Online Encyclopedia

DARJEELING

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 834 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

DARJEELING  , a

hill station and
See also:
district of
See also:
British India, in the
See also:
Bhagalpur division of Bengal . The sanatorium is situated 367 M. by
See also:
rail north of
See also:
Calcutta . In 1901 it had a population of 16,924 . It is the summer quarters of the Bengal government and has a most agreeable
See also:
climate, which neither exceeds 8o° F. in summer, nor falls below 3o° in winter . The
See also:
great attraction of Darjeeling is its scenery, which is unspeakably
See also:
grand . The view across the hills to Kinchinjunga discloses a glittering white wall of perpetual snow, surrounded by towering masses of granite . There are several
See also:
schools of considerable
See also:
size for
See also:
European boys and girls, and a government boarding school at Kurseong . The buildings and the roads suffered severely from the
See also:
earthquake of the 12th of
See also:
June 1897 . But a more terrible disaster occurred in
See also:
October 1899, when a series of landslips carried away houses and broke up the hill railway . The
See also:
total value of the
See also:
property destroyed was returned at £16o,000 . The district of Darjeeling comprises an
See also:
area of 1164 sq. m . It consists of two well-defined tracts, viz. the
See also:
lower Himalayas to the south of
See also:
Sikkim, and the tarai, or plains, which extend from the south of these ranges as far as the
See also:
northern
See also:
borders of
See also:
Purnea district .

The plains from which the hills take their rise are only 300 ft. above

sea-level; the mountains ascend abruptly in spurs of 6000 to 10,000 ft. in height . The scenery throughout the hills is picturesque, and in many parts magnificent . The two highest mountains in the
See also:
world, Kinchinjunga in Sikkim (28,156 ft.) and Everest in
See also:
Nepal (29,002 ft.), are visible from the
See also:
town of Darjeeling . The
See also:
principal peaks within the district are—Phalut (11,811 ft.), Subargum (11,636), Tanglu (10,084), Situng and Sinchal Pahai (8163) . The chief rivers are the
See also:
Tista, Great and Little Ranjit, Ramman, Mahananda, Balasan and Jaldhaka . None of them is navigable in the mountain valleys; but the Tista, after it debouches on the plains, can be navigated by cargo boats of considerable burthen . Bears, leopards and musk deer are found on the higher mountains, deer on the lower ranges, and I2 a few elephants and tigers on the slopes nearest to the plains . In the lowlands, tigers, rhinoceroses, deer and wild hogs are abundant . A few wolves are also found . Of small
See also:
game,
See also:
hares, jungle fowl, peacocks, partridges, snipe, woodcock, wild ducks and geese, and green pigeons are numerous in the tarai, and jungle fowl and pheasants in the hills . The mahseer fish is found in the Tista . In 1901 the population was 249,117, showing an increase of 12 % since 1891, compared with an increase of 43 % in the previous decade .

The inhabitants of the hilly

tract consist to a large extent of Nepali immigrants and of aboriginal highland races; in the tarai the
See also:
people are chiedly
See also:
Hindus and Mahommedans . The Lepchas are considered to be the aboriginal inhabitants of the hilly portion of the district . They are a
See also:
fine, frank
See also:
race, naturally open-hearted and
See also:
free-handed, fond of change and given to an out-door
See also:
life ; but they do not seem to improve on being brought into contact with
See also:
civilization . It is thought that they are now being gradually driven out of the district, owing to the increase of
See also:
regular cultivation, and to the government conservation of the forests . They have no word for plough in their language, and they still follow the nomadic form of tillage known as jum cultivation . This consists in selecting a spot of virgin
See also:
soil, clearing it of
See also:
forest and jungle by burning, and scraping the
See also:
surface with the rudest agricultural implements . The productive powers of the
See also:
land become exhausted in a few years, when the clearing is abandoned, a new site is chosen, and the same operations are carried on de novo . The Lepchas are also the ordinary out-door labourers on the hills . They have no caste distinctions but speak of themselves as belonging to one of nine septa or clans, who all eat together and intermarry with each other . In the upper or northern tarai, along the
See also:
base of the hills, the Mechs form the principal ethnical feature . This tribe inhabits the deadly jungle with impunity, and cultivates cotton, rice and other ordinary crops, by the jum
See also:
process described above . The cultivation of tea was introduced in 1856, and is now a large industry .

See also:
Cinchona 'cultivation was introduced by the government in 1862, and has since been taken up by private enterprise . There is a
See also:
coal mine at Daling . The Darjeeling Himalayan railway of 2 ft. gauge, opened in 188o, runs for 50 M. from Siliguri in the plains on the Eastern Bengal
See also:
line . The British connexion with Darjeeling
See also:
dates from 1816, when, at the close of the war with Nepali, the British made over to the Sikkim
See also:
raja the tarai tract, which had been wrested from him and annexed by Nepal . In 1835 the nucleus of the
See also:
present district of British Sikkim or Darjeeling was created by a cession of a portion of the hills by the raja of Sikkim to the British as a sanatorium . A military expedition against Sikkim, rendered necessary in 185o by the imprisonment of Dr A . Campbell, the superintendent of Darjeeling, and
See also:
Sir Joseph Hooker, resulted in the stoppage of the allowance granted to the raja for the cession of the hill station of Darjeeling, and in the annexation of the Sikkim tarai at the
See also:
foot of the hills and of a portion of the hills beyond . In August 1866 the hill territory east of the Tista, acquired as the result of the
See also:
Bhutan
See also:
campaign of 1864, was added to the jurisdiction of Darjeeling .

End of Article: DARJEELING
[back]
DARIUS III
[next]
GEORGE DARLEY (1795-1846)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.