Online Encyclopedia

AURANGABAD, or AURUNGABAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 922 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AURANGABAD, or AURUNGABAD  , a city of India, in the dominions of the
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nizam of Hyderabad, north-west division, situated 138 m. from Poona, 207 from Bombay via Poona, and 270 from Hyderabad on the
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river Kaum . It gives its name to a
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district . It was founded in 161o, under the name of Fatchnagar, by Malik Ambar, an Abyssinian, who had risen from the condition of a slave to
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great influence . Subsequently it became the capital of the Mogul conquests in the south of India . Aurangzeb, who erected here a
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mausoleum to his wife which has been compared to the Taj at
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Agra, made the city the seat of his government during his viceroyalty of the Deccan, and gave it the name of Aurangabad . It thus grew into the
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principal city of an extensive province of the same name, stretching westward to the sea, and comprehending nearly the whole of the territory now comprised within the
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northern division of the
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presidency of Bombay . Aurangabad long continued to be the capital of the succession of potentates bearing the
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modern title of nizam, after those chiefs became
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independent of
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Delhi . They abandoned it subsequently, and transferred their capital to Hyderabad, when the
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town at once began to decline . Aurangabad is a railway station on the Hyderabad-
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Godavari
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line, 435 M. from Bombay . In 1901 the population, with military cantonments, was 36,837, showing an increase of 8 % in the decade . It has a cotton mill . The district of Aurangabad has an
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area of 6172 sq. m .

The population in 1901 was 721,407 . It contains the famous caves of

Ajanta, and also the battlefield of
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Assaye .

End of Article: AURANGABAD, or AURUNGABAD
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