Online Encyclopedia

SULTANPUR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 70 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SULTANPUR  , a

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town and
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district of
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British India, in the Fyzabad division of the
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United Provinces . The town is on the right
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bank of the
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river Gurnti, midway between
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Benares' and
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Lucknow, on the Oudh &
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Rohilkhand railway . Pop . (1901), 9550 . The DISTRICT OF SULTANPUR has an
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area of 1713 sq. m . The
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surface is generally level, being broken only by ravines in the neighbourhood of the rivers . The central portion is highly cultivated, while in the south are widespread and plains and swampy jhils or marshes . The
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principal river is the
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Gumti, which passes through the centre of the district and affords a valuable
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highway for commerce . Minor streams are the Kandu, Pili, Tengha and Nandhia, the last two being of some importance, as their channels form the outlet for the superfluous
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water of the jhils, draining into the Sai . There' are no forests in the district, only stunted digit jungles used for'fuel . In x901 the population was 1,083,904, showing an increase of 'less than' 1% in the decade . Sultanpur is a purely agricultural district with a very dense population .

The principal crops are

rice, pulses, wheat, barley,
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sugar-
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cane and a little
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poppy . The main
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line of the Oudh & Rohilkhand railway from Lucknow to Rae Bareli and Mogul Serai serves the south-western portion . The only incident worthy of note in the
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history of the district since the British annexation of Oudh is the revolt of the native troops stationed at Sultanpur during the Mutiny . The troops rose in
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rebellion on the 9th of
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June 1857, and, after murderingtwo of their
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officers, sacked the station . Upon the restoration of order Sultanpur cantonment was strengthened by a detachment of British troops; but in 1861 it was entirely abandoned as a military station . See Sultanpur District Gazetteer (
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Allahabad, 1903) .

End of Article: SULTANPUR
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