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SAMBALPUR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 113 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SAMBALPUR  , a

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town and
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district of
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British India, in the
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Orissa division of Bengal . The town is on the
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left
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bank of the
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river Mahanadi, 495 ft. above sea-level, the
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terminus of a branch of the Bengal-
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Nagpur railway . Pop . (Igor) 12,870 . It contains a ruined fort with old temples . The garrison of native
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infantry was withdrawn in 1902 . There is considerable trade, and hand-
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weaving of tussore
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silk and cotton
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cloth are carried on . The DISTRICT of SAMBALPUR has an
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area of 3773 sq. m . The Mahanadi, which is the only important river, divides it into unequal parts . The greater portion is an undulating plain, with ranges of rugged hills
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running in every direction, the largest of which is the Bara Pahar, covering an area of 350 sq. m., and attaining at Debrigarh a height of 2267 ft. above the plain . The Mahanadi affords means of
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water communication for 90 m.; its
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principal tributaries in Sambalpur are the Ib, Kelo and Jhira . To the W. of the Mahanadi the district is well cultivated .

The

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soil is generally
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light and sandy . It is occupied for the greater
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part by crystalline metamorphic rocks; but part of the N.W. corner is composed of
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sandstone,
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limestone and shale . Gold dust and diamonds have been found near Hirakhuda or
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Diamond Island, at the junction of the Ib and Mahanadi . The
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climate of Sambalpur is considered very unhealthy; the
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annual rainfall averages 59 in . The population in Igor was 640,243, showing an increase of 3.2% in the decade . The registered
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death-
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rate for 1897 was only 30 per thousand, as against 68 for the province generally . This figure shows that Sambalpur entirely escaped the famine of 1896-1397, which indeed can be said to have brought prosperity to the district by causing high prices for a good rice crop, rice being the
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staple of cultivation . It was almost equally fortunate in 1900 . The main
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line of the Bengal-Nagpur railway runs along the N. border of the district, with a branch S. to Sambalpur town . Sambalpur lapsed to the British -in 1849, and was attached to Bengal until 1862, when it was transferred to the Central Provinces . The early revenue administration was not successful . On the outbreak of the Mutiny in 1857 a general rising of the chiefs took place, and it was not until the final arrest of Surandra Sa, in 1864, that tranquillity was restored .

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October I9o5 Sambalpur was transferred back again to Bengal, without the subdivisions of Phuljhar and Chandarpur-Padampur . See Sambalpur District Gazetteer (
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Calcutta, 1909) .

End of Article: SAMBALPUR
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