Online Encyclopedia

GUJARAT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 709 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GUJARAT  or GUZERAT, a region of

India, in the Bombay
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Presidency . In the widest sense of the name it includes the whole of the country where the
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Gujarati language is spoken, i.e. the
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northern districts and states of the Presidency from
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Palanpur to
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Damaun, with Kathiawar and Cutch . But it is more properly confined to the country north of the Nerbudda and east of the Rann of Cutch and Kathiawar . In this sense it has an
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area of 29,071 sq. m., with a population in 1901 of 4,798,504 . It includes the states distributed among the agencies of Palanpur,
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Mahi Kantha,
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Rewa Kantha and Cambay, with most of
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Baroda and the
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British districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Panch Mahals and Broach . Less than one-
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fourth is British territory . The region takes its name from the Gujars, a tribe who passed into India from the north-west, established a
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kingdom in
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Rajputana, and spread south in A.D . 400–600 . The ancient
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Hindu capital was Anhilvada; the
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Mahommedan dynasty, which ruled from 1396 to 1572, founded Ahmedabad, which is still the largest city; but Gujarat owed much of its
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historical importance to the seaports of Broach, Cambay and
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Surat . Its fertile plain, with a
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regular rainfall and numerous rivers, has caused it to be styled the " garden of India." It suffered, however, severely from the famine of 1899–1901 . For an account of the
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history, geography, &c., of Gujarat see the articles on the various states and districts . Gujarat gives its name to the vernacular of northern Bombay, viz .

Gujarati, one of the three

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great
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languages of that Presidency, spoken by more than 9 millions . It has an ancient literature and a
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peculiar character . As the language of the Parsis it is prominent in the Bombay press; and it is also the commercial language of Bombay city, which lies outside the territorial area of Gujarat . See J . Campbell, History of Gujarat (Bombay, 1896) ;
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Sir E . C . Bayley, The Muhammedan Kingdom of Gujarat (1886); A . K . Forbes,
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Ras Melia (1856) .

End of Article: GUJARAT
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FRANCOIS PIERRE GUILLAUME GUIZOT (1787-1874)
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