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KHASI AND JAINTIA HILLS

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 774 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KHASI AND JAINTIA HILLS  , a

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district of
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British India, in the Hills division of Eastern Bengal and
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Assam . It occupies the central plateau between the valleys of the
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Brahmaputra and the Surma .
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Area, 6027 sq. m.; pop . (1901), 202,250, showing an increase of 2 % in the decade . The district consists of a succession of steep ridges
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running east and west, with elevated table-lands between . On the
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southern side, towards
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Sylhet, the mountains rise precipitously from the valley of the Barak or Surma . The first plateau is about 4000 ft. above sea-level . Farther north is another plateau, on which is situated the station of
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Shillong, 4900 ft. above the sea; behind lies the Shillong range, of which the highest
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peak rises to 6450 ft . On the north side, towards
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Kamrup, are two similar plateaus of
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lower
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elevation . The ',The
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village of Halfaya, a place of some importance before the foundation of
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Khartum, is 4 m. to the N., on the eastern
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bank of the Nile . From the 15th century up to 1821 it was the capital of a small state, tributary to
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Sennar, regarded as a continuation of the Christian
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kingdom of Aloa (see
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DONGOLA) .. general appearance of all these table-lands is that of undulating
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downs, covered with grass, but destitute of large
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timber .

At 3000 ft. elevation the indigenous

pine predominates over all other vegetation, and forms almost pure pine forests . The highest ridges are clothed with magnificent clumps of timber trees, which superstition has preserved from the axe of the wood-cutter . The characteristic trees in these sacred groves chiefly consist of oaks, chestnuts, magnolias, &c . Beneath the shade grow rare
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orchids, rhododendrons and wild
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cinnamon . The streams are merely mountain torrents; many of them pass through narrow gorges of wild beauty . From time immemorial, Lower Bengal has
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drawn its supply of lime from the Khasi Hills, and the quarries along their southern slope are inexhaustible .
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Coal of
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fair quality crops out at several places, and there are a few small coal-mines . The Khasi Hills were conquered by the British in 1833 . They are inhabited by a tribe of the same name, who still live in
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primitive communities under elective chiefs in
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political subordination to the British government . There are 25 of these chiefs called Sierras, who exercise
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independent jurisdiction and pay no tribute . According to the census of 1901 the Khasis numbered 107,500 . They are a
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peculiar
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race, speaking a language that belongs to the Mon-Anam
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family, following the
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rule of matriarchal succession, and erecting monolithic monuments over their dead .

The Jaintia Hills used to

form a petty
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Hindu principality which was annexed in 1835 . The inhabitants, called Syntengs, a cognate tribe to the Khasis, were subjected to a moderate income tax, an innovation against which they rebelled in 186o and 1862 . The revolt was stamped out by the Khasi and Jaintia Expedition of 1862-63 . The headquarters of the district were transferred in 1864 from
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Cherrapunji to Shillong, which was afterwards made the capital of the province of Assam . A good cart-road runs north from Cherrapunji through Shillong to
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Gauhati on the Brahmaputra;
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total length, 97 M . The district was the focus of the
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great
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earthquake of the 12th of
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June 1897, which not only destroyed every permanent
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building, but broke up the roads and caused many landslips . Tile loss of
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life was put at only 916, but hundreds died subsequently of a malignant fever . In 1901 the district had 17,321 Christians, chiefly converts of the Welsh Calvinistic
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Mission . See District Gazetteer (1906) ; Major P . R . T . Guidon, The Khasis (1907) .

End of Article: KHASI AND JAINTIA HILLS
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