Online Encyclopedia

BROACH, or BHARUCH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 620 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BROACH, or BHARUCH  , an ancient city and
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modern
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district of
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British India, in the
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northern division of Bombay . The city is on the right
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bank of the Nerbudda, about 30 M. from the sea, and 203 M . N. of Bombay . The
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area, including suburbs; occupies 2g sq. m . Pop . (1901) 42,896 . The sea-borne trade is confined to a few
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coasting vessels . Handloom-
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weaving is almost
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extinct, but several cotton mills have been opened . There are also large
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flour-mills . Broach is the Barakacheva of the Chinese traveller Hsiian Tsang and the Barygaza of Ptolemy and Arrian . Upon the
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conquest of
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Gujarat by the Mahommedans, and the formation of the state of that name, Broach formed
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part of the new
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kingdom . On its overthrow by
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Akbar in 1572, it was annexed to the Mogul
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empire and governed by a
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Nawab .

The

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Mahrattas became its masters in 1685, from which period it was held in subordination to the peshwa until 1772, when it was captured by a force under General Wedderburn (
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brother to Lord Lough-borough), who was killed in the assault . In 1783 it was ceded by the British to Sindhia in acknowledgment of certain services . It was stormed in 1803 by a detachment commanded by Colonel Woodington, and was finally ceded to the East India
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Company by Sindhia under the treaty of Sarji Anjangaom . The DISTRICT OF BROACH contains an area of 1467 sq. m . Consisting chiefly of the alluvial plain at the mouth of the
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river Nerbudda, the
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land is rich and highly cultivated, and though it is without forests it is not wanting in trees . The district is well supplied with rivers, having in addition to the Nerbudda the
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Mahi in the north and the Kim in the south . The population comprises several distinct races or castes, who, while speaking a
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common dialect,
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Gujarati, inhabit
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separate villages . Thus there are Koli, Kunbi or Voro (
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Bora) villages, and others whose lands are almost entirely held and cultivated by high castes, such as Rajputs, Brahmans or Parsecs . In 1901 the population was 291,763, showing a decrease of 15%,•compared with an increase of 5 % in the preceding decade . The
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principal crops are cotton; millet, wheat and
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pulse . Dealing in cotton is the chief industry, the dealers being organized in a gild . Besides the cotton mills in Broach city there are several factories for ginning and pressing cotton, some of them on a very large scale .

The district is traversed throughout its length by the Bombay &

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Baroda railway, which crosses the Nerbudda opposite Broach city on an iron-girder
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bridge of 67 spans . The district suffered severely from the famine of 1899-1900 .

End of Article: BROACH, or BHARUCH
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