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GAUHATI , a See also: town of See also: British See also: India, in the See also: Kamrup See also: district of Eastern See also: Bengal and See also: Assam, mainly on the See also: left or See also: south, but partly on the right See also: bank of the See also: Brahmaputra
.
Pop
.
(1901) 14,244
.
It is beautifully situated, with an amphitheatre of wooded hills to the south, but is not very healthy
.
There are many evidences, such as See also: ancient earthworks and tanks, of its See also: historical importance
.
During the 17th century it was taken and retaken by Mahommedans and Ahoms eight times in fifty years, but in 1681 it became the residence of the See also: Ahom governor of See also: lower Assam, and in 1786 the capital of the Ahom See also: raja
.
On the cession of Assam to the British in 1826 it was made the seat of the British administration of Assam, and so continued till 1874, when the headquarters were removed to See also: Shillong in the Khasi hills, 67 m. distant, with which Gauhati is connected by an excellent cart-road
.
Two much-frequented places of See also: Hindu pilgrimage are situated in the immediate vicinity, the See also: temple of Kamakhya on a See also: hill 2 in. west of the town, and the rocky
See also: island of Umananda in the See also: mid-channel of the Brahmaputra
.
Gauhati is still the headquarters of the district and of the Brahmaputra Valley division, though no longer a military cantonment
.
It is the See also: river See also: terminus of a section of the Assam-Bengal railway
.
There are a second-grade See also: college, a See also: government high school, a See also: law class and a training school for masters
.
Gauhati is an important centre of river See also: trade, and the largest seat of commerce in Assam
.
See also: Cotton-ginning, See also: flour-milling, and an export trade in See also: mustard seed, cotton, See also: silk and See also: forest produce are carried on
.
Gauhati suffered very severely from the See also: earth-quake of the 12th of See also: June 1897
.
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