Online Encyclopedia

JESSORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 337 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JESSORE  , a

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town and
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district of
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British India, in the
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Presidency division of Bengal . The town is on the Bhairab
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river . The DISTRICT OF JESSORE has an
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area of 2925 sq. m . Pop . (1901), 1,813,155, showing a decrease of 4% in the decade . The district forms the central portion of the delta between the Huglf and the
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united Ganges and
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Brahmaputra . It is a vast alluvial plain intersected by rivers and watercourses, which in the
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southern portion spread out into large marshes . The
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northern
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part is verdant, with extensive groves of date-palms; villages are numerous and large; and the
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people are prosperous . In the central portion the population is sparse, the only part suitable for dwellings being the high
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land on the banks of rivers . The
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principal rivers are the Madhumati or Haringhata (which forms the eastern boundary of the district), with its tributaries the Nabaganga, Chitra, and Bhairab; the Kumar, Kabadak, Katki, Harihar, Bhadra and Atharabanka . Within the last century the rivers in the interior of Jessore have ceased to be true deltaic rivers; and, whereas the northern portion of the district formerly
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lay under
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water for several months every
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year, it is now reached only by unusual inundations . The tide reaches as far north as the latitude of Jessore town .

Jessore is the centre of

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sugar manufacture from date palms . The exports are sugar, rice,
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pulse,
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timber, honey, shells, &c.; the imports are salt,
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English goods, and
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cloth . The district is crossed by the Eastern Bengal railway, but the chief means of communication are waterways . British administration was completely established in the district in 1781, when the governor-general ordered the opening of a court at Murali near Jessore . Before that, however, the fiscal administration had been in the hands of the English, having been transferred to the East India
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company with that of the rest of Bengal in 1765 . The changes in jurisdiction in Jessore have been very numerous . After many transfers and rectifications, the district was in 1363 finally constituted as it at
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present stands . The rajas of Jessore or Chanchra trace their origin to Bhabeswar Rai, a soldier in the army of Khan-i-Azam, an imperial general, who deprived
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Raja Pratapaditya, the popular hero of'the Sundarbans, of several fiscal divisions, and conferred them on Bhabeswar . But Manohar Rai (1649–1705) is regarded as the principal founder of the
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family . The estate when he inherited it was of moderate
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size, but he acquired one pargana after another, until, at his
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death, the
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property-was by far the largest in the neighbour-hood .

End of Article: JESSORE
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SIR GEORGE JESSEL (1824-1883)
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Additional information and Comments

Seventh line from end of main comment: the date cannot be 1693. I don't know what the date was, but it must be after 1756.
Seventh line from end of text. The date cannot be 1363. Perhaps 1963? The date must be after 1756.
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