History of Assam

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History of Assam From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2013) Major kingdoms of Assam Outline of South Asian history History of Indian subcontinent 7000–3000 BC: Stone Age [show] 3000–1300 BC: Bronze Age [show] 1700–26 BC: Iron Age [show] 21–1279 AD: Middle Kingdoms [show]

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Transcript of History of Assam

Page 1: History of Assam

History of AssamFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2013)

Major kingdoms of Assam

Outline of South Asian historyHistory of Indian

subcontinent

7000–3000 BC: Stone Age [show]

3000–1300 BC: Bronze Age [show]

1700–26 BC: Iron Age [show]

21–1279 AD: Middle Kingdoms [show]

1206–1596: Late medieval age [show]

1526–1858: Early modern period [show]

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1505–1961: Colonial period [show]

Other states (1102–1947)[show]

Kingdoms of Sri Lanka[show]

Nation histories[show]

Regional histories[show]

Specialised histories[show]

V

T

E

The history of Assam is the history of a confluence of people from the east, west and the north; the

confluence of the Indo-Aryan,Austroasiatic and Tibeto-Burman cultures. Politically, it has been invaded, but has

never served as a vassal or a colony to an external power till the advent of the Burmese in 1821 and

subsequently the British in 1826.

The history of Assam is known from many sources. The Ahom kingdom of medieval Assam maintained

chronicles, called Buranjis, written in the Ahom and the Assamese languages. History of ancient Assam comes

from rock inscriptions and the many copper plates and royal grants the Kamarupa kings issued during their

reign. Protohistory is reconstructed from folklore, epics like Mahabharata, and two medieval texts compiled in

the Assam region—the Kalika Purana and the Yogini Tantra.

The history of Assam can be divided into various periods. Prehistory is reconstructed from archaeological

evidence and proto-history is reconstructed from traditional accounts of the past. The ancient period, the first of

the historical periods, begins in the 4th-century with the mention of Kamarupa in Samudragupta's Allahabad

pillar and the establishment of the Kamarupa kingdom. The medieval period begins with the Turko-Afghan

attacks from Bengal, the first of which took place in 1207 as mentioned in the Kanai-boroxiboa rock inscription,

after the breakup of the ancient kingdom and the sprouting of medieval kingdoms and chieftainships in its

place. The colonial period begins with the establishment of British control after the Yandaboo Treaty in 1826,

and the post-colonial period begins in 1947 after the Independence of India.

Contents

  [hide] 

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1 Prehistory

o 1.1 Paleolithic cultures

o 1.2 Neolithic cultures

o 1.3 Metal age

o 1.4 Megalithic cultures

2 Mythological Assam

3 Ancient Assam

4 Medieval Assam

5 Colonial Assam

o 5.1 British annexation of Assam

o 5.2 Colonial rule

6 Post-colonial Assam

7 See also

8 Notes

9 References

Prehistory[edit]

Paleolithic cultures[edit]

The earliest inhabitants of the region are assigned to the Middle Pleistocene period (781,000 to 126,000 years

ago) in the Rongram valley of Garo Hills. The Paleolithic sites, which used handaxe-cleaver tools, have

affinities to the Abbevillio-Acheulean culture. Other Paleolithic sites include those in the Daphabum area of

Lohit district in Arunachal Pradesh which used stone tools from metamorphic rocks. The cave-based Paleolithic

sites at Khangkhui in Ukhrul, Manipur, is placed in the Late Pleistocene period.

There exists evidence of a microlithic culture in the Rongram Valley of Garo Hills that lie between the neolithic

layers and virgin soil. The microliths here were made of dolerite, unlike those from the rest of India. Shreds of

crude hand-made pottery indicate that the microlithic people were hunters and food-gatherers.

Neolithic cultures[edit]

Early Neolithic cultures based on the unifacially flaked hand-axe in the Garo hills have developed in line with

the Hoabinhian culture, and it is conjectured that this region was the contact point for the Indian and

the Southeast Asian cultures.

The Late neolithic cultures have affinities with the spread of the Mon Khmer speaking people

from Malaysia and the Ayeyarwady valley and late neolithic developments in South China. Since these cultures

have been dated to 4500–4000 BCE, the Assam sites are dated to approximate that period.

