Online Encyclopedia

MANDLA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 565 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MANDLA  , a

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town and
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district of
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British India, in the Jubbulpore division of the Central Provinces . The town is on the
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river Nerbudda, 1787 ft. above the sea . It has a manufacture of bell-metal vessels . Pop . (Igor), 5054 . The district of Mandla, among the
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Satpura hills, has an
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area of 5054 sq. m . It consists of a wild highland region, broken up by the valleys of numerous rivers and streams . The Nerbudda flows through the centre of the district, receiving several tributaries which take their rise in the Maikal hills, a range densely clothed with sal
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forest, and forming
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part of the
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great
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watershed between eastern and western India . The loftiest mountain is Chauradadar, about 3400 ft. high . Tigers abound, and the proportion of deaths caused by wild animals is greater than in any other district of the Central Provinces . The magnificent sal forests which formerly clothed the highlands have suffered greatly from the nomadic
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system of cultivation practised by the hill tribes, who burned the wood and sowed their crops in the ashes; but
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measures have been taken to prevent further damage . The population in 1901 was 318,400, showing a decrease of 6.5% in the decade, due to famine .

The aboriginal or hill tribes are more numerous in Mandla than in any other district of the Central Provinces, particularly the Gonds . The

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principal crops are rice, wheat, other food grains,
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pulse and oil-seeds . There is a little manufacture of country
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cloth . A branch of the Bengal-
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Nagpur railway touches the south-western border of the district . Mandla suffered most severely from the famine of 1896–1897, partly owing to its inaccessibility, and partly from the shy habits of the aboriginal tribes . The registered
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death-
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rate in 1907 was as high as 96 per thousand .

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