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See also: town and See also: district of See also: British See also: India, in the See also: Orissa division of See also: Bengal
.
The town is on the See also: sea-See also: coast, and has a railway station
.
Pop
.
(1901), 49,334, including an exceptional number of pilgrims
.
As containing the See also: world-famous shrine of Jagannath (see See also: JUGGERNAUT), See also: Puri is perhaps the most frequented of all See also: Hindu places of pilgrimage
.
Sanitation is effected by the Puri Lodging-See also: House See also: Act, which provides for the See also: appointment of a See also: special See also: health officer, and for the licensing of lodging-houses both in the town and along the pilgrims' route
.
The DISTRICT OF' PURI has an See also: area of 2499 sq. m
.
The population in 1901 was 1,017,284, showing an increase of 7.6% in the See also: decade
.
For the most See also: part the country is flat, the only mountains being a low range which, rising in the west, runs See also: south-See also: east in an irregular See also: line towards the Chilka lake and forms a See also: water-parting between the district and the valley of the Mahanadi
.
The See also: middle and eastern divisions of the district, forming the south-western part of the Mahanadi See also: delta, consist entirely of alluvial plains, watered by a network of channels through which the most southerly branch of that See also: river, the Koyakhai, finds its way into the sea
.
The other See also: rivers are the Bhargavi, the Daya and the Nun, all of which flow into the Chilka lake and are navigable by large boats during the See also: rainy season, when the See also: waters come down in tremendous floods, bursting the See also: banks and carrying everything before them
.
The Chilka lake is one of the largest in India; its length is 44 m., and its breadth in some parts 20 m
.
It is separated from the sea only by a narrow See also: strip of See also: sand
.
The lake is saline and everywhere very shallow, its mean See also: depth ranging from 3 to 5 ft
.
Puri district is See also: rich in See also: historical remains, from the See also: primitive See also: rock-hewn caves of Buddhism—the earliest See also: relics of See also: Indian architecture—to the See also: medieval See also: sun See also: temple at Kanarak and the shrine of Jagannath
.
The See also: annual rainfall averages 58 in
.
Puri first came under British administration in 1803
.
The only See also: political events in its See also: history since that date have been the See also: rebellion of the maharaja of Khurda in 1804 and the rising of the paiks or peasant militia in 1817-18
.
In the Orissa See also: famine of 1866 more than one-third of the population of Puri is said to have perished
.
The district suffered from drought in 1897
.
It is served by the East Coast railway, which was openedthroughout from See also: Calcutta to See also: Madras in 1851, with a branch to Puri town
.
See Puri District Gazetteer (Calcutta, 1908)
.
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