Online Encyclopedia

RANGPUR, or RUNGPORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 892 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

RANGPUR, or RUNGPORE  , a
See also:
town and
See also:
district of
See also:
British India, in the
See also:
Rajshahi division of Eastern Bengal and
See also:
Assam . The town is situated on the little
See also:
river Ghaghat . Pop . (19or) 15,96o . There are a high school, a normal school and an
See also:
industrial school . The
See also:
earthquake of the 12th of
See also:
June 1897 destroyed many of the public buildings and diverted the drainage channels . The DISTRICT OF RANGPUR, with an
See also:
area of 3493 sq. m., is one vast plain . The greater
See also:
part of it, particularly towards the east, is inundated during the rains, and the remainder is traversed by a network of streams which frequently break through their sandy banks and plough for themselves new channels over the fields . The river
See also:
system is constituted by the
See also:
Brahmaputra and its tributaries, chief of which are the
See also:
Tista, Dharla, Sankos and Dudhkumar . The
See also:
climate is generally malarious, owing to the numerous stagnant swamps and marshes filled with decaying
See also:
vegetable
See also:
matter . The
See also:
annual rainfall averages 82 in . About three-fourths of the district is under continuous cultivation .

Spare

See also:
land can hardly be said to exist—even the patches of waste land yield a valuable tribute of reeds and
See also:
cane . The
See also:
staple crops are rice, oil-seeds, jute and
See also:
tobacco . In tool the population was 2,154,181, showing an increase of 4.3% in the decade . Nearly two-thirds are Mahommedans . The Eastern Bengal railway has two branches, one of which crosses the district to the Brahmaputra, and the other runs north towards Assam . The tract comprised within the district of Rangpur was formerly the western outpost of the ancient
See also:
Hindu
See also:
kingdom of
See also:
Kamrup, which appears to have attained its greatest power and prosperity under
See also:
Raja Nilambar, who was treacherously over-thrown by
See also:
Ala-uddin Hosain of Bengal at the close of the 15th century . Rangpur passed to the East India
See also:
Company in 1765 under the firman of the emperor Shah Alam . Since then a
See also:
great number of changes have taken place in the jurisdiction, in
See also:
con-sequence of which the district area has been much diminished .

End of Article: RANGPUR, or RUNGPORE
[back]
RANGOON
[next]
MAHARAJA RANJIT SINGH (178o-1839)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.