Online Encyclopedia

KUCH BEHAR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 937 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KUCH

BEHAR  , or Coocx BEHAR, a native state of India, in Bengal, consisting of a submontane tract, not far from
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Darjeeling, entirely surrounded by
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British territory .
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Area, 1307 sq. m . Pop . (Igor), 566,974; estimated revenue, £140,000 . The state forms a level plain of triangular shape, intersected by numerous rivers . The greater portion is fertile and well cultivated, but tracts of jungle are to be seen in the north-east corner, which abuts upon
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Assam . The
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soil is
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uniform in character throughout, consisting of a
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light, friable loam, varying in
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depth from 6 in. to 3 ft., superimposed upon a deep bed of sand . The whole is detritus, washed down by torrents from the neighbouring Himalayas . The rivers all pass through the state from north to south, to join the main stream of the
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Brahmaputra . Some
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half-dozen are navigable for small trading boats throughout the
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year, and are nowhere fordable; and there are about twenty minor streams which become navigable only during the rainy season . The streams have a tendency to cut new channels for themselves after every
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annual flood, and they communicate with one another by
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cross-country watercourses . Rice is grown on three-fourths of the cultivated area .

Jute and

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tobacco are also largely grown for export . The only
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special
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industries are the
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weaving of a strong
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silk obtained from
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worms fed on the
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castor-oil plant, and of a coarse jute
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cloth used for screens and bedding . The
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external trade is chiefly in the hands of Marwari immigrants from
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Rajputana . Among other improvements a railway has been constructed, with the assistance of a loan from the British government . The
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earthquake of the 12th of
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June 1897 caused damage to public buildings, roads, &c., in the state to the estimated amount of £roo,000 . The Koch or Rajbansi, from which the name of the state is derived, are a widely spread tribe, evidently of aboriginal descent, found throughout all
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northern Bengal, from
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Purnea
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district to the Assam valley . They are akin to the Indo-Chinese races of the north-east frontier; but they have now become largely hinduized, especially in their own home, where the appellation " Koch " has come to be used as a
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term of reproach . Their
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total number in all India was returned in 1901 as nearly 22 millions . As in the case of many other small native states, the royal
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family of Kuch Behar
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lays claim to a divine origin in order to conceal an impure aboriginal descent . The greatest monarch of the dynasty was Nar Narayan, the son of Visu Singh, who began to reign about 1550 . He conquered the whole of
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Kamrup, built temples in Assam, of which ruins still exist bearing inscriptions with his name, and extended his power southwards over what is now
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part of the British districts of Rangpur and Purnea . His son, Lakshmi Narayan, who succeeded him in Kuch Behar, became tributary to the Mogul
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Empire .

In 1772 a competitor for the

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throne, having been driven out of the country by his rivals, applied for assistance to Warren Hastings . A detachment of sepoys was accordingly marched into the state; the Bhutias, whose interference had led to this intervention, wereexpelled, and forced to sue for peace through the mediation of the lama of Tibet . By the treaty made on this occasion,
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April 1773, the
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raja acknowledged subjection to the
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Company, and made over to it one-half of his annual revenues . In 1863, on the
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death of the raja, leaving a son and heir only ten months old, a British
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commissioner was appointed to undertake the
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direct management of affairs during the minority of the prince, and many important reforms were successfully introduced . The maharaja
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Sir Nripendra Narayan, G.C.I.E., born in 1862, was educated under British guardianship at
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Patna and
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Calcutta, and became hon.
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lieutenant-colonel of the 6th Bengal Cavalry . In 1897—98 he served in the
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Tirah
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campaign on the staff of General Yeatman-Biggs, and received the distinction of a C.B . He was
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present at the Jubilee in 1887, the
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Diamond Jubilee of 1897, and King
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Edward's Coronation in 1902, and became a well-known figure in
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London society . In 1878 he married a daughter of Keshub Chunder Sen, the Brahma leader . His eldest son ,was educated in England . The
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town of Kuch Behar is situated on the
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river Tursa, and has a railway station . Pop . (Igor), 10,458 .

It contains a

college affiliated to the Calcutta University .

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