Online Encyclopedia

MANBHUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 542 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MANBHUM  , a

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district of
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British India, in the Chota
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Nagpur division of Bengal . The administrative headquarters are at
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Purulia .
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Area, 4147 sq. m.; pop . (19o1), 1,301,364, showing an increase of 9.1% since 1891 . Manbhum district forms the first step of a gradual descent from the table-
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land of Chota Nagpur to the delta of
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lower Bengal . In the
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northern and eastern portions the country is open, and consists of a series of
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rolling
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downs dotted here and there with isolated conical hills . In the western and
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southern tracts the country is more broken and the scenery much more picturesque . The
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principal hills are Dalma (3407 ft.), the crowning
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peak of a range of the same name; Gangabari or Gajboro (2220 ft.), the highest peak of the Baghmundi range, about 20 M. south-west of Purulia; and Panchkot or Panchet (1600 ft.), on which stands the old fort of the rajas of Panchet . The hills are covered with dense jungle . The chief
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river is the Kasai, which flows through the district from north-west to south-east into
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Midnapore, and on which a considerable floating trade in sal
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timber is carried on . The most numerous aboriginal tribe are the Sontals; but the Bhumij
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Kols are the characteristic
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race . In Manbhum they inhabit the country lying on both sides of the Subanrekha .

They are pure

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Mundas, but their compatriots to the east have dropped the title of Munda and the use of their distinctive language, have adopted
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Hindu customs, and are fast becoming
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Hindus in religion . The Bhumij Kols of the Jungle Mahalswere once the terror of the surrounding districts; they are now more peaceful . Three principal crops of rice are grown, one sown broadcast early in May on table-lands and the tops of ridges, an autumn crop, and a winter crop, the last forming the chief harvest of the district . Other crops are wheat, barley,
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Indian corn, pulses, oilseeds, linseeds, jute, hemp,
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sugar-
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cane, indigo, pan and
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tobacco . Owing to the completeness of the natural drainage, floods are unknown, but the country is liable to droughts caused by deficient rainfall . The principal articles of export are oilseeds, pulses, ghi,
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lac, indigo, tussur
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silk (manufactured near Raghunathpur), timber, resin,
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coal, and (in good seasons) rice . The chief imports are salt, piece goods, brass utensils and unwrought iron . Cotton hand-
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loom
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weaving is carried on all over the district . Manbhum contains the Jherria coalfield, in the Damodar valley, where a large number of mines have been opened since 1894, The
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United
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Free Church of Scotland has a
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mission at Pakheria, with a printing press that issues a monthly journal in Sonthali; and a German Lutheran mission has been established since 1864 . The district is traversed by the Bengal–Nagpur railway, while two branches of the East Indian railway serve the coalfield .

End of Article: MANBHUM
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