Online Encyclopedia

BHANDARA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 844 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BHANDARA  , 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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Nagpur division of the Central Provinces . The town (pop. in 1901, 14,023) is situated on the
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left
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bank of the
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river
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Wainganga, 7 M. from a station on the Bengal-Nagpur railway . It has considerable manufactures of cotton
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cloth and brass-
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ware, and a first-grade
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middle school, with a library . The DISTRICT OF BHANDARA has an
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area of 3965 sq. m . In 1901 the population was 663,062, showing a decrease of 11 % since 1891 compared with an increase of 8 % in the preceding decade . The district is bounded on the N., N.E. and E. by lofty hills, inhabited by Gonds and other aboriginal tribes, while the W. and N.W. are comparatively open . Small branches of the
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Satpura range make their way into the interior of the district . The Ambagarh or Sendurjhari hills, which skirt the south of the Chandpur pargana, have an
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average height of between 300 and 400 ft. above the level of the plain . The other elevated tracts are the Balahi hills, the Kanheri hills and the Nawegaon hills . The Wainganga is the
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principal river in the district, and the only stream that does not dry up in the hot weather,—its affluents within the district being the Bawanthari, Bagh, Kanhan and Chulban . There are 3648 small 'lakes and tanks in Bhandara district, -whence it is called the " lake region of Nagpur "; they afford ample means of irrigation . More than one-third of the district lies under jungle, which yields gum, medicinal fruit and nuts, 'edible fruits,
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lac, honey and the blossoms of the mahuli tree (Bassia latifolia), which are eaten by the poorer classes, and used for the manufacture of a kind of spirit .

Tigers, panthers,

deer, wild hogs and other wild animals abound in the forests, and during the rainy season many deaths occur from snake-bites . Iron is the chief
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mineral product . Gold is also found in the bed of the
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Sone river, Laterite, shale and
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sandstone occur all over the district . Native cloth, brass wares, pot-stone wares, cartwheels,
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straw and reed baskets, and a small quantity of
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silk, form the only manufactures . The principal crops are rice, wheat, millet, other food-grains,
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pulse,
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linseed, and a little
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sugar-
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cane . The district is traversed by the main road from Nagpur to the east, and also by the Bengal-Nagpur railway . It suffered in the famine of 1896-1897, and yet more severely in 1900 . Bhandara district contains 25 semi-
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independent chiefships . These little states are exempted from the revenue
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system, and only pay a
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light tribute . Their territory, however, is included within the returns of area and population above given . The
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climate of Bhandara is unhealthy,—the prevailing diseases being fever, small-pox and cholera . Nothing is known of the early
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history of the district .

Tradition says that at a remote

period a tribe of men, called the Gaulis or Gaulars, overran and conquered it . At the end of the 17th century it belonged to the Gond
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raja of
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Deogarh . In 1743 it was conquered by the
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Mahrattas, who governed it till 1853, when it lapsed to the British government, the raja of Nagpur having died without an heir .

End of Article: BHANDARA
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