in Hindustan, a tract of the Punjab, comprising several valleys, with their inclosing ridges, on the southern slope of the Himalayas, and containing an area of 759 square miles, with a population of 113,000. Upon the conquest of the Punjab, Mundi became tributary to the British; and upon the death of the rajah in 1851, and the succession of his infant son, arrangements were made for the government of this petty state. Mundi, the capital town, which is situated at the confluence of the Sukyt with the Beas, is in Lat. 31. 43., Long. 76. 58.