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These neolithic sites, though widely spread, are concentrated in the hills and high grounds, due possibly to the

floods. These cultures performed shifting cultivation called jhum, which is still practiced by some communities

in the region. Some typical sites are Daojali Hading in Dima Hasao, Sarutaru in Kamrup district and Selbagiri in

the Garo Hills.

Metal age[edit]

There exists no archaeological evidence of Copper-Bronze or Iron age culture in the region. This might seem

as an impossibility given that corresponding cultures have been discovered in Bengalas well as Southeast

Asia. It can only be conjectured that metal age sites in the region exist but have not yet been discovered.

Megalithic cultures[edit]

Though the metal age seems to be missing in Assam, the Iron Age Megalithic culture of South India finds an

echo in the rich megalithic culture in the region, which begins to appear earlier than the first millennium BCE,

[1] and which continues till today among the Khasi and the Naga people. The affinity is with Southeast Asia. The

megalithic culture was the precursor of the fertility cult and the saktism and the vajrayana Buddhism that

followed.

Mythological Assam[edit]

Protohistoric Assam is reconstructed from epics and literature from early times (Mahabharata, Kalika

Purana, Yogini Tantra, etc.). The earliest political entity seems to have been led by a non-Aryan Danava

dynasty with Mahiranga mentioned as the first king. This dynasty was removed by Narakasura. Naraka

appears to be a generic name for many kings belonging to the Naraka dynasty. According to legend, the last of

the Naraka kings was killed by Krishna and his son Bhagadatta took the throne. Bhagadatta is said to have

participated in the Mahabharata war with an army of "chinas, kiratas and dwellers of the eastern sea", thereby

indicating that his kingdom, Pragjyotisha, included part of Bangladesh. The last in the Naraka dynasty was a

ruler named Suparua.

Ancient Assam[edit]

Main article: Kamarupa

The historical account of Assam begins with the establishment of Pushya Varman's Varman dynasty in the 4th

century in the Kamarupa kingdom, which marks the beginning of Ancient Assam. The kingdom reached its

traditional extent, from the Karatoya in the west to Sadiya in the east.[2] This and the two succeeding dynasties

drew their lineage from the mythical Narakasura.[3] The kingdom reached its zenith under Bhaskarvarman in the

7th century. Xuanzang visited his court and left behind a significant account. Bhaskar Varman died without

leaving behind an issue and the control of the country passed to Salasthamba, who established the Mlechchha

dynasty. After the fall of the Mlechchha dynasty in the late 9th century, a new ruler, Brahmapala was elected,

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who established the Pala dynasty. The last Pala king was removed by the Gaur king, Ramapala, in 1110. But

the two subsequent kings, Timgyadeva and Vaidyadeva, though established by the Gaur kings, ruled mostly as

independents and issued grants under the old Kamarupa seals. The fall of subsequent kings and the rise of

individual kingdoms in the 12th century in place of the Kamarupa kingdom marked the end of the Kamarupa

kingdom and the period of Ancient Assam.

Medieval Assam[edit]

A typical octagonal Ahom coin issued by SuremphaaRajeswar Singha (1751-1769) of the Ahom dynasty

See: Kamata kingdom, Ahom kingdom, Kachari kingdom, Sutiya kingdom, Bhuyan chieftains.

In the middle of the 13th century, Sandhya, a king of Kamarupanagara, moved his capital to Kamatapur, and

thus established the Kamata kingdom.[4] on account of attacks by the Turks of Bengal. The last of the Kamata

kings, the Khens, were removed by Alauddin Hussain Shah in 1498.[5] But Hussein Shah and subsequent rulers

could not consolidate their rule in the Kamata kingdom, mainly due to the revolt by the Bhuyan chieftains,[6] a

relic of the Kamarupa administration, and other local groups. Soon after in the beginning of the 16th

century Vishwa Singha of the Koch tribe established the Koch dynasty in the Kamata kingdom. The Koch

dynasty reached its peak under his sons, Nara Narayan and Chilarai.

