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FARUKHABAD, FARRAKHABAD, or FURRUCKABAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 191 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FARUKHABAD, FARRAKHABAD, or FURRUCKABAD  , a city 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 city is near the right
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bank of the Ganges, 87 m. by
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rail from Cawnpore . It forms a joint
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municipality with Fatehgarh, the
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civil headquarters of the district with a military cantonment . Pop . (1901) 67,338 . At Fatehgarh is the government
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gun-
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carriage factory; and other
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industries include cotton-printing and the manufacture of gold lace, metal vessels and tents . The DISTRICT OF FARUKHABAD has an
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area of 1685 sq. m . It is a flat alluvial plain in the
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middle
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Doab . The
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principal rivers are: the Ganges, which has a course of 87 m. either bordering on or passing through the district, but is not at all times navigable by large boats throughout its entire course; the
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Kali-nadi (84 m.) and the Isan-nadi (42 m.), both tributaries of the Ganges; and the Arind-nadi, which, after a course of 20 M. in the south of the district, passes into Cawnpore . The principal products are rice, wheat, barley, millets, pulses, cotton,
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sugar-
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cane, potatoes, &c . The grain crops, however, are insufficient for
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local wants, and grain is largely imported from Oudh and
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Rohilkhand . The district is, therefore, liable to famine, and it was severely visited by this calamity six times during the 19th century—in 1803–1804, 1815–1816, 1825–1826, 1837–1838, 1868–1869 and 1899–1900 .

Farukhabad is one of the healthiest districts in the Doab, but fevers are prevalent during

August and September . The
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average
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annual mean temperature is almost 8o° F.; the average annual rainfall, 29.4 in . In the early
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part of the 18th century, when the Mogul
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empire was breaking up, Mahommed Khan, a
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Bangash Afghan from a
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village near Kaiuiganj, governor of
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Allahabad and later of Maiwa, established a considerable state of which the
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present district of Farukhabad was the nucleus, founding the city of Farukhabad in 1714 . After his
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death in 1743, his son and successor Kaim Khan was embroiled by Safdar Jang, the
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nawab wazir of Oudh, with the Rohillas, in
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battle with whom he lost his
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life in 1749 . In 1750 his
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brother, Ahmad Khan, recovered
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ICI the Farukhabad territories; but Safdar Jang called in the
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Mahrattas, and a struggle for the possession of the country began, which ended in 1771, on the death of Ahmad Khan, by its becoming tributary to Oudh . In 18o1 the nawab wazir ceded to the British his lands in this district, with the tribute due from the nawab of Farukhabad, who gave up his
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sovereign rights in 1802 . In 1804 the Mahrattas, under
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Holkar. ravaged this tract, but were utterly routed by Lord Lake at the
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town of Farukhabad . During the mutiny Farukhabad shared the
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fate of other districts, and passed entirely out of British hands for a time . The native troops, who had for some time previously evinced a seditious spirit, finally broke into
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rebellion on the 18th of
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June 1857, and placed the titular nawab of Farukhabad on the
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throne . The
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English military residents took shelter in the fort, which they held until the 4th of
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July, when, the fort being undermined, they endeavoured to escape by the
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river . One boat succeeded in reaching .Cawnpore, but only to fall into the hands of Nana . Its occupants were made prisoners, and perished in the
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massacre of the loth of July .

The other boat was stopped on its progress down the river, and all those in it were captured or killed, except four who escaped . The prisoners were conveyed back to Fatehgarh, and murdered there by the nawab on the 19th of July . The rebels were defeated in several engagements, and on the 3rd of

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January 1858 the English troops recaptured Fatehgarh fort; but it was not till May that order was thoroughly re-established . In 1901 the population was 925,812, showing an increase of 8% in one decade . Part of the district is watered by distributaries of the Ganges canal; it is traversed throughout its length by the Agra-Cawnpore
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line of the
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Rajputana railway, and is also served by a branch of the East
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Indian
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system .
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Tobacco, opium, potatoes and fruit, cotton-prints,
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scent and saltpetre are among the principal exports .

End of Article: FARUKHABAD, FARRAKHABAD, or FURRUCKABAD
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