Badakhshan Province
Badakhshan Province
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|---|---|
Map of Afghanistan with Badakhshan highlighted | |
| Coordinates: 38°0′N 71°0′E / 38.000°N 71.000°E | |
| Country | Afghanistan |
| Capital | Fayzabad |
| Government | |
| • Governor | Mawlawi Ismail Ghaznawi |
| Area | |
• Total | 44,835 km2 (17,311 sq mi) |
| Population (2023) | |
• Total | c. 1.1 million |
| • Density | 24.5/km2 (63/sq mi) |
| Demonym | Badakhshi |
| Time zone | UTC+4:30 (Afghanistan Time) |
| Postal code | 34XX |
| ISO 3166 code | AF-BDS |
| Main languages | Dari, Pashto, and Pamiri languages among others |
Badakhshan (Dari: ولایت بدخشان, romanized: Wilāyat-e Badakhshān and Pashto: د بدخشان ولایت, romanized: Da Badakhshān Wilāyat) is one of the northeastern provinces of Afghanistan and is widely regarded as one of the country's most geographically distinctive and historically significant regions. It borders Tajikistan's Gorno-Badakhshan province to the north, China's Xinjiang province to the east, and Pakistan's northern provinces to the south, while internally it neighbors the Afghan provinces of Takhar and Panjshir. The provincial capital is Fayzabad, which functions as the main administrative, economic, and cultural center of the province.
Covering an area of approximately 44,000 square kilometers and having an estimated population of about 1.2 million people (as of 2025), Badakhshan is defined by its mountainous terrain, dominated by the Hindu Kush and Pamir mountain ranges, as well as by deep river valleys shaped primarily by the Kokcha and Panj rivers. The province includes the Wakhan Corridor, a narrow high-altitude strip that extends eastward between Tajikistan and Pakistan to China, giving Badakhshan a unique geopolitical position as Afghanistan's only land connection to China.
Historically part of the broader historical Badakhshan region, the province has served as an important cultural and commercial crossroads between Central Asia, South Asia, and the Iranian world. It is internationally known for the ancient lapis lazuli mines of Sar-i Sang, which have been exploited for thousands of years and supplied gemstones to ancient civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and South Asia. This long history of trade contributed to the early integration of the region into transregional economic and political networks.