In the eastern part of the erstwhile Kamarupa kingdom, the Kachari (south bank of river Brahmaputra, central

Assam) and the Sutiya (northbank, near Sadiya) kingdoms arose, with some Bhuyan chiefs controlling the

region just west of the Sutiya kingdom. In the tract between the Kachari and the Sutiya kingdoms, a Shan

group, led by Sukaphaa, established the Ahom kingdom. The sixteenth century is crucial in the history of

medieval period because of the consolidation of the Ahoms (who subsumed the Sutiya kingdom and pushed

the Kachari kingdom away from central Assam) in the east, the Koch in the west and the growth ofEkasarana

Dharma of Srimanta Sankardev. After the death of Nara Narayan of the Koch dynasty in the late 16th century,

the Kamata kingdom broke into Koch Bihar in the west and Koch Hajo in the east. The rivalry between the two

kingdoms resulted in the former allying with the Mughals and the latter with the Ahoms. Most of the 17th

century saw the Ahom-Mughal conflicts, in which the Ahoms held the expansive Mughals at bay epitomized in

the Battle of Saraighat of 1671, and which finally ended in 1682 with the defeat of the Mughals

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at Itakhuli in Guwahati.[7] The Ahom kingdom reached its westernmost boundary till Manas River which it

retains till 1826 CE. Though the Ahom kingdom saw itself as the inheritor of the glory of the erstwhile

Kamarupa kingdom and aspired to extend itself to the Karatoya river, it could never do so; though an Ahom

general, Ton Kham under Swargadeo Suhungmung, reached the river once when he pursued a retreating

invading army in the 16th century.[8]

After the Ahom kingdom reached its zenith, problems within the kingdom arose in the 18th century, when it lost

power briefly to rebels of the Moamoria rebellion. Though the Ahoms recaptured power, it was beset with

problems,[9] leading to the Burmese invasion of Assam in the early 19th century.[10] With the defeat of the

Burmese in the First Anglo-Burmese war and the subsequentTreaty of Yandaboo, control of Assam passed into

the hands of the British, which marks the end of the Medieval period.

Colonial Assam[edit]

Main article: Colonial Assam

British annexation of Assam[edit]

In 1824 CE, the First Anglo-Burmese War broke out. The British attacked the Burmese garrison in Assam and

by 1825 CE, the Burmese were expelled from Assam.[11][12][13][14] According to the Treaty of Yandabo, the

Burmese Monarch Bagyidawrenounce all claims on Assam. The British thus became the masters

of Brahmaputra Valley and they began to consolidate their rule in Assam. In 1830 CE, the Kachari king

Govinda Chandra was assassinated. Seizing this opportunity, the British annexed Kachari kingdom in 1832 CE.

In 1833 CE, the Ahom prince Purandar Singha was made a tributary ruler in Upper Assam. But owing to

mismanagement and failure to pay regular revenue, the British authorities annexed his kingdom in 1838 CE. In

1835 CE, the kingdom of Jaintia was also annexed. In 1842 CE, the region of Matak and Sadiya was also

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annexed by British authorities, and in 1854 CE, the North Cachar Hill district, under Tularam Senapati's

admistration, was also annexed into British Empire, thereby completing their conquest and consolidation of

their rule in Assam.[15]

Colonial rule[edit]

Bengal Presidency (1826–1873): Assam was included as a part of the Bengal Presidency. The annexation of

upper Assam is attributed to the successful manufacture of tea in 1837, and the beginning of the Assam

Company in 1839. Under the Wasteland Rules of 1838, it became nearly impossible for natives to start

plantations. After the liberalization of the rules in 1854, there was a land rush. The Chinese staff that was

imported earlier for the cultivation of tea left Assam in 1843, when tea plantations came to be tended by local

labor solely, mainly by those belonging to the Kachari group. From 1859 central Indian labor was imported for

the tea plantations. This labor, based on an unbreakable contract, led to a virtual slavery of this labor group.

The conditions in which they were transported to Assam were so horrific that about 10% never survived the

journey. The colonial government already had monopoly over the opium trade.

There were immediate protests and revolts against the British occupation. In 1828, two years after the Treaty of

Yandaboo, Gomdhar Konwar rose in revolt against the British, but he was easily suppressed. In

1830 Dhananjoy Burhagohain, Piyali Phukan and Jiuram Medhi rose in revolt, and they were sentenced to

death. In the Indian rebellion of 1857, the people of Assam offered resistance in the form of non-cooperation,

and Maniram Dewan and Piyali Baruah were executed for their roles. In 1861 peasants of Nagaon gathered

at Phulaguri for a raiz mel (peoples' assembly) to protest against taxes on betel-nut and paan. Lt. Singer, a

British officer got into a fracas with the peasants and was killed, after which the protests were violently

suppressed.

