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BELGAUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 668 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BELGAUM  , 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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southern division of Bombay . The town is situated nearly 2500 ft. above sea-level; it has a station on the Southern Mahratta railway, 245 M . S. of Poona . It has an ancient fortress, dating apparently from 1519, covering about
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ioo acres, and surroundedby a ditch; within it are two interesting Jain temples . Belgaum contains a cantonment which is the headquarters of a brigade in the 6th division of the western army corps . It is also a considerable centre of trade and of cotton
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weaving . There are cotton mills . Pop . (1901) 36,878 . The district of Belgaum has an
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area of 4649 sq. m . To the north and east the country is open and well cultivated, but to the south it is intersected by spurs of the
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Sahyadri range, thickly covered in some places with
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forest . In 1901 the population was 993,976, showing a decrease of 2 % compared with an increase of 17 % in the preceding decade .

The

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principal crops are millet, rice, wheat, other food-grains,
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pulse, oil-seeds, cotton,
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sugar-
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cane, spices and
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tobacco . There are considerable manufactures of cotton-
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cloth . The town of
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Gokak is known for its dyes, its paper and its wooden and earthenware toys . The West Deccan
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line of the Southern Mahratta railway runs through the district from north to south . Two high
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schools at Belgaum town are maintained by government and by the
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London
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Mission . The Kurirs, a wandering and thieving tribe, the Kamais, professional burglars, and the Baruds, cattle-stealers and highwaymen, are notorious among the criminal classes .
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History.—The ancient name of the town of Belgaum was Venugrama, which is said to be derived from the bamboos that are characteristic of its neighbourhood . The most ancient place in the district is Halsi; and this, according to inscriptions on copper plates discovered in its neighbourhood, was once the capital of a dynasty of nine Kadamba kings . It appears that from the
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middle of the 6th century A.D. to about 76o the country was held by the Chalukyas, who were succeeded by the Rashtrakutas . After the break-up of the
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Rashtrakuta power a portion of it survived in the Rattas (875-1250), who from 1210 onward made Venugrama their capital . Inscriptions give evidence of a long struggle between the Rattas and the Kadambas of
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Goa, who succeeded in the latter years of the 12th century in acquiring and holding
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part of the district . By 1208, however, the Kadambas had been overthrown by the Rattas, who in their turn succumbed to the Yadavas of Devagiri in 1250 .

After the overthrow of the Yadavas by the

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Delhi emperor (1320), Belgaum was for a short time under the
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rule of the latter; but only a few years later the part south of the Ghatprabha was subject to the
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Hindu rajas of Vijayanagar . In 1347 the
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northern part was conquered by the Bahmani dynasty, which in 1473 took the town of Belgaum and conquered the southern part also . When Aurungzeb overthrew the
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Bijapur sultans in 1686, Belgaum passed to the Moguls . In 1776 the country was overrun by Hyder
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Ali, but was retaken by the Peshwa with British assistance . In 1818 it was handed over to the East India
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Company and was made part of the district of
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Dharwar . In 1836 this was divided into two parts, the southern district continuing to be known as Dharwar, the northern as Belgaum . See Imp . Gazetteer of India (Oxford, ed . 1908), S.V .

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