Online Encyclopedia

TANJORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 399 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TANJORE  , a

city and
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district of
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British India in the
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Madras
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presidency . The city is situated on the right
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bank of the
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river Cauvery, and is an important junction on the South
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Indian railway, 218 m . S. of Madras . Pop . (19o1) 57,870 . As the last capital of the ancient
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Hindu dynasty of the Cholas, and in all ages one of the chief
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political,
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literary and religious centres of the south, the city is full of interesting associations . It was the scene of the earliest labours of
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Protestant missionaries in India . The
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modern
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history of Tanjore begins with its
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conquest by the
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Mahrattas in 1674 under Venkaji, the
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brother of Sivaji the
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Great . The British first came into contact with Tanjore by their expedition in 1749 with a view to the restoration of a deposed
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raja . In this they failed, and a subsequent expedition was bought off . The Mahrattas practically held Tanjore until 1799 . In
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October of that
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year the district was ceded to the East India
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Company in absolute
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sovereignty by Raja Sharabhoji, pupil of the missionary Schwarz .

The raja retained only the capital and a small

tract of country round . He died in 1833 and was succeeded by his son Sivaji, on whose
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death in 1855 without an heir the house became
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extinct . The
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mission at Tanjore was founded in 1778 by the Rev . Christian F . Schwarz or Schwartz (1726-1798) . The mission establishments were taken over in 1826 by the Society for the
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Propagation of the Gospel, which subsequently founded new stations in several parts of the district .
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Roman Catholic missions date from the first
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half of the 17th century . St Peter's College, founded by Schwarz as a school, is now a first-grade college affiliated to the university of Madras . His church
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dates from 1779 . Among interesting ancient buildings may be mentioned the palace within the fort, containing an armoury and
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fine library; and the Brihadiswaraswami temple, of the 11th century, enclosed in two courts, surmounted by a lofty tower and including the exquisitely decorated shrine of Subrahmanya . Though the city has specialities of jewelry, carpets, modelling in pith, &c., there are no large
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industries . The DISTRICT OF TANJORE has an
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area of 3710 sq. m .

On

account of its fertility it has been called the " Gal den of
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Southern India." It is irrigated by an elaborate
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system of dams, cuts and canals in connexion with the rivers Cauvery and Coleroon, and the
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soil is exceedingly productive . The delta of the Cauvery occupies the flat
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northern
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part, which is highly cultivated, dotted over with groves of coco-nut trees, and is one of the most densely populated tracts in India . The
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staple crop is rice, which is grown on 77 per cent. of the cultivated area . Tanjore is a
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land of temples, many of them being of very early date . The district is traversed by the main
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line and several branches of the South Indian railway, some of which have been constructed by the district board . The chief seaport is
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Negapatam, and the
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principal export is rice to
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Ceylon . The population in 1901 was 2,245,029 . See Tanjore District Gazetteer (Madras, 1906) .

End of Article: TANJORE
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