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BANGALORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 315 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BANGALORE  , a

city of India, the capital of the native state of
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Mysore, and the largest
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British cantonment in the south of India . It is 3113 ft. above the sea, and 219 M . W. of
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Madras by
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rail . Pop . (1901) 69,447 . The foundation of the
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present fort was laid by a descendant of Kempe-Goude, a husbandman of the neighbouring country, who, probably in the 16th century, had
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left his native
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village to avoid the tyranny of the wadeyar of that place, and settled on a spot a few miles to the north of Bangalore . To the peaceful occupation of a farmer he added that of a
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warrior, and his first exploit was the
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conquest of this place, where, and at Savendrug, his
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family subsequently erected fortresses . Bangalore, with other possessions, was, however, wrested from them by
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Bijapur . Somewhat later we find it enumerated among the jagirs of Shahji,
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father of Sivaji, the founder of the Mahratta sway; and at an early period of his career in the service of the Bijapur state, that adventurer seemed to have fixed his residence there . It appears to have passed into the possession of Venkaji, one of the sons of Shahji; but he having occupied
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Tanjore, deemed Bangalore too distant, especially under the circumstances of the times, to be safe . He accordingly, in 1687, entered into a bargain for its sale to Chikka Deva,
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raja of Mysore, for three lakhs of rupees; but before it could be completed, Kasim Khan,
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commander of the forces of Aurangzeb, marched upon the place and entered it almost without resistance . This event, however, had no other result than to transfer the stipulated price from one vendor to another; for that general, not coveting the possession, immediately delivered it over to Chikka Deva on payment of the three lakhs .

In 1758, Nanjiraj, the powerful

minister of the raja, caused Bangalore to be granted, as a jagir or
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fief, to Hyder All, afterwards usurper of Mysore, who greatly enlarged and strengthened the fort, which, in 176o, on his expulsion from Seringapatam, served as his
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refuge from destruction . The fort formed the traditional scene of the first captivity of
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Sir David Baird after Baillie's defeat at Perambakam in 1780 . The prison cell of Sir David and his
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fellow-captive is from 12 to 15 ft. square, with so low a roof that a man can scarcely stand upright in it . In 1791 it was stormed by a British army commanded by Lord Cornwallis . In 1799 the
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district was included by the treaty of Seringapatam within the territory of the restored raja of Mysore . It formed the headquarters of the British administration of Mysore from 1831 to 1881 . When the state of Mysore was restored to its raja in 1881, the
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civil and military station of Bangalore was permanently reserved under British jurisdiction as an " assigned tract." It has an
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area of 13 sq. m., and had in 19or a population of 89,599, showing a decrease of 10 % in the decade, due to plague . Bangalore is the headquarters of a military district, its
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elevation rendering it healthy for British troops, with accommodation for a strong force of all arms and an
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arsenal in the old fort . It is the headquarters of a brigade in the 9th division of the
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Indian army . A considerable number of
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European pensioners reside here . There is a
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modern palace for the maharaja . There is an aided
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Roman Catholic college, besides many
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schools for Europeans .

A permanent

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water-supply has been introduced and there is a
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complete
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system of drainage . Bangalore is an important railway centre . There are several cotton mills . The city suffered severely from plague in 1899 and 1000 . The district of Bangalore
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borders on the Madras district of
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Salem . The main portion consists of the valley of the Arkavati
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river, which joins the Cauvery on the
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southern frontier . Its area is 3079 sq. m . In 1901 the population was 789,664, showing an increase of 15 % in the decade . The district is crossed by several lines of railway . Outside Bangalore city there is a woollen mill, which turns out blankets,
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cloth for greatcoats, and woollen stuffs .

End of Article: BANGALORE
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HERMANN JOACHIM BANG (1858– )
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