Online Encyclopedia

BASSEIN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 492 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BASSEIN  , a

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district and
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town in the Irrawaddy division of
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Lower
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Burma, in the delta of the Irrawaddy . The district has been reduced to 4127 sq. m., from 8954 sq. m. in 1871, having given up a large tract to the district of
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Myaungmya formed in 1896 . A mountain range called the Anauk-pet Taungmyin stretches through the district from N. to S. along the coast . The
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principal
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river of the district is the Irrawaddy, which debouches on the sea at its eastern extremity through a delta intersected with salt
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water creeks, among which the Pyamalaw, Pyinzalu, Kyunton, and Ngawun Shagegyi or Bassein river rank as important arms of the sea . Irrawaddy and Inyegyi are the only two lakes in the district . The delta of the Irrawaddy forms, wherever cultivable, a vast
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sheet of rice, with cotton, sesamum, and
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tobacco as subsidiary crops . In 1901 the population was 391,427 . BASSEIN, the chief town and
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port, is the capital of the district and division, and is situated on the eastern
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bank of the Bassein river, one of the main arteries by which the waters of the Irrawaddy discharge themselves into the sea . It forms an important seat of the rice trade with several steam rice mills, and has
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great capabilities both from a mercantile and a military point of view, as it commands the great outlet of the Irrawaddy . It fell before the
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British arms, in May 1852, during the second Burmese war . In 1901 it had a population of 31,864 . The vessels of the Irrawaddy Flotilla
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Company ply between
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Rangoon and Bassein, &c., by inland waters, and a railway opened in 1903 runs north- eastward through the centre of the district, to
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Henzada and Letpadan .

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OLIVIER BASSELIN (c. 1400-c. 1450)

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