Online Encyclopedia

FARIDPUR, or FURREEDPORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 178 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FARIDPUR, or FURREEDPORE  , 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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Dacca division of eastern Bengal and
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Assam . The town, which has a railway station, stands on an old channel of the Ganges . Pop . (1901) 11,649 . There are a Baptist
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mission and a government high school . The district comprises an
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area of 2281 sq. m . The general aspect is flat, tame 'and uninteresting, although in the
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northern tract the
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land is comparatively high, with a
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light sandy
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soil, covered with
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water during the rainy season, but dry during the cold and hot weather . From the town of Faridpur the ground slopes, until in the south, on the confines of Backergunje, it becomes one immense swamp, never entirely dry . During the height of the inundations the whole district may be said to be under water . The villages are built on artificially raised sites, or the high banks of the deltaic streams . Along many of the larger rivers the
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line of hamlets is unbroken for miles together, so that it is difficult to say where one ends and another begins . The huts, however, except in markets and bazaars, are seldom close together, but are scattered amidst small garden plots, and groves of
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mango, date and betel-nut trees .

The plains between the villages are almost invariably more or less depressed towards the centre, where usually a

marsh, or lake, or deep lagoon is found . These marshes, however, are gradually filling up by the silt deposited from the rivers; in the north of the district there now only remain two or three large swamps, and in them the
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process may be seen going on . The
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climate of Faridpur is
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damp, like that of the other districts of eastern Bengal; the
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average
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annual rainfall is 66 in. and the average mean temperature 76.9° F . The
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principal rivers of Faridpur are the Ganges, the Arial Khan and the Haringhata . The Ganges, or Padma as it is locally called, touches the extreme north-west corner of the district, flows along its northern boundary as far as Goalanda, where it receives the waters of, the Jamuna or main stream of the
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Brahmaputra, and whence the
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united stream turns southwards and forms the eastern boundary of the district . The
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river is navigable by large cargo boats throughout the
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year, and has an average breadth during the rainy season of 160o yds . Rice is the
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great crop of the district . In 1901 the population was1,937,646, showing an increase of 6% in the decade . The north of the district is crossed by the line of the Eastern Bengal railway to Goalanda, the
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port of the Brahmaputra steamers, and a branch runs to Faridpur town . But most of the trade is
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con-ducted by river .

End of Article: FARIDPUR, or FURREEDPORE
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SALVATORE FARINA (1846– )

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