Online Encyclopedia

SAUGOR, or SAGAR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 235 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SAUGOR, or
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SAGAR
  , 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, in a picturesque situation on a spur of the Vindhyan hills, 1758 ft. above sea-level, has a station on the
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Indian
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Mid-
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land railway . Pop . (1901) 42,330 . It has long ceased to be a growing place, though it it still third in importance in the province . It was founded in 166o, but owes its importance to having been made the capital of the Mahratta governor who established himself here in 1735 . The cantonments contain a battery of artillery, a detachment of a
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European regiment, a native cavalry and a native
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infantry regiment . The town is handsomely built, and is an emporium of trade . The DISTRICT OF SAUGOR has an
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area of 3962 sq. m . It is an extensive, elevated and in parts tolerably level plain, broken in places by low hills of the Vindhyan
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sandstone . It is traversed by numerous streams, chief of which are the Sunar,
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Beas, Dhasan and Bina, all flowing in a northerly direction towards the valley of the Ganges . In the
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southern and central parts the
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soil is black, formed by decaying trap; to the north and east it is a reddish-brown
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alluvium .

Iron ore of excellent quality is found and worked at Hirapur, a small
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village in the extreme north-east . The district contains several densely wooded tracts, the largest of which is the Ramna
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teak
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forest preserve in the north . The population in 1901 was 469,479, showing a decrease of 20% in the decade, due to the results of famine . The
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principal crops are wheat, millet,
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pulse, oil-seeds and a little cotton . The main
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line of the Indian Midland railway crosses the district, with a branch from Bina to Katni on the East Indian
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system . By a treaty concluded with the Mahratta Peshwa in 1818, the greater
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part of the
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present district was made over to the British ; and the town 'became the capital of the Saugor and Nerbudda Territories, then attached to the North-western Provinces . During the Mutiny of 1857 the whole district was in the possession of the rebels, excepting the town and fort, in which the Europeans were shut up for eight months, till relieved by
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Sir
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Hugh Rose . The rebels were totally defeated and order was again restored by March 1858 . See the Saugor District Gazetteer (
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Allahabad, 1907) .

End of Article: SAUGOR, or SAGAR
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