though there is no evidence of the existence of a private school before that 1972, the nationalization of educational efforts across Pakistan curb development of any private sector educational institutions. In 1977, the Marshal Law Government of Zia-ul-Haq allowed for limited privatization and opening of private educational institutions. Among the first few new private educational institutions in Pakistan, was Mailsi Model School on Multan Road. Due to its focus on Girls' education, Mailsi Model School became a very successful institution and a school of choice for the girls from affluent families in Mailsi. The school opened its doors in 1977. Since the early 2000s, a number of private schools have been established in the city.
Allied School, Hawks Public School, City Public School, Al-Rehan School System, Dawn Public School and APS&AC are local institutes. IPS College, Punjab College, Superior College and Vista College are local colleges.[citation needed]
Transportation
[edit]Mailsi, میلسی, is located on the northern alternate rail and overland route to Bahawalpur and Lahore, the capital of the Punjab province of Pakistan. The western route connects with Multan and in south-east side Bahawalpur & south-west is Kahror Pakka.
Bus, rail and air service connects Mailsi to other parts of Pakistan.
Telecommunication
[edit]Land line based companies and mobile phone companies serve Mailsi. in south there is Khair Pur Tamewali and in south east there is Hasilpur city. Moreover, every mobile network companies also operate in the city with 3G-4G Band facility.
Monuments and recreational places
[edit]In the city, a historic mosque named as "Shahi Masjid" is located in the second largest city( Jallah Jeem -8UCs ) in the Tehsil. It is said that it was built by Mughal Emperor Shahjahan (1058AD). A zoo is also situated in the city named as "Garrison Park". A public park named as TMO Park is also there to provide citizens space for recreational activities. Ladies Park is built for the recreation of the female members of the society. Mailsi Siphon, situated near the city on the river Sutlej, is a picnic-spot. Sardar Pur Jandhir Library also attracts a number of students and researchers across the country to it. There is one canal in Mailsi city near Kent area. A badshahi mosque located in Moza Malik Wahin. Its foundation was placed by empire Orangzaib Alamgier. It was started in 1653 and completed in 1706.
References
[edit]- ^ "TMA Mailsi Website". Archived from the original on 31 March 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2025.
- ^ "Punjāb (Pakistan): Province, Major Cities, Municipalites & Towns - Population Statistics, Maps, Charts, Weather and Web Information".
- ^ "Population by administrative units 1951-1998" (PDF). Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
- ^ Tehsils & Unions in the District of Vehari - Government of Pakistan
- ^ Location of Mailsi - Falling Rain Genomics
Mailsi
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins and early settlement
The region encompassing modern Mailsi features early human settlements confined to the fertile banks of the Sutlej River, where agrarian communities established villages amid the alluvial plains of southern Punjab. These initial inhabitants included the Arain, an agricultural tribe tracing origins to migrations from Lahore, and the Bhatti, a warrior clan originating from Rajasthan, who adapted to the riverine environment for farming and pastoralism.[4] Settlement patterns in the area gained prominence during the medieval Islamic era, as the broader Multan region—encompassing Mailsi—fell under the conquest of Muhammad bin Qasim in 712 CE, integrating it into early Muslim administrative networks. However, the specific founding of Mailsi as a town occurred in the late 12th century, following the defeat of Prithviraj Chauhan by Muhammad of Ghor in 1192 CE; members of the Khichi Chauhan Rajput clan, a branch displaced from northern India, migrated southward and established a fortified settlement at Mailsi, leveraging its strategic position near the Sutlej for defense and agriculture.[8][9] The Khichi Chauhans developed Mailsi into a semi-autonomous principality, ruling over surrounding territories through a feudal structure that emphasized Rajput martial traditions and alliances with incoming Muslim elites, including conversions among local tribes like the Dhudi. This early polity persisted through the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal periods, fostering local governance and irrigation-based economy until its subjugation by Sikh forces in the mid-18th century.[10][11]Colonial era and infrastructure development
During the British colonial administration of Punjab, following its annexation in 1849, infrastructure development in the Multan district—which included Mailsi tehsil—prioritized irrigation systems to convert semi-arid lands into productive agricultural zones, thereby enhancing land revenue collection.[12] The Punjab government's focus on perennial canal networks, starting from the late 19th century, addressed seasonal flooding limitations of earlier inundation canals and supported the canal colonies policy, allotting irrigated lands to settlers, including military pensioners and yeoman farmers from eastern Punjab.[13] In Mailsi tehsil, this manifested through the extension of canals like the Hajiwah, which irrigated local tracts and integrated the area into broader colonization efforts by the 1910s, fostering cash crop production such as cotton.