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HOSHIARPUR , a See also: town of See also: British See also: India, in the See also: Jullundur division of the See also: Punjab
.
Pop
.
(1901), 17,549
.
It was founded, according to tradition, about the early See also: part of the 14th century
.
In 1809 it was occupied by Ranjit Singh
.
The maharaja and his successors maintained a considerable cantonment 1 m
.
S.E. of the town, and the British See also: government kept it up for several years after the annexation of the Punjab in 1849
.
There are manufactures of See also: cotton goods, inlaid woodwork, lacquered See also: ware, shoes and copper vessels
.
The See also: DISTRICT OF HOSHIARPUR comprises an See also: area of 2244 sq. m.; pop
.
(1901) 989,782, showing a decrease of 2% in the See also: decade, compared with an increase of 12% during the previous decade
.
It falls into two nearly equal portions of See also: hill and plain country
.
Its eastern face consists of the westward slope of the Solar Singhi Hills; parallel with that
See also: ridge, a See also: line of See also: lower heights belonging to the Siwalik range traverses the district from See also: south to See also: north, while between the . two chains stretches a valley of uneven width, known as the Jaswan Dun
.
Its upper portion is crossed by the Sohan torrent, while the See also: Sutlej sweeps into its lower end through a break in the hills, and flows in a southerly direction till it turns the flank of the central range, and debouches westwards upon the plains
.
This western plain consists of alluvial formation, with a general See also: westerly slope owing to the deposit of silt from the See also: mountain torrents in the sub-montane See also: tract
.
The See also: Beas has a fringe of See also: lowland, open to moderate but not excessive inundations, and considered very fertile
.
A considerable area is covered by government woodlands, under the care of the See also: forest department
.
See also: Rice is largely grown, in the marshy flats along the See also: banks of the Beas
.
Several religious fairs are held, at Anandpur, Mukerian and Chintpurni, all of which attract an enormous concourse of See also: people
.
The district, owing to its proximity to the hills, possesses a comparatively cool and humid See also: climate
.
Cotton fabrics are manufactured, and See also: sugar, rice and other grains, See also: tobacco and indigo are among the exports
.
The country around Hoshiarpur formed part of the old See also: Hindu See also: frame-See also: work knitting
.
For this reason it is largely used in the See also: shawl, See also: kingdom of Katoch in Jullundur
.
The See also: state was eventually
broken up, and the See also: present district was divided between the rajas of Ditarpur and Jaswan
.
They retained undisturbed possession of their territories until 1759, when the rising See also: Sikh chieftains commenced a series of encroachments upon the hill tracts
.
In 1815 the aggressive maharaja, Ranjit Singh, forced the ruler of Jaswan to resign his territories in See also: exchange for an estate on feudal tenure; three years later the See also: raja of Ditarpur met with similar treatment
.
By the close of the See also: year 1818 the whole country from the Sutlej to the Beas had come under the government of See also: Lahore, and after the first Sikh war in 1846 passed to the British government
.
The deposed rajas of Ditarpur and Jaswan received See also: cash See also: pensions from the new rulers, but expressed bitter disappointment at not being restored to their former See also: sovereign position
.
Accordingly the outbreak of the second Sikh war, in 1848 found the disaffected chieftains ready for See also: rebellion
.
They organized a revolt, but the two rajas and the other ringleaders were captured, and their estates confiscated
.
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