Online Encyclopedia

DEHRA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 932 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DEHRA  , a

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town of
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British India, headquarters of the Dehra Dun
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district in the
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United Provinces . Pop . (1901) 28,095 . It lies at an
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elevation of 2300 ft . Here the Hardwar-Dehra railway terminates . Dehra is the headquarters of the Trigonometrical Survey and of the
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Forest Department, besides being a cantonment for a Gurkha force . The Forest School, which trains subordinate forest officials for all parts of India, is a
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fine
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building . Attached to it is an institution for the scientific study of sylvi-culture and the exploitation and administration of forests . The town of Dehra grew up round the temple built in 1699 by the heretical
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Sikh Guru, Ram Rai, the founder of the Udasi
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sect of Ascetics . This temple is a remarkable building in
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Mahommedan style . The central block, in imitation of the emperor Jahangir's tomb, contains the bed on which the Guru, after dying at will and coming back to
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life several times, ultimately died outright; it is an
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object of
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great veneration . At the corners of the central block are smaller monuments commemorating the Guru's wives .

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