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BANDA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 310 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BANDA  , a

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town and
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district of
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British India, in the
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Allahabad division of the
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United Provinces . The town is near the right
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bank of the
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river Ken, 95 m . S . W. of Allahabad . The population in 1901 was 2-2,565 . The town possesses 65 mosques and 168
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Hindu temples . It was formerly, but is no longer, a military cantonment . The district is' the most barren and backward portion of the province . It contains an
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area of 3061 sq. m . In some parts it rises into irregular uplands and elevated plains, interspersed with detached rocks of granite; in others it sinks into marshy lowlands, which frequently remain under
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water during the rainy season . The sloping country on the bank of the Jumna is full of ravines . To the S.E. the
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Vindhya chain of hills takes its origin in a low range not exceeding 500 ft. in height, and forming a natural boundary of the district in that direction .

The

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principal river of the district is the Jumna, which flows fromnorth-west to south-east, along the N.E. boundary of the district, for 125 M . In 1901 the population was 631,058, showing a decrease of 11 % in the decade, due to the effects of famine . The black
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soil of the district yields crops of which the principal are millet, other food-grains,
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pulse, rice, cotton and oil-seeds . Banda cotton enjoys a high repute in the market . A branch railway from Manikpur to
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Jhansi traverses the length of the district, which is also crossed by the East
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Indian main
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line to Jubbulpore . Banda, which forms one of the districts included under the general name of
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Bundelkhand, has formed an arena of contention for the successive races who have struggled for the
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sovereignty of India .
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Kalinjar town, then the capital, was unsuccessfully besieged by Mahmud of
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Ghazni in A.D . 1023; in 1196 it was taken by Kutab-ud-din, the general of Muhammad Ghori; in 1545 by Shere Shah, who, however, fell mortally wounded in the assault . About the
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year 1735 the
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raja of Kalinjar's territory, including the
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present district of Banda, was bequeathed to Baji Rao, the Mahratta peshwa; and from the
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Mahrattas it passed by the
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treaties of 1802–1803 to the
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Company . At the time of the Mutiny the district, which was poverty-stricken and over-taxed, joined the rebels . The town of Banda was recovered by General Whitlock on the 20th of
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April 1858 . The fiscal
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system was remodelled, and the district has since enjoyed a greater degree of prosperity only interrupted by famine .

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