Clickable map of points taken from the local map of Ladakh drawn by Ea Rasmussen, Moesgaard Museum/University of Aarhus.[1] The highlighted yellow area on the base map is the administrative area of the Union Territory of Ladakh.
Aqua highlight labels represent Gompas or monasteries that paid the highest taxes in the 1850s — Hemis (with Hanle) Rs 900; Chimra Rs 900; Thigse Rs 500; Pitak Rs 500; Gawan Rs 900; Lama Yuru Rs 900.[2] (see Strachey's 1851 map of Ladakh for similar location spellings i.e. Chimra/Chemre etc)
Route marked in red arrows () depicts routes of Zorawar Singh's Ladakhi and Balti campaigns. Arrows 1 to 5 depict the start from Kishtawar in 1834, through Warwan to Suru Valley, then north to Dkarste and from there turning south east to Khalatse. Arrows A to D depicts the conquest of Balti, reaching Skardu and back. Coloured labels represent southeast–wards conquests heading into Tibet and ending at Taklakot.[3]
^Charak, Sukhdev Singh (2016). General Zorawar Singh. New Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, Government of India. p. 16. ISBN9788123026480.
^Sircar, Joydeep (1984). "Oropolitics"(PDF). British Alpine Journal. p. 78. Archived(PDF) from the original on 1 January 2021. Retrieved 31 December 2020.