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HAIDARABAD HYDERABAD

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 32 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HAIDARABAD

HYDERABAD  , also known as the
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Nizam's Dominions, the
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principal native state of India in extent, population and
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political importance;
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area, 82,698 sq. m.; pop . (1901) 11,141,142, showing a decrease of 3'4% in the decade: estimated revenue 41 crores of Hyderabad rupees (£2,500,000) . The state occupies a large portion of the eastern plateau of the Deccan . It is bounded on the north and north-east by
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Berar, on the south and south-east by
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Madras, and on the west by Bombay . The country presents much variety of
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surface and feature; but it may be broadly divided into two tracts, distinguished from one another geologically and ethnically, which are locally known from the
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languages spoken as Telingana and Marathwara . In some parts it is mountainous, wooded and picturesque, in others flat and undulating . The open country includes lands of all descriptions, including many rich and fertile plains, much good
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land not yet brought under cultivation, and numerous tracts too sterile ever to be cultivated . In the north-west the
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geological formations are volcanic, consisting principally of trap, but in some parts of
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basalt; in the
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middle,
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southern and south-western parts the country is overlaid with gneissic formations . The territory is well watered, rivers being numerous, and tanks or artificial pieces of
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water abundant, especially in Telingana . The principal rivers are the
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Godavari, with its tributaries the Dudna, Manjira and Pranhita; the
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Wardha, with its tributary the Penganga; and the Kistna, with its tributary the
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Tungabhadra . The
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climate may be considered in general good; and as there are no arid
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bare deserts, hot winds are little felt . More than
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half the revenue of the state is derived from the land, and the development of the country by irrigation and
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railways has caused considerable expansion in this revenue, though the
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rate of increase in the decade 1891–1901 was retarded by a succession of unfavourable seasons .

The

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soil is generally fertile, though in some parts it consists of chilka, a red and gritty
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mould little fitted for purposes of agriculture . The principal crops are millets of various kinds, rice, wheat, oil-seeds, cotton,
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tobacco,
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sugar-
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cane, and fruits and garden produce in
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great variety .
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Silk, known as tussur, the produce of a wild
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species of
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worm, is utilized on a large scale .
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Lac, suitable for use as a resin or dye, gums and oils are found in great quantities . Hides, raw and tanned, are articles of some importance in commerce . The principal exports are cotton, oil-seeds, country-clothes and hides; the imports are salt, grain,
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timber,
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European piece-goods and hardware . The
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mineral
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wealth of the state consists of
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coal, copper, iron, diamonds and gold; but the development of these resources has not hitherto been very successful . The only coal mine now worked is the large one at Singareni, with an
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annual out-turn of nearly half a million tons . This coal has enabled the nizam's guaranteed state railway to be worked so cheaply that it now returns a handsome profit to the state . It also gives encouragement to much-needed schemes of railway extension, and to the erection of cotton presses and of spinning and
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weaving mills . The Hyderabad-Godavari railway (opened in Igor) traverses a rich cotton country, and cotton presses have been erected along the
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line . The currency of the state is based on the hali sikka, which contains approximately the same
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weight of
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silver as the
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British rupee, but its
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exchange value fell heavily after 1893, when
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free coinage ceased in the mint .

In 1904, however, a new

coin (the Mahbubia rupee) was minted; the supply was regulated, and the rate of exchange became about 115 =10o British rupees . The state suffered from famine during 1900, the
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total number of persons in receipt of
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relief rising to nearly 5oo,000 in
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June of that
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year . The nizam met the demands for relief with great liberality . The nizam of Hyderabad is the principal
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Mahommedan ruler in India . The
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family was founded by Asaf Jah, a distinguished
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Turkoman soldier of the emperor Aurangzeb, who in 1713 was appointed subandar of the Deccan, with the title of nizamul-mulk (regulator of the state), but eventually threw off the control of the
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Delhi court . Azaf Jah's
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death in 1748 was followed by an internecine struggle for the
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throne among his descendants, in which the British and the French took
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part . At one time the French nominee, Salabat Jang, established himself with the help of Bussy . But finally, in 176r, when the British had secured their predominance throughout southern India, Nizam
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Ali took his place and ruled till 1803 . It was he who confirmed the grant of the
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Northern Circars in 1766, and joined in the two
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wars against Tippoo Sultan in 1792 and 1799 . The additions of territory which he acquired by these wars was afterwards (1800) ceded to the British, as payment for the subsidiary force which he had undertaken to maintain . By a later treaty in 18J3, the districts known as Berar were " assigned " to defray the cost of the Hyderabad contingent . In 1857 when the Mutiny broke out, the attitude of Hyderabad as the premier native state and the cynosure of the Mahommedans in India became a
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matter of extreme importance; but Afzul-ud-Dowla, the
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father of the
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present ruler, and his famous minister,
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Sir Salar Jang, remained loyal to the British .

