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CHAPTER II
( A ) »
Ganges.
R.IUMookherjee thinks that ’'the whole of Bengal is a
the Hooghly on the West and Meghna on the East is only the
the Padma on the north, the Bhagirathi on the west and the
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Meghna on the east.
( B )
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Bengal's geography thus has been conditioned by
its river systems. The most important of its rivers is
the Ganges.
37 - 38 etc.
13. Sir William Willcocks, Lectures on the Ancient System
of Irrigation in Bengal., P.4 ff.
14. K. Bagchi, Op. cit. , P. 40.
15. Ibid. ,
16. Ptolemy, vii, I, 18.
:: 24 ::
(Memoir,' P. 57).
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tlorth.
the Jamuna and with the combined water of the Atreyi and
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the Karatoya at Juffergung. Thence flowing southward it
Meghna.
22, 37 - 38.
53. Ramayana I.
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whereas the Dp.vibhagavatam refers to the origin of the
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Ganges and the Padma separately. The Idilpur copper-plate
are:
Tilogrammon, a town.
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of latitude. The distance between Tamluk and Chittagong
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is also.the same. Hence it is not unlikely that in
of the present day, wider than the channel now called the
Pa dma.
:: 38 ::
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Jamunl.
the latter.
Satgaon, where the Sarsuti & the Jamuna unite with that
river.
Introduction.
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Ganga on the South. It was by crossing the river Ganga
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that Ramapala entered into VarendrI, i. e. Worth Bengal.
not prove that the Padma was wider than the Bhagirathf
down by the river had gradually raised its bed. When the
72. Ibid
:: 44 ::
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served as one of the main outlets of the Gangetic waters.
At present, however, it is not a very significant branch
and is dissected into three parts by the Jelangi and the
Mathabhanga. It used to branch off from the Padma opposite
Rampur-Boalia and emptied itself into the Haringhata
74 .
estuary.
73. Q. Pi cat.
74. Ibid. P.54.
75. Ibid. P. 53*
/
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* *>
time between the 16th and the 18th centuries, but the exact
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( C )
at Goalundo.
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the three rivers, viz. , the Karatoya, Atreyi and the Punar-
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bhava. Gradually they were probably reduced to their
present straits.
( D )
, 94
Yasodhara (13th century), in his commentary on
54 t:
/
The Saktisangamatantra states that the entire
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territory from the sea up to the Brahrflaputra denoted Vanga.
40 years between the Teesta flood and the time when the
Hirst thinks that between 1787 and 1820 the Jamuna gradua
But in that case also the flood of 1787 and the fluctua
the Brahmaputra.
etc.
helow the last place it suddenly takes a curve and flows due
South into the Hooghly a little above the Bhagirathi-Rupnarayan,
confluence.
102. O.plcit.
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103 r _
Kalidasa refers to a river called Kapisa. In
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