Chief Commissioner's Province (1874–1905): In 1874, the Assam region was separated from the Bengal

Presidency, Sylhet was added to it and its status was upgraded to a Chief Commissioner's Province. The

capital was at Shillong. The people of Sylhet protested the inclusion in Assam. Assamese, which was replaced

by Bengali as the official language in 1837, was reinstated alongside Bengali. In 1889, oil was discovered

at Digboi giving rise to an oil industry. In this period Nagaon witnessed starvation deaths, and there was a

decrease in the indigenous population, which was more than adequately compensated by the immigrant

labor. Colonialism was well entrenched, and the tea, oil and coal-mining industries were putting increasing

pressure on the agricultural sector which was lagging behind.

The peasants, burdened under the opium monopoly and the usury by money lenders, rose again in revolt.

Numerous raiz mels decided against paying the taxes. The protests culminated in a bayonet charge against the

protesters at Patharughat in 1894. At least 15 were left dead and in the violent repression that followed

villagers were tortured and their properties were destroyed or looted. In 1903, Assam Association was formed

with Manik Chandra Baruah as the first secretary.

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Eastern Bengal and Assam under Lt. Governor (1906–1912): Bengal was partitioned and East Bengal was

added to the Chief Commissioner's Province. The new region, now ruled by a Lt. Governor, had its capital

at Dhaka. This province had a 15-member legislative council in which Assam had two seats. The members for

these seats were recommended (not elected) by rotating groups of public bodies.

The Partition of Bengal was strongly protested in Bengal, and the people of Assam were not happy either. The

partition was finally annulled by a royal decree in 1911. The Swadeshi movement(1905–1908) from this period,

went largely unfelt in Assam, though it stirred some, most notably Ambikagiri Raychoudhury.

Beginning 1905 peasants from East Bengal began settling down in the riverine tracts (char) of

the Brahmaputra valley encouraged by the colonial government to increase agricultural production. Between

1905 and 1921, the immigrant population from East Bengal increased four folds. The immigration continued in

post colonial times, giving rise to the Assam Agitation of 1979.

Assam Legislative Council (1912–1920): The administrative unit was reverted to a Chief Commissioner's

Province (Assam plus Sylhet), with a Legislative Council added. The Council had 25 members, of which the

Chief Commissioner and 13 nominated members formed the bulk. The other members were elected by local

public bodies like municipalities, local boards, landholders, tea planters and Muslims.

As Assam got sucked into the Non-Cooperation Movement, the Assam Association slowly transformed itself

into the Assam Pradesh Congress Committee (with 5 seats in AICC) in 1920–21.

Dyarchy (1921–1937): Under the Government of India Act 1919 the Assam Legislative Council membership

was increased to 53, of which 33 were elected by special constituencies. The powers of the Council were

increased too; but in effect, the official group, consisting of the Europeans, the nominated members etc. had

the most influence.

Assam Legislative Assembly (1937–1947): Under the Government of India Act 1935, the Council was

expanded into an Assembly of 108 members, with even more powers. The period saw the sudden rise

of Gopinath Bordoloi and Muhammed Saadulah and their tussle for power and influence.

Post-colonial Assam[edit]

In 1979, Assam flared into Assam Agitation (or Assam Movement) a popular movement against illegal

immigration. The movement, led AASU and AAGSP, set an agitational program to compel the government to

identify and expel illegal immigrants and prevent new immigration. The agitational programs were largely non-

violent, but there were incidents of acute violence, like the Nellie massacre where over 3000 Muslim

immigrants were massacred by AASU activists in Nagaon district. It ended in 1985 following the Assam

Accord that was signed by the agitation leaders and the Government of India. The agitation leaders formed a

political party, Asom Gana Parishad, which came to power in the state of Assam in the Assembly elections of

1985.

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In 2012 violent riots broke out]] between indigenous people and immigrant Muslims from Bangladesh, resulting

in more than 85 deaths and displacement of 400,000 people.[16]

See also[edit]

Timeline of Assam History

History of People of Assam

History of Assamese literature

Notes[edit]

1. Jump up^ The Megalithic cite at Marakdola in the Khasi Hills were dated to 1296+/-100 BCE (Rao, S. N,

(Singh 1991:120))

2. Jump up^ "...the temple of the goddess Tameshwari (Dikkaravasini) is now located at modern Sadiya

about 100 miles to the northeast of Sibsagar" (Sircar 1990, pp. 63–64).