An attack on the residency was repulsed, and the Hyderabad contingent displayed their

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loyalty in the field against the rebels . In 1902 by a treaty made by Lord Curzon, Berar was leased in perpetuity to the British government, and the Hyderabad contingent was merged in the
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Indian army . The nizam Mir Mahbub Ali Khan Bahadur, Asaf Jah, a
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direct descendant of the famous nizam-ul-mulk, was born on the 18th of August 1866 . On the death of his father in 1869 he succeeded to the throne as a minor, and was invested with full powers in 1884 . He is notable as the originator of the Imperial Service Troops, which now form the contribution of the native chiefs to the defence of India . On the occasion of the Panjdeh incident in 1885 he made an offer of
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money and men, and subsequently on the occasion of Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1887 he offered 20 lakhs (130,000) annually for three years for the purpose of frontier defence . It was finally decided that the native chiefs should maintain small but well-equipped bodies of
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infantry and cavalry for imperial defence . For many years past the Hyderabad finances were in a very unhealthy condition; the
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expenditure consistently outran the revenue, and the nobles, who held their tenure under an obsolete feudalsystem, vied with each other in ostentatious extravagance . But in 1902, on the revision of the Berar agreement, the nizam received 25 lakhs (£167,000) a year for the
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rent of Berar, thus substituting a fixed for a fluctuating source of income, and a British
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financial adviser was appointed for the purpose of reorganizing the resources of the state . See S . H . Bilgrami and C .

Willmott,

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Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the Nizam's Dominions (Bombay, 1883-1884) . HYDERABAD or HAIDARABAD, capital of the above state, is situated on the right
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bank of the
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river Musi, a tributary of the Kistna, with
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Golconda to the west, and the residency and its bazaars and the British cantonment of
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Secunderabad to the north-east . It is the
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fourth largest city in India; pop . (Igor) 448,466, including suburbs and cantonment . The city itself is in shape a parallelogram, with an area of more than 2 sq. m . It was founded in 1589 by Mahommed Kuli, fifth of the Kutb Shahi kings, of whose.period several important buildings remain as monuments . The principal of these is the Char Minar or Four Minarets (1591) . The minarets rise from arches facing the cardinal points, and stand in the centre of the city, with four roads radiating from their
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base . The Ashur Khana (1594), a ceremonial
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building, the hospital, the Gosha Mahal palace and the Mecca mosque, a sombre building designed after a mosque at Mecca, surrounding a paved quadrangle 36o ft. square, were the other principal buildings of the Kutb Shahi period, though the mosque was only completed in the time of Aurangzeb . The city proper is surrounded by a stone wall with thirteen gates, completed in the time of the first nizam, who made Hyderabad his capital . The suburbs, of which the most important is Chadarghat, extend over an additional area of 9 sq. m . There are several
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fine palaces built by various nizams, and the British residency is an imposing building in a large park on the
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left bank of the Musi, N.E. of the city .

The bazaars surrounding it, and under its

jurisdiction, are extremely picturesque and are thronged with natives from all parts of India . Four bridges crossed the Musi, the most notable of which was the Furana Pul, of 23 arches, built in 1593 . On the '27th and 28th of September 1908, however, the Musi, swollen by torrential rainfall (during which 15 in. fell in 36 hours), rose in flood to a height of 12 ft. above the bridges and swept them away . The damage done was widespread; several important buildings were involved, including the palace of Salar Jang and the Victoria zenana hospital, while the beautiful grounds of the residency were destroyed . A large and densely populated part of the city was wrecked, and thousands of lives were lost . The principal educational establishments are the Nizam college (first grade),
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engineering, law, medical, normal,
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industrial and
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Sanskrit
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schools, and a number of schools for Europeans and Eurasians . Hyderabad is an important centre of general trade, and there is a cotton mill in its vicinity . The city is supplied with water from two notable
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works, the Husain
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Sagar and the Mir Alam, both large lakes retained by great dams . Secunderabad, the British military cantonment, is situated 52 M . N. of the residency; it includes Bolaram, the former headquarters of the Hyderabad contingent .

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