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RANGOON , the capital ofSee also: Burma, situated on the See also: left See also: bank of the Hlaing or Rangoon See also: river, 21 M. from the See also: sea, in 16° 47' N. and 96° 13' E
.
In 188o the city was detached from the See also: main See also: district, called See also: Hanthawaddy, and formed into a See also: separate district, with an See also: area of 19 sq. m
.
Pop
.
(1901) 234,881, of whom just See also: half were immigrants from See also: India
.
Rangoon, from being a comparatively insignificant place, has within less than half a century risen to be the third seaport in See also: British India, being surpassed only by See also: Calcutta and Bombay in thevolume of its See also: trade
.
During the busy season of See also: rice-export, which lasts from the end of See also: December to the See also: middle of May, the See also: pool forming the See also: port of Rangoon presents almost as crowded a scene as the See also: Hugli at Calcutta
.
Rangoon has the See also: double See also: advantage of being situated near the sea and being served by a See also: great river navigable for 900 M. behind it
.
The approach to the port is not difficult at any season of the See also: year
.
With flat and shelving shores, the shoal-See also: banks off the main mouths of the See also: delta See also: form the chief danger to See also: shipping, and this is guarded against by a See also: good service of lighthouses and lightships
.
For a length of seven or eight See also: miles the river is from a mile to a mile and a quarter in breadth, so that there is plenty of accommodation for shipping
.
Here is concentrated the whole of the See also: rich trade of the delta of the See also: Irrawaddy
.
Great See also: part of the river front-age is occupied with rice-mills, See also: teak wharves and similar buildings
.
The rice exported from Rangoon in 1904–5 amounted to 28 million cwt. with a value of nearly 7 million sterling . The city is dominated by the greatSee also: golden See also: pile of the Shwe Dag8n pagoda, the centre of Burmese religious See also: life
.
Rising to a height of 368 ft., this magnificent See also: building is loftier than St See also: Paul's See also: Cathedral in See also: London, and its See also: size is greatly enhanced by the fact that it stands on an See also: eminence that is itself 168 ft. above the level of the city
.
It is covered with pure gold from See also: base to See also: summit, and once in every generation this gold is renewed by public subscription
.
Moreover, benefactions to this pagoda are one of the favourite methods of acquiring religious merit among the Burmese
.
The pagoda itself has no interior
.
It is a solid stupa of brick, in the form of a See also: cone, raised over a relic chamber; and the place of worship is the surrounding platform with a perimeter of nearly 1400 ft
.
Though traditionally a site of great sanctity, Rangoon owes its first importance to its rebuilding in 1753 by See also: Alompra, the founder of the Burmese See also: monarchy, who gave it the See also: present name of Yan Kan, " the end of the war." An See also: English factory was opened here about 1790
.
On the outbreak of the first Burmese War, in 1824, it was taken by the British, but subsequently restored
.
It was captured a second See also: time in 1852, and passed along with the province of See also: Pegu into the hands of the British
.
It was destroyed by fire in 185o, and serious conflagrations occurred again in 1853 and 1855
.
Since the last devastation Rangoon has undergone considerable improvements
.
Until 1874, when the existing See also: municipality was constituted, the administration was in the hands of the See also: local See also: government, which devoted itself to raising the centre of the See also: town above the river level, providing See also: land See also: fit for building purposes from the See also: original swamp, which was flooded at spring-tides, and making roads, See also: bridges, culverts and See also: surface drains
.
In 1892 was introduced the sewage See also: system, which now includes 6 m. of mains, 22 M. of gravitating sewers, 44 M. of air mains and 44 Shone's ejectors
.
The See also: water supply, See also: drawn from the See also: Victoria Lake, 5 M. distant, has recently been supplemented by an additional See also: reservoir, 10 m. farther off
.
The city proper of Rangoon with the Kemmendine suburb is laid out on the See also: block system, each block being 800 by 86o ft., intersected with See also: regular streets
.
In the extensions to the See also: east and west it has been decided to have no streets less than 5o ft. wide
.
The roads are still lighted by kerosene oil lamps, but electric See also: lighting is in comtemplation
.
Electric tramways run to Pazundaung in one direction and to A18n and Kemmendine in the other, as well as to the See also: foot of the Shwe See also: Dagon Pagoda See also: hill
.
Latterly the erection of
See also: masonry buildings, instead of See also: plank houses, has been insisted on in the central portion of the city, with the result that fires have decreased in number
.
There are two large maidans, or See also: commons, which are used as military parade grounds and for racing, as well as for golf links and other purposes of amusement
.
There is a garden round the Phayre Museum, managed by the Agri-Horticultural Society, and an extremely See also: pretty and well-kept garden in the cantonments under the pagoda
.
Beyond these lie the Royal Lake and Dalhousie See also: Park, with 16o acres of water and 205 acres of well-laid-out and well-timbered park land
.
Dalhousie Park has recently been greatly extended, and the new Victoria Park, declared open on the
occasion of the visit of the See also: prince of See also: Wales in r906, is quite the finest in the East
.
There are two cathedrals, See also: Church of
See also: England and See also: Roman Catholic, and a Presbyterian church, besides the cantonment church buildings for worship
.
Religious buildings and lands, indeed, occupy an area in Rangoon out of all proportion to its size
.
Buddhists, See also: Hindus, Mussulmans, See also: Parsees, Armenians and Jews all own lands and pagodas, temples, mosques, churches and synagogues
.
The Buddhist monasteries, in particular, occupy wide spaces in very central portions of the town and cantonments
.
See also: Burial-grounds are equally extensive, and exist in every direction ir. what were once the outskirts, but are now fast becoming central parts of the city
.
The chief educational institutions are the Government Rangoon See also: college, the Baptist college and St See also: John's college (S.P.G.)
.
Besides the general hospital, a
See also: female hospital in connexion with the Dufferin Fund has recently been built, and there are hospitals for contagious diseases and for lepers in the suburbs
.
The See also: staple See also: industries are mills for husking rice and for sawing See also: timber, and petroleum refineries
.
See also: Carving in See also: wood and ivory, and embossed silverwork are also carried on
.
There are three municipal and eight private markets, which are being improved and extended
.
Everything, from sacking to jewelry, is sold in them
.
The introduction of pure water and the establishment of compulsory See also: vaccination have greatly improved the See also: health of Rangoon
.
But the See also: death-See also: rate is still high, due partly to the swampy nature of the outskirts of the city proper, and still more to the mortality among See also: Hindu immigrants from the See also: Madras See also: presidency
.
The See also: total rainfall in 1905 was 1o4.96 in
.
Rangoon is the See also: head-quarters of a brigade in the Burma command of the See also: Southern army
.
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