Background of Brahmanbaria District

 

Brahmanbaria district was established in 1984. Earlier this district was part of Comilla (old name Tipra) district. Note that before 1830 Sarail Pargana was part of Mymensingh District. This area was a part of Samat town in ancient Bengal. In the medieval period, today's Brahmanbaria belonged to Sarail Pargana. According to historical data, Pathan Sultan Shershah created the first parganas to facilitate revenue collection and administration. Sarail Pargana was created during the Sultanate period. Sarail Pargana sometimes became important for political reasons. In the best Bhuiya Masnad of Bar Bhuiya, Bengal, it is known from the genealogy of Ala Isa Khan that a Prince Kalidas Ghazdani of Baiswara State of India converted to Islam with Syed Ibrahim Malekululama (RA) and assumed the name of Solaiman Khan. Sulaiman Khan arrived in Bengal in 1534 AD. He was the first to receive the Jagir of Sarail Pargana since Sultan Ghiyas ud-Din Mahmud Shah. Sulaiman Khan's rival Pathan forces summoned him on a false treaty proposal and killed him. At that time Isa Khan was ten years old. Later, due to his talent, he became a great power in Bhatiarajya. The battle of Mughal forces with Isa Khan to protect the freedom of Bhati kingdom is recorded in the pages of history. Isa Khan established a temporary capital at Sarail at that time. Around 1581 AD, he shifted his seat of rule from Sarail to Rasanar Gaon and temporarily to Kishoreganj Jungle House as the sole ruler of Bhati Rajya. When Tripura district was established in 1793 AD, most of Brahmanbaria was included in Mymensingh district. In 1830 Sarail, Daidpur, Haripur, Bejura and Satrakandal Parganas were transferred from Mymensingh to Tripura District. When Nasirnagar subdivision was established in 1860, most of Brahmanbaria came under it. In 1875 Nasirnagar subdivision was renamed Brahmanbaria subdivision. Before that, in 1868, Brahmanbaria city was elevated to a municipality. After 1947, greater Comilla district came under East Pakistan. In 1960, East Pakistan part of Tripura district was renamed as Comilla district. Brahmanbaria was then known as a sub-divisional town. Bangladesh gained independence in 1971 through a bloody liberation war. Brahmanbaria was declared a district on 15 February 1984 during post-independence administrative decentralization. Isa Khan's first and temporary capital was at Saraile, 10 km north of Brahmanbaria town. When the Swadeshi movement started in this district in 1905 centered on the partition of Bengal, the revolutionary Ullas Kar (Abiram) Dutta was accused of bomb blasts and the lamp was transferred to Andaman. On 14 December 1931, Suniti Chowdhury, Shanti Ghosh and Gopal Dev shot dead the then District Magistrate CCB Stevens in broad daylight at his residence. During the peasant movement in 1930, Congress leader Abdul Hakim called for a ban on taxes. At that time, four civilians were killed in reckless firing by British soldiers. In 1971, Bir Shrestha Mustafa Kamal was martyred in the Daruin War of Akhaura during the Liberation War. During the British period, the headquarters of the English manager Mee Hallid was shifted from Sarail to Maurail in the city. At present it has been demolished and converted into a government office building. During the possession of Munipur by the British troops in 1824, their military headquarters was in this city. The commercial centers of the city are Anandbazar and Tanbazar. Anandbazar, Tanbazar, Jagatbazar, Mahadev Patti, Kalaishree Para, Madhyapara, Kazipara and Kandipara are the old areas of the city. Brahmanbaria city has an ancient tradition of art-literature and education-culture. This city is called the cultural capital of Bangladesh. In 1869 the town was converted into a municipality. The rise of this city in the nineteenth century.

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