Regions of Assam

The Regions of Assam are non-administrative units in the Indian state of Assam with a common historical past. Not all these regions are mutually exclusive.

The Regions

Assam Proper: This is the region that is constituted by the five colonial districts that were originally in the Ahom kingdom. The districts were: Undivided Kamrup district, Darrang, Nagaon, Lakhimpur and Sibsagar.

Goalpara region: This is the region between the Sankosh and the manas rivers on the north bank of the Brahmaputra river, with a corresponding region on the south bank.

Kamrup region: This is the region between the Manas river in the west and the Barnadi river on the east on the north bank of the Brahmaputra river, with a corresponding region on the south bank.

Barak Valley: The Barak Valley in Assam, North Kachar (Dima Hasao), Kachar, Hailakandi and Karimgonj districts are often called Ishan Banga and South Assam,[1] which together formed the erstwhile undivided Cachar district, a part of the Kachari kingdom, that was under the command of Gobinda Chandra.

Notes

  1. (Tunga 1995, p. 1)
gollark: Yes, it's much more elegant to just arbitrarily mix raw database queries into all your user-facing view stuff.
gollark: I decided to not do that since it's annoying, which is why I'm *multitasking* by doing maths work and discord simultaneously*.* not simultaneously
gollark: Sign up for osmarks.tk™ time management, where every day I ask you if you did/didn't do a thing, and if you did not do what you committed to doing, I will slander you in every discord server/other place ever.
gollark: With sensible use of databases and prepared statement™ technology you cannot have injection issues.
gollark: Well, `system` is often horribly vulnerable to injection issues. You *should* be fine if you base64 all user input.

References

  • Dutta, Birendranath (1995). A Study of the Folk Culture of the Goalpara Region of Assam. Guwahati, Assam: University Publication Department, Gauhati University.
  • Tunga, S. S. (1995). Bengali and Other Related Dialects of South Assam. Delhi: Mittal Publications. ISBN 9788170995883. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.