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<title>Bengal District Gazetteers Purnea</title>
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<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 18:59:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>Bengal District Gazetteers Purnea 1911</title>
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<description>Bengal District Gazetteers Purnea 1911
O'Malley, L.S.S.
The district of Purnea, which. forma the north-eastern portion 8  .&#13;
of the Bhagalpur Division, is situated between 25° 15' and backup.&#13;
26° 35' north latitude, and between 87 0 and 88° .32' east M°*r’&#13;
longitude. It extends over 4,994 square miles, and has a population &#13;
 of 1,874,794 persons, as ascertained at the census of 1901&#13;
its area being nearly as great as that o f Norfolk, Suffolk and&#13;
Essex combined, while it has 400,000 more inhabitants than the&#13;
whole of Wales. The headquarters are at the town of Purnea,&#13;
the name of which was extended to the territory now included&#13;
in the district. Purnea is an English corruption of the vernacular&#13;
name Purania, and this or Puraniya is the designation of the&#13;
district in old records. Local tradition states that it is derived&#13;
from the word purlin, the local name for the lotus, which is said&#13;
to have grown thickly in the neighborhood of the town, when&#13;
the Kosi river flowed past it. Another derivation which has&#13;
been suggested is pura-aranya, meaning ‘.absolute forest’, for&#13;
tradition asserts that the district was once covered by dense&#13;
forest. The district forms part of the alluvial tract known as North&#13;
Bihar, but its eastern portion more properly belongs to Bengal.&#13;
It formed in fact, the northernmost Sarkdr of that Province under&#13;
Mughal rule, the river Kosi, which used to flow through the centre&#13;
of Purnea, being the boundary between it and the sub-province of&#13;
Bihar . The population in the east and west is, moreover, ethnically&#13;
and linguistically different. The Rajbansis, a characteristic caste&#13;
of Noftheiji Bengal, predominate east of the river Mahanadi,&#13;
while to the west they give place to the common castes of Bihar.
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<pubDate>Tue, 07 Feb 1911 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>1911-02-07T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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