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AKOLA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 458 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AKOLA  , a

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town and
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district of India, in
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Berar, otherwise known as the Hyderabad Assigned Districts . The town is on the Murna tributary of the Purna
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river, 930 ft. above the sea, Akola proper being on the west
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bank, and Tajnapeth, containing the government buildings and
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European residences, on the east bank . It is a station out the
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Nagpur branch of the
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Great
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Indian Peninsula railway and is 383 M . E.N.E. of Bombay . It had a population (1901) of 29,289 . It is walled, and has a citadel built in the early years of the 19th century . Akola is one of the chief centres of the cotton trade in Berar, and has numerous ginning factories and cotton presses . Among the educational establishments are a government high school, and an
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industrial school supported by a
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Protestant
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mission . The DISTRICT OF AKOLA as reconstituted in 1905 has an
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area of 4111 sq. m., the population of this area in 1901 being 754,804 . (Before the alteration of the boundaries the area of the district was 2678 sq. m., and the population 582,540.) The
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surface of the country is generally flat, the greater
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part being situated in the central valley of Berar . On the north it is bounded by the Melghat hills . By the addition of
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Basim and Mangrul taluks in 1905, the district includes the eastern part of the Ajanta hills, with peaks rising to 2000 ft., and the tableland of Basim (q.v.) .

North of the Ajanta hills the country is drained eastward by the

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Puma affluent of the
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Tapti and its tributaries . None of the rivers is navigable . The
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climate resembles that of Berar generally, but the heat during
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April to
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mid-
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June, when the rains begin, is very great, the
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average temperature at the town of Akola in May for the twenty-five years ending 1901 being 94.4° F . But even during the hot season the nights are cool . The
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annual rainfall averages 34 in . In the Purna valley the
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soil is every-where a rich black loam, and nearly the whole of the
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land is cultivated . Very little land is under irrigation . The
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principal crop is cotton, and the
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staple grain millet . Wheat and pulses are also grown . The
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history of Akola is not distinguished from that of the other portions of Berar . In 1317-1.318 it was added to the
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Delhi
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empire, became
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independent under the Bahmani dynasty in 1348, and in 1596 again fell under the sway of the Moguls . In 1724 it came, with the rest of Berar, under the dominion of the
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nizam, being assigned to the
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British in 1853 .

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