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BAHRAICH or BHARAICH, a See also: town and See also: district of See also: British See also: India, situated in the See also: Fyzabad division of the See also: United Provinces
.
The town is on the See also: river Sarju
.
Since the opening of the railway the place has begun to flourish
.
It contains the most popular place of pilgrimage in Oudh, the See also: tomb of Masaud, a champion of See also: Islam, slain in See also: battle by the confederate Rajputs in 1033, which is resorted to by Mahommedans and See also: Hindus alike
.
There is also a Mussulman monastery, and the ruined palace of a See also: nawab of Oudh
.
The See also: American Methodists have a See also: mission here
.
Pop
.
(1901) 27,304
.
The district of Bahraich contains an See also: area of 2647 sq. m
.
It consists of three tracts: (I) in the centre, an elevated triangular See also: plateau, projecting from the See also: base of the Himalayas for about 50 M. in a See also: south-easterly direction—average breadth, 13 m., area, 67o sq. m.; (2) the See also: great plain of the See also: Gogra, on the west, about 40 ft. below the level of the plateau; and (3) on the See also: east, another lesser area cf depression, comprising the See also: basin of the Rapti
.
The tarar, or the See also: forest and marshy tracts along the See also: southern slopes of the Himalayas, gradually See also: merge within the district into drier See also: land, the beds of the streams become deeper and more marked, the marshes disappear, and the country assumes the ordinary appearance of the plain of the See also: Ganges
.
The Gogra skirts the district for 114 m.; and the Rapti, with its branch the Bhalka, drains the high grounds
.
In 1got the population was 1,051,347, showing an increase of 5% in theSee also: decade
.
A considerable See also: trade is conducted with See also: Nepal, chiefly in See also: timber
.
A See also: line of railway has been opened through the district to Nepalganj on the frontier
.
As thrre are no canals in the district, irrigation is obtained solely from See also: wells, tanks and See also: rivers
.
The district is purely agricultural in character, and is one of large estates, 78% being held by taluqdars, of whom the four chief are the See also: raja of See also: Kapurthala, the maharaja of See also: Balrampur, the raja of Nanpara and the raja of Payagpur
.
Little is known of the See also: history of the district before the See also: Mahommedan invasion in A.D
.
1033
.
Masaud was defeated and slain by the nobles of Bahraich in 1033, and the Mahommedans did not establish their authority over the country till the See also: middle of the 13th century
.
About 1450 the Raikwars, or See also: Rajput adventurers, made themselves masters of the western portion of the district, which they retain to this See also: day
.
In 1816 by the treaty of Segauli the Nepal tarai was ceded to the British, but was given back in 1860
.
During the See also: Mutiny the district was the scene of considerable fighting, and after its close a large portion was distributed in jagirs to loyal chiefs, thus originating the taluqdari estates of the See also: present day
.
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