In the 1870s, the
British colonial government in India gave the Jowaki
Afridi tribe a tribute payment to guard the
Kohat Pass. At the time the Jowaki were the most powerful Pathan tribe in the
northwest frontier. In 1875, local tribes in the area of the Kohat Pass, including the Jowaki, objected to the building of a road through the pass. The final straw for the Jowaki came in 1877 when they had their payment reduced by the colonial government. entered the village of
Shakkote (located on the Cherat road beneath the hill fort of
Cherat), killed almost all of the
Sepoy guard of 18 men, and made off with British rifles. The same day the colonial government issued a war proclamation against the Jowaki, stating that if they did not give up the Shakkote murderers, return the stolen British rifles, and pay an indemnity of 30,000 rupees as a guarantee of their future good behaviour, the British would advance into their territory. The Jowaki said they were not going to agree to any terms and were ready to fight. == Course ==