Online Encyclopedia

GORAKHPUR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 246 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GORAKHPUR  , a

city,
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district and division of the
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United Provinces of
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British India . The city is situated on the
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left
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bank of the
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river Rapti . Pop . (1901) 64,148 . It is believed to have been founded about 1400 A.D . It is the
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civil headquarters of the district and was formerly a military cantonment . It consists of a number of adjacent
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village sites, sometimes separated by cultivated
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land, and most of the inhabitants are agriculturists . The DISTRICT OF GORAKHPUR has an
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area of 4535 sq. m . It lies immediately south of the
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lower Himalayan slopes, but itself forms a portion of the
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great alluvial plain . Only a few sandhills break the monotony of its level
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surface, which is, however, intersected by numerous rivers studded with lakes and marshes . In the north and centre dense forests abound, and the whole country has a verdant appearance . The
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principal rivers are the Rapti, the Gogra, the
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Gandak and Little Gandak, the Kuana, the Rohin, the Ami and the Gunghi .

Tigers are found in the north, and many other

wild animals abound throughout the district . The lakes are well stocked with fish . The district is not subject to very intense heat, from which it is secured by its vicinity to the hills and the moisture of its
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soil . Dust-storms are rare, and cool breezes from the north, rushing down the gorges of the Himalayas, succeed each short
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interval of warm weather . The
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climate is, however, relaxing . The
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southern and eastern portions are as healthy as most parts of the province, but the tarai and
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forest-tracts are still subject to
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malaria . Gautama
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Buddha, the founder of the religion bearing his name, was born, and died near the boundaries of the district . From the beginning of the 6th century the country was the scene of a continuous struggle between the Bhars and their
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Aryan antagonists, the Rathors . About 900 the Domhatars or military Brahmans appeared, and expelled the Rathors from the
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town of Gorakhpur, but they also were soon driven back by other invaders . During the 15th and 16th centuries, after the district had been desolated by incessant war, the descendants of the various conquerors held parts of the territory, and each seems to have lived quite isolated, as no bridges or roads attest any intercourse with each other . Towards the end of the 16th century Mussulmans occupied Gorakhpur town, but they interfered very little with the district, and allowed it to be controlled by the native rajas . In the
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middle of the 18th century a formidable foe, the Banjaras from the west, so weakened the power of the rajas that they could not resist the fiscal exactions of the Oudh officials, who plundered the country to a great extent .

The district formed

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part of the territory ceded by Oudh to the British under the treaty of 18o1 . During the Mutiny it was lost for a short time, but under the friendly Gurkhas the rebels were driven out . The population in Igor was 2,957,074, showing a decrease of 3% in the decade . The district is traversed by the main
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line and several branches of the Bengal & North-Western railway, and the Gandak, the Gogra and the Rapti are navigable .
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GORAL-GORCHAKOV under his relative
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Suvarov in the
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Turkish
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Wars, and took part as a general officer in the
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Italian and Swiss operations of 1799, and in the war against
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Napoleon in Poland in 1806—1807 (
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battle of
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Heilsberg) . PETR DMITRIEVICH (1790-1868) served under Kamenski and Kutusov in the
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campaign against
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Turkey, and afterwards against France in 1813—1814 . In 182o he suppressed an insurrection in the
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Caucasus, for which service he was raised to the rank of major-general . In 1828—1829 he fought under Wittgenstein against the
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Turks, won an
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action at Aidos, and ,signed the treaty of peace at Adrianople . In 1839 he was made governor of Eastern
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Siberia, and in 1851 retired into private
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life . When the
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Crimean War broke out he offered his services to the emperor Nicholas, by whom he was appointed general of the VI. army corps in the Crimea . He commanded the corps in the battles of
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Alma and Inkerman . He retired in 1855 and died at Moscow, on the 18th of March 1868 .

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