Facts about
Assam
Assam
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Area
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78,438
sq km
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Capital
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Dispur
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Population
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2,66,55,528
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Principal
Languages
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Assamese
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History and Geography: The word 'Assam' as interpreted by some scholars is
derived from the Sanskrit word Asoma meaning peerless or unparalleled.
But the widely accepted opinion of the academic circles today is that the term
has come from the original name of Ahoms, who ruled the land for about
six hundred years prior to its annexation by the British. The races like
Austric, Mongolian, Dravidian and Aryan that came to this land long-long ago
have contributed to its composite culture. Thus Assam has a rich legacy of
culture and civilization.
Assam
was known as Pragjyotisha or the place of eastern astronomy during the epic
period and later named as Kamrupa. The earliest epigraphic reference to the
kingdom of Kamrupa is found in the Allahabad pillar inscription of king
Samudragupta. Kamrupa is mentioned as a Pratyanta or frontier state
outside the Gupta empire but with friendly and subordinate relation to it.
Hiuen Sang, the Chinese scholar pilgrim who visited Kamrupa in about 743 AD on
an invitation of its monarch, Kumar Bhaskar Varman, left a record of the
kingdom he called Kamolupa. Kamrupa also figured in the writings of the Arabian
historian Alberuni in the eleventh century. Thus, from the epic period down to
the twelfth century AD, the eastern frontier kingdom was known as Pragjyotisha
and Kamrupa and kings called themselves 'Lords of Pragjyotisha'.
The
advent of the Ahoms across the eastern hills in 1228 AD was the turning point
in the Assam history. They ruled Assam nearly for six centuries. The Burmese
entered through the eastern borders and overran the territory at a time when
court intrigues and dissensions were sapping the vitality of the Ahom royalty.
It became a British protectorate in 1826 when the Burmese ceded Assam to the
British under the provision of the Treaty of Yandabo.
Assam is the sentinel of north-east India and
gateway to the North-Eastern States. The State is close to India's
international borders with Bangladesh and Bhutan. Assam is surrounded by Bhutan
and Arunachal Pradesh on the north, Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh on
the east and Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram on the south.
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