Online Encyclopedia

MALDA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 485 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MALDA  , a

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district of
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British India, in the
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Rajshahi division of Eastern Bengal and
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Assam .
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Area, 1899 sq. m.; pop . (1901), 884,030, showing an increase of 8.5 in the decade . The administrative headquarters are at
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English Bazar (pop . 13,667) near the
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town of Old Malda . The district is divided into two almost equal parts by the Mahananda
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river, flowing from north to south . The western tract between the Mahananda and the main stream of the Ganges is an alluvial plain of sandy
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soil and
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great fertility . The eastern
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half is an elevated region broken by the deep valleys of the Tangan and Purnabhaba rivers and their small tributary streams . The soil here is a hard red clay; and the whole is overgrown with thorny tree jungle known as the katal . Agri-cultural prosperity centres on the Mahananda, where
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mango orchards and high raised plots of mulberry
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land extend continuously along both banks of the river . The Ganges nowhere intersects the district, but skirts it from its north-western corner to the extreme south . The Mahananda flows in a deep well-defined channel through the centre, and joins the Ganges at the
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southern corner .

Its tributaries are the Kalindri on the right, and the Tangan and Purnabhaba on the

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left
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bank . The two
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principal
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industries are the production of indigo and
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silk . The first has declined, and so has the second as far as concerns the
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weaving of piece goods, but the rearing of silkworms and the export of raw silk and silk thread are carried on upon a large scale . No railway touches the district, but the communications by
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water are good . Malda supplied two great capitals to the early
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Mahommedan kings of Bengal; and the sites of Gaur and
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Pandua exhibit the most interesting remains to be found in the
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lower valley of the Ganges . (See GAUR.) The connexion of the East India
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Company with Malda
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dates from a very early period . As far back as 1676 there was a factory there . In 1770 English Bazar was fixed upon for a commercial residency, the buildings of which at the
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present day form both the public offices and private residence of the
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collector .

End of Article: MALDA
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