3. Jump up^ "(I)t is significant that like the kings of the Bhauma-Naraka family they also claim descent from

Naraka or Bhagadatta, and this descent is acknowledged outside also outside their own kingdom when the

Pashupatinath temple inscription of Nepal described Rajyamati, the daughter of Sri Harsha of the family of

Salasthambha as bhagadatta-raja-kulaja.(Sharma 1978, p. xxxiv)

4. Jump up^ (Kamarupa) was reorganized as a new state. 'Kamata' by name with Kamatapur as capital. The

exact time when the change was made is uncertain. But possibly it had been made by Sandhya (c1250-

1270) as a safeguard against mounting dangers from the east and the west. Its control on the eastern

regions beyond the Manah (Manas river) was lax." (Sarkar 1992, pp. 40-41)

5. Jump up^ (Sarkar 1992:46–47).

6. Jump up^ (Neog 1980, p. 46)

7. Jump up^ "In the Battle of Itakhuli in September 1682, the Ahom forces chased the defeated Mughals

nearly one hundred kilometers back to the Manas river. The Manas then became the Ahom-Mughal

boundary until the British occupation." (Richards 1995, p. 247)

8. Jump up^ "The Ahom statesmen and chroniclers wishfully looked forward to the Karatoya as their natural

western frontier. They also looked upon themselves as the heirs of the glory that was ancient Kamarupa by

right of conquest, and they long cherished infructuously their unfulfilled hopes of expanding up to that

frontier." (Guha 1983:24), and notes.

9. Jump up^ (Guha 1991:122)

10. Jump up^ (Baruah 1993, pp. 221-222)

11. Jump up^ Gait E.A. A History of Assam 2nd Edition 1926 Thackar, Spink & Co Calcutta page 286

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12. Jump up^ Barbaruah Hiteshwar Ahomar Din or A History of Assam under the Ahoms 1st Edition 1981

Assam Publication Board Guwahati page 327-328

13. Jump up^ Barua Gunaviram A History of Assam Fourth Edition 2008 Assam Publication Board page 126-

127

14. Jump up^ Bhuyan S.K. Tungkhungia Buranji or A History of Assam 1681-1826 A.D. Department of

Historical and Antiquarian studies in Assam, Guwahati 2nd Edition 1968 page 210-211

15. Jump up^ Gait E.A. A History of Assam 2nd Edition 1926 Thackar, Spink & Co Calcutta page 303-311

16. Jump up^ Assam riots: Of ghost towns and relief camps, 4 lakh people displaced

References[edit]

Baruah, S. L. (1993), Last Days of Ahom Monarchy, New Delhi

Borpujari, H. K., ed. (1990), The Comprehensive History of Assam : from the Pre-historic Times to the Twelfth

Century A.D., Guwahati

Choudhury, P. C. (1966), The History of Civilisation of the People of Assam to the Twelfth Century A.D.,

Guwahati

Gait, Edward A (1906), A History of Assam, Calcutta

Guha, Amalendu (1977), Planter-Raj to Swaraj, Delhi

Singh, Jai Prakash; Sengupta, Gautam, eds. (1991), Archeology of North-Eastern India, New Delhi: Har-Anand

Publications

Sarkar, J. N. (1992), "Chapter II The Turko-Afghan Invasions", in Barpujari, H. K., The Comprehensive History of

Assam 2, Guwahati: Assam Publication Board, pp. 35–48

Lahiri, Nayanjot (1984). "The Pre-Ahom Roots of Medieval Assam". Social Scientist (Social Scientist) 12 (6): 60–

69. Retrieved December 25, 2012.

Neog, M (1980), Early History of the Vaisnava Faith and Movement in Assam, Delhi: Motilal Banarasidass

Richards, John F. (1995). The Mughal Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521566037.

Retrieved January 26, 2013.

Guha, Amalendu (December 1983), "The Ahom Political System: An Enquiry into the State Formation Process in

Medieval Assam (1228-1714)", Social Scientist 11 (12): 3–34, doi:10.2307/3516963,JSTOR 3516963

Guha, Amalendu (1991), Medieval and Early Colonial Assam, Calcutta: K P Bagchi