Online Encyclopedia

ETAWAH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 804 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ETAWAH  , 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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Agra division of the
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United Provinces . The town is situated on the
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left
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bank of the Jumna, and has a station on the East
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Indian railway, 206 m. from
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Allahabad . Pop . (root) 42,570 . Deep fissures intersect the various quarters of the town, over which broad roads connect the higher portions by bridges and embankments . The Jama Masjid (
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Great Mosque) is the chief architectural ornament of Etawah . It was originally a
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Hindu temple, and was adapted to its
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present use by the
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Mahommedan conquerors . Several
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fine Hindu temples also stand about the
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mound on which are the ruins of the ancient fort . Etawah is now only the
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civil headquarters of the district, the military cantonment having been abandoned in 1861 . Considerable trade is carried on by
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rail and
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river . The manufactures include cotton
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cloth, skin-bottles, combs and horn-
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ware and sweetmeats . The DISTRICT OF ETAWAII has an
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area of 1691 sq. m .

It form§ a purely artificial administrative division, stretching across the level

plain of the
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Doab, and beyond the valley of the Jumna, to the gorges of the
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Chambal, and the last rocky outliers of the Vindhyan range . The district exhibits a striking variety of
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surface and scenery . The greater portion lies within the Doab or level alluvial plain between the Ganges and the Jumna . This
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part falls naturally into two sections, divided by the deep and fissured valley of the river Sengar . The tract to the north-east of that stream is rich and fertile, being watered by the Cawnpore and Etawah branches of the Ganges canal, and other important
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works . The south-western region has the same natural advantages, but possesses no great irrigation
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system, and is consequently less fruitful than the opposite slopes . Near the banks of the Jumna, the plain descends into the river valley by a series iof wild ravines and terraces, inhabited only by a scattered
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race of hereditary herdsmen .. Beyond the Jumna again a
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strip of British territory extends along the tangled gorges of the Chambal and the Kuari Nadi, far into the
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borders of the
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Gwalior state . This outlying tract embraces a series of rocky glens and mountain torrents, crowned by the ruins of native strongholds, and interspersed with narrow ledges of cultivable
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alluvium . The
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climate, once hot and sultry, has now become comparatively moist and equable under the influence of irrigation and the planting of trees . Etawah was marked out by its
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physical features as a secure retreat for the turbulent tribes of the Upper Doab, and it was not till the 12th century that any of the existing castes settled on the
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soil . After the Mussulman conquests of
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Delhi and the surrounding country, the
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Hindus of Etawah appear to have held their own for many generations against the Mahommedan power; but in the 16th century
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Baber conquered the district, with the rest of the Doab, and it remained in the hands of the Moguls until the decay of their
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empire .

After passing through the usual vicissitudes of Mahratta and Jat conquests during the

long anarchy which preceded the British
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rule, Etawah was annexed by the wazir of Oudh in 1773 . The wazir ceded it to the East India
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Company in 1801, but it still remained so largely in the hands of lawless native chiefs that some difficulty was experienced in reducing it to orderly government . During the mutiny of 1857 serious disturbances occurred in Etawah, and the district was occupied by the rebels from
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June to December; order was not completely restored till the end of 1858 . In 1901 the population was 806,798, showing an increase of 11% in the decade . The district is partly watered by branches of the Ganges canal, and is traversed throughout by the main
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line of the East Indian railway from Cawnpore to Agra . Cotton, oilseeds and other agricultural produce are exported, and some indigo is made, but manufacturing industry is slight .

End of Article: ETAWAH
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