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Jagdispur

Jagdispur
subdistrict
Jagdispur is located in Bihar
Jagdispur
Jagdispur
Location in Bihar, India
Coordinates: 25°28′N 84°25′E / 25.467°N 84.417°E / 25.467; 84.417Coordinates: 25°28′N 84°25′E / 25.467°N 84.417°E / 25.467; 84.417
Country  India
State Bihar
District Bhojpur
Elevation 53 m (174 ft)
Population (2011)
 • Total 32,447
Languages
 • Official Hindi, Bhojpuri
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
PIN 802 158
Telephone code 916181
ISO 3166 code IN-BR
Website jagdispur.com

Jagdispur (Commonly spelled: Jagdishpur, Hindi: जगदीशपुर) is a subdivision of the district Bhojpur of the state of Bihar in eastern India. Having a golden historical background, this great historical place is related to the Babu Veer Kunwar Singh, the great freedom fighter of 1857. The sub-division occupies an area of 2,474 km2 (955 sq mi) and has a population of 212541 (as of 2001).

Jagdishpur has a very long historical background in the freedom movement of India. The King who ruled here was "Veer Kunwar Singh"(1856–1858), born in 1777, succeeded to throne in 1826, village "Dulaur" was most loveable village of Veer Kunwar Singh. This throne comprised two praganas and several Tulkas of Sahabad District. The total annual income of the estate was about rupees six lakhs. But several factors, including family litigations, extravagant living, generosity beyond his means and, above all, the machinations of his own staff with unscrupulous creditors, combined to put the estate under ruinous debts which amounted to rupees twenty lakhs on the eve of the Rising of 1857. He played a prominent part in the events of 1857/1858, he fought in the battle of Kanpur. Subsequently, he arrived in Lucknow, where the King of Awadh awarded him a robe of honour and a farman for the area comprising the Azamgarh district. He decided in April 1858 to return to his home district. Fighting a careful rearguard action, he crossed the Ganges at Sheopur Ghat, and re-entered Jagdishpur on 22 April 1858. During his fight when he was returning, he was injured by a bullet in his right hand which he had to cut. Thus he lost his right hand during his fight with Britishers. On 23 April 1858, he conquered his fort and hoisted the flag of India at the place of the flag of Britain.

A man of generous disposition, Kunwar Singh gave numerous grants to individuals and for the maintenance of shrines, including a Muslim shrine in the Patna City. On the establishment of the Arrah Zilla School in 1846, he not only donated the land for the building but also gave a cash donation of rupees one hundred. He got a Shiva temple and a tank constructed at Jagdishpur. He was an admirer and a patron of men well versed in martial sports, such as riding, shooting, archery etc. He invited such experts to Jagdishpur and retained them for long periods to train his men in those arts. He married the daughter of Raja Fateh Narain Singh of Deo, a wealthy zamindar of Gaya district, and had issue.


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