Report On The Administration of North East India

Report On The Administration of North East India

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In the present Report wherever the term Assam occurs, it dose not mean the Assam of today which is a tiny, truncated   State with its capital at Dispur. It means the entire North Eastern Part of India which is of very great strategic importance with its Frontiers touching Tibet, Burma, Bhutan and the  present day Bangladesh. In fact this constitutes the old Governor's Province of Assam which came into being on 3rd January 1921 under the provisions of Section 3 of the Government of India Act, 1919 and the rules made thereunder which provided for and Executive Council and a legislature known as Legislative Council. It of course excludes hill districts and frontier tracts, declared as backward  tracts. Thus the Report is of particular significance because it is the first authentic Report on the Administration of old Assam after 3-1-1921 the date on which the old Governor's Province of that name came into being. It was prepared against the background of non-cooperation movement started  by Mahatma Gandhi and also the Khilafat agitation to which he lent his full moral support. This powerful movement spread like wild fire throughout the jength and breadth of India and had its impact over Assam. It therefore finds place in the opening part itself of the Report. It is not merely a routine Administrative Report prepared as an annual ritual for the information of superior authorities but is a virtual history of Assam giving a kaleido-scopic account of all that Assam  stands for including its ancient past. Its importance lies in the fact that it was formulated after Assam came into being and its administration attained a degree of stability. It is divided into two Parts. Part I contains a general summary and Part II contains the main body of the Report which records, gazetteer-like, all that is worth knowing about Assam. It paints, on a vast canvas, the entire geography, climate, chief staples, form of administration, character of land tenures, frontier relations and feudatory States, land administration, forests, revenue and finance, archaeology and ecclesiastical jurisdiction and all other related features. But what strikes as of supreme interest in the Report is its historical  aspect which surveys in a sweep the glorious pageant of history of Assam, known as the ancient Kamrup, beginning with the colonisation or conquest of the brahmaputra valley by early Aryan settlers. According to the legend, Krishna is said to have carried away his bride Rukmini from her father Bhismaka, king of kundilya, the name of whose kingdom survives in the Kundil river to the east of sadiya. Krishna's son Anirudha captured Sonitpur (now called Tezpur) the capital of Raja Ban and carred of  his daughter, Usha. Hiouen Tsang, the famous Chinese traveller, visited the country in 640 A.D., a prince named Kumar Bhaskar Barman was then on the throne. Then follow a succession of rulers from Pal dynasty to Koch and Ahom Kings and finally to Muslim and British rulers which covers the history of past two centuries with ups and downs of fortune. Thus, strictly speaking, it is not merely an administrative Report but a sort of comprehensive gazetteer which gives an exhaustive description of all that is worth knowing about Assam and the ancient Kamrup which has been the stage of great historical events. It constitutes a rich and valuable source of information of inestimable value not only for research scholars and administrators but for all those who have a keen desire to enlarge their knowledge of this strategic region of india.

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