Laur Kingdom

The Kingdom of Laur was one of the many petty kingdoms of the Sylhet region. Others included the Gour Kingdom, Ita Kingdom, Taraf Kingdom, Pratapgarh Kingdom and Jaintia Kingdom.[2]

Kingdom of Laur

লাউড় রাজ্য
600–1565[1]
CapitalNabagram (now in Badaghat Union, Tahirpur)
Common languagesSanskrit, Prakrit
Religion
Hinduism
Demonym(s)Lauri
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraClassical period
 Established
600
 Disestablished
1565[1]
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Jaintia Kingdom
Mughal Empire
Today part of Bangladesh
 India

Location

The kingdom was bounded by the Brahmaputra river in the west, the Jaintia Kingdom in the east, Kamarupa in the north and Brahmanbaria in the south. It is considered that in the 7th century, the kingdom consisted of the modern-day Sunamganj District as well as parts of Habiganj and Mymensingh.[1][3]

History

Before the establishment of the Laur Kingdom, the area was a part of Jaintia in the greater Kamarupa Kingdom. When Guhak ascended the Jaintia throne, he married a princess from Kamarupa. Guhak had a deep interest in Hinduism and migration of Brahmins from the Kamrup region to this area took place. Guhak had three sons; Jayantak, Gurak and Ladduk, and two daughters; Sheela and Chatala. He split the Jaintia Kingdom into three for his three sons. He gave his eldest son, Jayantak, the northern hills which remained known as the Jaintia Kingdom. He gave his second son, Gurak, the southern plains which would be named Gour Kingdom, and he gave his third son, Ladduk, the western plains which would become the Laur Kingdom.[4]

In 640, the Raja of Tripura Dharma Fa planned a ceremony and invited five Brahmans from Etawah, Mithila and Kannauj. Keshab Misra, a Brahman from Kannauj, migrated to Laur where he established a Hindu kingdom.[5]

In the late thirteenth century, Laur faced a number of attacks from the neighbouring kingdom of Gour ruled by the Hindu king Gour Govinda.[6]

A later Raja of Laur, Ramnath (descendant of Keshab Misra), had three sons with only one remaining in central Laur. Ramnath's second son, Durbar Singh became a Muslim and changed his name to Durbar Khan.[7] Khan migrated to Jagannathpur to build his own palace. He later seized his youngest brother, Gobind Singh's, territory in Baniachong.[5]

After the death of Laur Raja Durbar Khan, his younger brother Gobind Singh took over his land. Durbar Khan's sons then informed the Nawab of Bengal of this incident. Gobind was summoned to Delhi for a short time where he also accepted Islam. He changed his name to Habib Khan. As a reward, he regained Laur in 1566 but as a feudal ruler. Laur lost its independence and became a mahal/mahallah of the Sylhet Sarkar in the Bengal Subah of the Mughal Empire.[8] Habib's grandson was Majlis Alam Khan, the father of Anwar Khan.

A later zamindar of Laur, Abid Reza left Laur to establish Baniachong in the early eighteenth century, which would become the largest village in the world. Many followed Reza to Baniachong after Laur was burnt by the Khasi in 1744. The Nawab of Bengal Alivardi Khan is said to have granted 48 large boats to the Baniachong zamindars.[9] A short while after, Reza built a fort in Laur which remains as ruins today. His son, Umed Reza, excavated much of Baniachong during his zamindari. Both Rezas were feudal under the Amils or Faujdars of Sylhet.[5]

British rule

With the establishment of the East India Company and later the British Raj, Laur continued to exist merely as a pargana or fiscal division, as well as a thana, within greater Sylhet. Its area was 105.64 square metres, consisted of 305 estates and had a land revenue of £308 as of 1875.[10]

In one incident, hill tribes attacked the Laur thana, killing 20 people including the thanadar. In 1787, the Khasis of Laur also rebelled, plundering many parganas, such as Atgram, Bangaikunda, Ramdiga, Betal and Selharas, and killing up to 800 people. Before the troops of the Collector of Sylhet, Robert Lindsay, could arrive, the Khasis retreated back to their mountains.[11]

List of kings

Krishak dynasty

  1. Ladduk (600-630)
  2. Shambhuk (630-660)
  3. Devadatta (660-690)
  4. Bhagadatta (690-720)
  5. Navarjun (720-750)
  6. Madhab (750-780)
  7. Pramardan (780-810)

See also

References

  1. Sreehatter Itibritta – Purbangsho (A History of Sylhet), Part 2, Volume 1, Chapter 1, Achyut Charan Choudhury; Publisher: Mustafa Selim; Source publication, 2004।
  2. North East India History Association. Session (1980). Proceedings of the North East India History Association. The Association. p. 73. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  3. সরকারি ওয়েব সাইট Archived 20 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine, জেলা তথ্য বাতায়ন
  4. East Pakistan District Gazetteers: Sylhet. East Pakistan Government Press. 1970.
  5. B C Allen (1905). Assam District Gazetteers. 2. Calcutta: Government of Assam. pp. 21-62.
  6. Mahmud, Hasan (18 Feb 2019). "আর হাতে রণতুর্য" (in Bengali). Desher Potro.
  7. Nath, Rajmohan (1948). The back-ground of Assamese culture. A. K. Nath. p. 122.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  8. E M Lewis (1868). "Sylhet District". Principal Heads of the History and Statistics of the Dacca Division. Calcutta: Calcutta Central Press Company. pp. 281-326.
  9. Hunter, William Wilson (1875). "District of Sylhet: Administrative History". A Statistical Account of Assam. 2.
  10. Hunter, William Wilson (1875). "District of Sylhet: Administrative History". A Statistical Account of Assam. 2.
  11. Robert Lindsay. "Anecdotes of an Indian life: Chapter VII". Lives of the Lindsays, or, A memoir of the House of Crawford and Balcarres. National Library of Scotland. 4.
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