Online Encyclopedia

SURAT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 117 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SURAT  , a

city and
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district of
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British India in the
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northern division of Bombay . The city is on the site where the
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English first established a factory on the mainland, and so planted the seed of the British
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Empire in India .
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Local traditions fix the establishment of the
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modern city in the last
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year of the fifteenth century, and in 1514 the Portuguese traveller Barbosa described it as an important seaport, frequented by many
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ships from
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Malabar and all parts . During the reigns of
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Akbar, Jahangir and Shah Jahan it rose to be the chief commercial city of India . At the end of the 16th century the Portuguese were undisputed masters of the Surat seas . But in 1612 Captain Best, and after him Captain Downton, destroyed the Portuguese
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naval supremacy and obtained an imperial firman making Surat the seat of a
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presidency under the English East India
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Company, while the Dutch also founded a factory . In 1664
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Sir George Oxenden defended the factory against Sivaji with a bravery that deserves to rank with Clive's defence of
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Arcot . The prosperity of the factory at Surat received a fatal blow when Bombay was ceded to the Company (1668) and shortly afterwards made the capital of the Company's possessions and the chief seat of their trade . From that date also the city began to decline . At one time its population was estimated at 800,000, by the
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middle of the loth century the number had fallen to 8o,000; but in 1901 it had risen again to 119,306 . Surat was taken by the English in 1759, and the conquerors assumed the undivided government of the city in 1800 . Since the introduction of British
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rule the district has remained comparatively tranquil; and even during the Mutiny peace was not disturbed, owing in
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great measure to the
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loyalty of the leading
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Mahommedan families .

The city is situated on the

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left
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bank of the
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river
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Tapti, 14 M. from its mouth, and has a station on the Bombay,
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Baroda & Central India railway, 167 m. north of Bombay . A
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moat indicates the dividing-
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line between the city, with its narrow streets and handsome houses, and the suburbs, mostly scattered among cultivated lands; but the city wall has almost disappeared . On the river frontage rises the irregular picturesque fortress built about 1540 . A fire and a flood in 1837 destroyed a great number of buildings, but there remain several of
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interest, such as the mosque of Nav Saiyid
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Sahib, with its nine tombs, the Saiyid Edroos mosque (1634) and the ornate Mirza Sami mosque and tomb (1540) . The most interesting monuments are the tombs of English and Dutch merchants of the 17th century, especially that of the Oxenden brothers . Surat is still a centre of trade and manufacture, though some of its former
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industries, such as
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ship-
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building, are
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extinct . There are cotton mills, factories for ginning and pressing cotton, rice-cleaning mills and paper mills .
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Fine cotton goods are
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woven in hand-looms, and there are
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special manufactures of
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silk
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brocade and embroidery . The chief trades are organized in gilds . There are many wealthy Parsee,
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Hindu and Mahommedan merchants . The DISTRICT of SURAT has an
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area of 1653 sq. m., and the population in tool was 637,017, showing a decrease of 2% in the decade . The district has a coast-line of 8o m., consisting of a barren stretch of sand drift and salt marsh; behind this is a rich, highly-cultivated plain, nearly 6o m. in breadth, at the mouth of the Tapti, but narrowing to only 15 M. in the
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southern
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part, and on the north-east are the wild hills and jungle of the Dangs .

The

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principal crops are millets, rice, pulses, cotton and a little wheat . After Surat city the chief centre of trade is Bulsar . The district is traversed by the main line of the Bombay & Baroda railway, with a branch along the Tapti valley to join the Great
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Indian Peninsula railway in Khandesh . Near the coast, under the influence of the sea
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breeze, an equable temperature prevails, but 8 to 11 m. inland the breeze ceases to blow . The coast also possesses a much lighter rainfall than the interior, the
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annual
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average ranging from 30 in. in Olpad to 72 in Chikhli, while at Surat city the average is 391 in . The SURAT AGENCY consists of three native states:
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Dharampur (q.v.),
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Bansda (q.v.) and Sachin, together with the tract knownas the Dangs .
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Total area, r06o sq. m.; pop . (1901), 179,995 . Sachin has a revenue of £17,000 and its chief is a Mahommedan . SUBBASE (
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Lat. super, whence the Fr. sur, above or upon, and
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base, q.v.), i.e. upper base, the
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term in architecture applied to what, in the fittings of a
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room, is called the chair-
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rail . It is also used to distinguish the cornice of a pedestal or podium and is separated from the base by the dado or die .

End of Article: SURAT
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