- Source: 24 Parganas
24 Parganas (Pron: pɔrɡɔnɔs; abbr. 24 PGS), or sometimes Twenty Four Parganas, is a former district in the Indian state of West Bengal, headquartered in Alipore. On 1 March 1986, the district was bifurcated into two separate districts namely North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas. It was the largest district of West Bengal by area and population at the time of bifurcation.
History
The district was directly not attached to the Gupta rulers. The district was also not a part of the Shashanka's unified bengali empire i.e. Gauda, but it is assumed that the district which was the south-west frontier territory of ancient Bengal, was comprised in under the rule of Dharmapala. Existence of the land form is evidence from the 2nd century A.D. writing of Ptolemy's treatise where it is said that the ancient land of Gangaridai was stretched between the rivers Bhagirathi-Hooghly (lower Ganges) and Padma-Meghna. What is known today as the 24 Parganas was the south and the south-eastern part of the Gangaridai kingdom. References to this portion of the Gangetic Delta in the Puranas, Mahabharata and Raghuvamsa show that it lay between the kingdom of the Suhmas and the Vangas.
From the early eighteenth century, slowly but steadily the East India Company was strengthening their position in Bengal. The small rulers of Bengal got their biggest blow when the last independent Nawab of Bengal Siraj-ud-Daulah faced defeat in the Battle of Plassey. Six months after the Battle of Plassey, on 20 December 1757, under the terms of a treaty, the then Nawab of Bengal, Mir Jafar, gave the East India Company the right to enjoy the zamindari of twenty-four parganas in return for an annual rent of 1,200 rupees. The total area then was 882 square miles, which later increased to 5,639 square miles with the addition of other territories. Henceforth the region was collectively called 24 Parganas. These twenty-four parganas were: (1) Akbarpur, (2) Amirpur, (3) Azimabad, (4) Balia, (5) Baridhari, (6) Basandari, (7) Calcutta, (8) Dakhin Sagar, (9) Garh, (10) Hathiagarh, (11) Ikhtiarpur, (12) Kharijuri, (13) Khaspur, (14) Maidanmal, (15) Magura, (16) Manpur, (17) Mayda, (18) Munragachha, (19) Paikan, (20) Pechakuli, (21) Satal, (22) Shahnagar, (23) Shahpur, and (24) Uttar Pargana. In 1759, the East India Company assigned these twenty-four parganas to Robert Clive as a personal jagir and after his death in 1774, these twenty-four parganas again came under the direct authority of the East India Company. Thus the British rule under the mask of a trader started.
In 1793, during the rule of Lord Cornwallis, entire Sundarbans were in 24 Parganas. In 1802, some parganas on the western banks of river Hooghly were included into it. These parganas were in Nadia district earlier. In 1814, a separate collectorate was established in 24 Parganas. In 1817, Falta and Baranagar and in 1820, some portions of Nadia's Balanda and Anwarpur were encompassed to it. In 1824, portions of Barasat, Khulna and Bakerganj were also included to it. In 1824, the district headquarters was shifted from Kolkata to Baruipur, but in 1828, it was removed to Alipore. In 1834, the district was split into two districts – Alipore and Barasat, but later these were united again. In 1861, the entire district is divided into eight subdivisions viz. Alipore, Diamond Harbour, Barasat, Barrackpore, Dum Dum, Baruipur, Basirhat and Satkhira. In 1905, some portion of the district around the Sundarbans was detached and linked with neighbouring Khulna and Barisal districts. After partition in 1947, these parts remained in the territory of Bangladesh, but Bangaon in Jessore district was added to 24 Parganas.
After India's independence, an administrative reform committee in the year 1983 under the Chairmanship of Dr. Ashok Mitra suggested to split the district into two. As per their
recommendation, the district was bifurcated into two parts on 1 March 1986 i.e. North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas. The North 24 Parganas district had been formed with five subdivisions namely Barasat Sadar, Bidhannagar, Barrackpore, Bangaon, and Basirhat. The South 24 Parganas district had been formed with five subdivisions namely Alipore Sadar, Baruipur, Canning, Diamond Harbour, and Kakdwip.
Demographics
See also
Pargana
References
External links
Media related to 24 Parganas district at Wikimedia Commons
24 Parganas travel guide from Wikivoyage
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kolkata Metro
- Kolkata
- Pargana
- Benggala Barat
- Bangau-nganga Asia
- Islam di Benggala Barat
- Akram Khan (politikus)
- Jalan Tol Belghoria
- Trutu hijau
- M. N. Roy
- North 24 Parganas district
- South 24 Parganas
- 24 Parganas
- Tebhaga movement
- Canning, South 24 Parganas
- Pargana
- Haroa, North 24 Parganas
- List of colleges affiliated to the University of Calcutta
- Higher education in West Bengal
- Basanti, South 24 Parganas