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Linguistic Survey of India- Vol.III, Tibeto-Burman Family, Part-III, 1904.

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dc.contributor.author George, A. Grierson
dc.date.accessioned 2019-01-27T06:33:47Z
dc.date.available 2019-01-27T06:33:47Z
dc.date.issued 1993-01-30
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.bpatc.org.bd/handle/1200/99
dc.description.abstract The territory inhabited by the Kuki-Chin tribes extends from the Naga Hills in the north down into the Sandoway District of Burma in the south; Geographical distribution. £r om Myittha river in the east, almost to the Bay of Bengal in the west. It is almost entirely filled up by hills and mountain ridges, separated by deep valleys. A great chain of mountains suddenly rises from the plains of Eastern Bengal, about 220 miles north of Calcutta, and stretches eastward in a Orographica! note. broadening mass of spurs and ridges, called successively the Garo, Khasia, and Naga Hills. The elevation of the highest points increases towards the #east, from about 3,000 feet in the Garo Hills to 8,000 and 9,000 in the region of Manipur. This chain merges, in the east, into the spurs which the Himalayas shoot out from the north of Assam towards the south. From here a great mass of mountain ridges starts southwards, enclosing the alluvial valley of Manipur, and thence spreads out westwards to the south of Sylhet. It then runs almost due north and south, with cross-ridges of smaller elevation, through the districts known as the Chin Hills, the Lushai Hills, Tippej&h, and the Chittagong Hill tracts. Farther south the mountainous region continues through the Arakan Hill tracts, and the Arakan Yorua, until it finally sinks into the sea at Cape Negrais, the total length of the range being some seven hundred miles. The greatest elevation is found to the north of Manipur. Thence it gradually diminishes towards the1 south. Where the ridge enters the north of Arakan it again rises, with summits upwards of 8,000 feet high, and. here a mass of spurs is thrown off in all directions. Towards the south the western off-shoots diminish in length, leaving a track of alluvial land between them and the sea, while in the north the eastern off-shoots of the Arfl.Vfl.n Yoma run down to the banks of the Irawaddy. This vast mountainous region, from the Jaintia and Naga Hills in the north, is the home of the Kuki-Chin tribes. We find them, besides, in the valley of Manipur, and, in small settlements, in the Cachar Plains and Sylhet. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher The Superintendent of Government Printing, India en_US
dc.subject Linguistic Survey en_US
dc.title Linguistic Survey of India- Vol.III, Tibeto-Burman Family, Part-III, 1904. en_US
dc.type Other en_US


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