Hunza is a precipitous valley in the Gilgit-Baltistan locale of Pakistan. Hunza is arranged in the outrageous northern piece of the locale, flanking with the Wakhan Corridor of Afghanistan and the Xinjiang area of China.
Hunza was some time ago a regal state flanking Xinjiang (self-governing locale of China) toward the upper east and Pamir toward the northwest, which made due until 1974, when it was at long last broken up by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. The state circumscribed the Gilgit Agency toward the south and the previous august territory of Nagar toward the east.
The state capital was the town of Baltit (otherwise called Karimabad); another old settlement is Ganish Village which signifies “old gold” town. Hunza was a free realm for over 900 years, until the British oversaw it and the neighboring valley of Nagar somewhere in the range of 1889 and 1891 through a military success. The then Mir/Tham (ruler) Safdar Khan of Hunza fled to Kashghar in China and looked for what might now be called political refuge.