[13] The Sutlej Valley Project (SVP), formalized after an 1901 Irrigation Committee recommendation and implemented from the 1920s, represented a pinnacle of such efforts, channeling Sutlej River waters to reclaim barren Nili Bar lands encompassing Mailsi.[14] Key components included the Mailsi Canal and Islam Headworks, constructed by the Punjab Irrigation Department to provide reliable perennial supply, with a temporary broad-gauge construction railway operational by 1926–1927 to facilitate material transport during building.[15] These works irrigated over 1.5 million acres across the project area by the 1930s, spurring demographic shifts as grants attracted Jat and Arain colonists, though tenancy disputes arose from unequal water distribution favoring larger allottees.[15] [13] Railway expansion complemented irrigation by improving market access; the Mailsi Railway Station was established in 1928 on the North Western Railway line, linking the tehsil to Multan and Lahore for grain and cotton export, amid Punjab's broader rail network growth that reached 5,000 miles by 1947.[16] This connectivity reduced transport costs from prior cart-based systems, stimulating trade but also entrenching colonial revenue extraction through export-oriented agriculture. Overall, these developments elevated Mailsi from peripheral status to an agrarian hub, though benefits skewed toward absentee landlords and the colonial state, with local cultivators often burdened by water rates and debt.[17]Post-partition and modern administrative changes
Following the partition of India on August 14, 1947, Mailsi Tehsil was integrated into the newly formed Dominion of Pakistan as part of Punjab Province's Multan District within Multan Division. The pre-existing colonial administrative setup, including tehsil-level governance, was largely retained amid the chaos of mass population transfers, with non-Muslim residents departing for India and Muslim migrants arriving from eastern Punjab districts. This continuity facilitated rapid stabilization of local revenue collection and law enforcement in the agrarian region, though initial challenges included refugee resettlement and border security adjustments.[18] A significant restructuring took place on July 1, 1976, when the government of Pakistan, under Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, created Vehari District by detaching three tehsils—Vehari, Burewala, and Mailsi—from Multan District. This bifurcation sought to decentralize administration, improve service delivery, and address the growing population and economic demands of southern Punjab's canal-irrigated zones, with Vehari designated as the district headquarters due to its central location and infrastructure. Mailsi Tehsil thus shifted from Multan District's oversight to Vehari's, marking the end of its longstanding subordination to Multan since the British era.[4][7] Subsequent modern adjustments have been incremental, aligning with provincial reforms. Under the Devolution of Power Plan in 2001, local governance in Mailsi Tehsil was devolved to district and tehsil councils, enhancing elected representation at lower levels until partial recentralization. The tehsil, now comprising approximately 31 union councils divided into Mailsi and Jallah Jeem blocks, remains one of Vehari District's three core subdivisions, situated within the restored Multan Division framework established in 2008. These changes have supported ongoing agricultural administration and infrastructure management without major boundary alterations since 1976.[19]Geography
Location and physical features
Mailsi is a city in Vehari District, Punjab Province, Pakistan, serving as the headquarters of Mailsi Tehsil.[20] It is situated at geographic coordinates 29°48′04″N 72°10′26″E.[21] The city lies approximately 80 kilometers east of Multan in the southern Punjab region.[22] The terrain surrounding Mailsi consists of flat alluvial plains typical of the Indus River basin, with an average elevation of 132 meters above sea level.[20] Soils in the area are primarily thick alluvial deposits formed by river sedimentation, varying in texture from sandy loams near watercourses to heavier clays farther inland, supporting extensive agricultural activity through irrigation canals.[23] The region lacks significant topographic relief, featuring broad, level expanses suited to mechanized farming rather than natural features like hills or forests.[24]Climate and environmental conditions
Mailsi experiences a hot desert climate (BWh) characterized by extreme heat in summer, mild winters, and low precipitation throughout the year. Average annual temperatures reach 30.86°C, with daily highs frequently surpassing 40°C from May to September and lows dipping to around 10°C in January.[25][26] The region is predominantly dry, with a rainless period spanning approximately 8.5 months from mid-September to early June, interrupted briefly by the summer monsoon.[26] Precipitation is minimal, averaging about 22 mm per month, with the highest totals in August at around 30 mm during monsoon influences; annual rainfall rarely exceeds 250-300 mm.[25][26] Humidity remains low outside the monsoon, often below 50%, contributing to arid conditions that support dust storms and haze, particularly in transitional seasons.[27]| Month | Avg. High (°C) | Avg. Low (°C) | Avg. Rainfall (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 22 | 10 | <10 |
| February | 25 | 12 | <10 |
| March | 31 | 17 | <10 |
| April | 38 | 24 | <10 |
| May | 42 | 29 | <10 |
| June | 43 | 32 | <10 |
| July | 40 | 32 | 20-25 |
| August | 39 | 30 | 30 |
| September | 38 | 28 | 20-30 |
| October | 35 | 22 | <10 |
| November | 30 | 16 | <10 |
| December | 24 | 11 | <10 |
