Online Encyclopedia

JULLUNDUR, or JALANDHAR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 552 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

JULLUNDUR, or JALANDHAR  , a city of
See also:
British India, giving its name to a
See also:
district and a division in the
See also:
Punjab . The city is 26o m. by
See also:
rail N.W. of
See also:
Delhi . Pop . (19o1), 67,735 . It is the headquarters of a brigade in the 3rd division of the
See also:
northern army . There are an
See also:
American Presbyterian
See also:
mission, a government normal school, and high
See also:
schools supported by
See also:
Hindu bodies . The DISTRICT OF JULLUNDUR occupies the
See also:
lower
See also:
part of the tract known as the Jullundur
See also:
Doab, between the rivers
See also:
Sutlej and
See also:
Beas, except that it is separated from the Beas by the state of
See also:
Kapurthala .
See also:
Area, 1431 sq. m . Pop . (1901), 917,58.7, showing an increase of 1% in the decade; the
See also:
average density is 641 persons per square mile, being the highest in the province . Cotton-
See also:
weaving and
See also:
sugar manufacture are the
See also:
principal
See also:
industries for export trade, and
See also:
silk goods and wheat are also exported . The district is crossed by the main
See also:
line of the North-Western railway from
See also:
Phillaur towards Amritsar .

The Jullundur Doab in

early times formed the Hindu
See also:
kingdom of Katoch, ruled by a
See also:
family of Rajputs whose descendants still exist in the petty princes of the
See also:
Kangra hills . Under
See also:
Mahommedan
See also:
rule the Doab was generally attached to the province of
See also:
Lahore, in which it is included as a
See also:
circar or governorship in the
See also:
great revenue survey of
See also:
Akbar . Its
See also:
governors seem to have held an autonomous position, subject to the payment of a fixed tribute into the imperial
See also:
treasury . The
See also:
Sikh revival extended to Jullundur at an early period, and a number of petty chieftains made themselves
See also:
independent throughout the Doab . In 1766 the
See also:
town of Jullundur fell into the hands of the Sikh confederacy of Faiz-ulla-puria, then presided over by Khushal Singh . His son and successor built a
See also:
masonry fort in the town, while several other leaders similarly fortified themselves in the suburbs . Meanwhile, Ranjit Singh was consolidating his power in the south, and in 1811 he annexed the Faiz-ulla-puria dominions . Thenceforth Jullundur became the capital of the Lahore possessions in the Doab until the British annexation at the close of the first Sikh war (1846) . The DIVISION of JULLUNDUR comprises the five districts of Kangra, Hoshiarpur, Jullundur,
See also:
Ludhiana and Ferozepore, all lying along the
See also:
river Sutlej . Area, 19,410 sq. m . Pop . (1901), 4,306,662 .

See Jullundur District Gazetteer (Lahore, 1908) .

End of Article: JULLUNDUR, or JALANDHAR
[back]
LOUIS ANTOINE JULLIEN (1812-186o)
[next]
JULY

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.