Online Encyclopedia

EAST KHANDESH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 771 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EAST
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KHANDESH
  and WEST, two districts of
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British India, in the central division of Bombay . They were formed in 1906 by the division of the old single
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district of Khandesh . Their areas are respectively 4544 sq. m. and 5497 sq. m., and the population on these areas in 1901 was 957,728 and 469,654 . The headquarters of East Khandesh are at Jalgaon, and those of West Khandesh at
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Dhulia . The
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principal natural feature is the
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Tapti
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river, which flows through both districts from east to west and divides each into two unequal parts . Of these the larger lie towards the south, and are drained by the rivers Girna, Bori and Panjhra . Northwards beyond the alluvial plain, which contains some of the richest tracts in Khandesh, the
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land rises towards the
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Satpura hills . In the centre and east the country is level, save for some low ranges of barren hills, and has in general an arid, unfertile appearance . Towards the north and west, the plain rises into a difficult and rugged country, thickly wooded, and inhabited by wild tribes of Bhils, who chiefly support themselves on the fruits of the forests and by wood-cutting . The drainage of the district centres in the Tapti, which receives thirteen principal tributaries in its course through Khandesh . None of the rivers is navigable, and the Tapti flows in too deep a bed to be useful for irrigation . The district on the whole, however, is fairly well supplied with
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surface
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water .

Khandesh is not

rich in minerals . A large
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area is under
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forest; but the jungles have been denuded of most of their valuable
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timber . Wild beasts are numerous . In 1901 the population of the old single district was 1,427,382, showing an increase of less than 1% in the decade . Of the aboriginal tribes the Bhils are the most important . They number 167,000, and formerly were a wild and lawless robber tribe . Since the introduction of British
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rule, the efforts made by kindly treatment, and by the offer of suitable employment, to win the Bhils from their disorderly
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life have been most successful . Many of them are now employed in police duties and as
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village watchmen . The principal crops are millets, cotton,
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pulse, wheat and oilseeds . There are many factories for ginning and pressing cotton, and a cotton-mill at Jalgaon . The eastern district is traversed by the
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Great
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Indian Peninsula railway, which branches at Bhusawal (an important centre of trade) towards Jubbulpore and
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Nagpur . Both districts are crossed by the Tapti Valley
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line from
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Surat .

Khandesh suffered somewhat from

famine in 1896-1897, and more severely in 1899-1900 .

End of Article: EAST KHANDESH
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