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- Baro-Bhuyan abstract "The Baro-Bhuyans (spelled variously as Baro-Bhuinas etc.) were warrior chiefs and landlords (zamindars) in medieval Bengal and Assam who maintained a loosely independent confederacy. In times of aggression by external powers, they generally cooperated in defending and expelling the aggressor. In times of peace, they maintained their respective sovereignty. In the presence of a strong king, they offered their allegiance. In general, they were in control of a group of villages, called cakala, and the more powerful among them called themselves raja. Baro denotes the number twelve, but in general there were more than twelve chiefs or landlords, and the word baro meant many. Thus, Bhuyan-raj denoted individual Bhuyanship, whereas Baro-Bhuyan denoted temporary confederacies that they formed. In Bengal they carved the land of Bhati into twelve administrative units or Dwadas BanglaThe system of Baro-Bhuyan confederacy is a relic of the erstwhile Kamarupa kingdom, that covered all of Assam, North Bengal and large portions of Bangladesh. The \"parcelization\" of power, which was an effect of settling North Indian adventurers, became prominent during the 9th century reign of Balavarman III of the Mlechchha dynasty. Whereas the central Kamarupa kingdom fragmented, the system of small chieftains remained. In Bengal as in Assam, the Baro-Bhuyans are found in regions within the traditional boundaries of the Kamarupa kingdom.In Assam, the Baro-Bhuyans occupied the region west of the Kachari kingdom in the south bank of the Brahmaputra river, and west of the Sutiya kingdom in the north bank. They were instrumental in defending against aggressors from Bengal, especially in defeating the remnant of Alauddin Husain Shah's administration after 1498. They also resisted the emergence of the Koch dynasty but failed. Subsequently, they were squeezed between the Kachari kingdom and the Kamata kingdom in the south bank and were slowly overpowered by the expanding Ahom kingdom in the north. In Bengal, the Kingdom of Chandradvipa or Barisal was ruled by the royal Basu family, the last of which being Raja Rabindra Narayan Bose, who later fled to Kolkata during the partition of Bengal, as their position had already been reduced to that of a zamindar. The royal family thus, still lives in Kolkata.These landlords did not belong to any particular ethnicity, religion or caste.".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageExternalLink index.php?title=Bara-Bhuiyans,_The.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageID "9398426".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageLength "12546".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageOutDegree "76".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageRevisionID "700152707".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Ahom_kingdom.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Ain-i-Akbari.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Akbarnama.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Alauddin_Husain_Shah.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Assam.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Baharistan-i-Ghaibi.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Banglapedia.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Barisal.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Barisal_Division.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Bhati_(region).
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Bhawal_Estate.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Biswa_Singha.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Bordowa.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Brahmaputra_River.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Assam.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Bangladesh.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_West_Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Rulers_of_Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Chandradwip.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Dhaka_District.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Fazl_Ghazi.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Firuz_Shah_Tughlaq.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Ganges.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Gauḍa_(region).
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Guwahati.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Ichamati_River.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Isa_Khan.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Islam_Khan_I.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Jahangir.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Jessore_District.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Kachari_Kingdom.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Kamarupa.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Kamata_Kingdom.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Kannauj.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Karrani_dynasty.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Khen_dynasty.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Koch_dynasty.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Kolkata.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Meghna_River.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Mlechchha_dynasty.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Mughal_Empire.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Mughal_emperors.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Mymensingh.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Mymensingh_District.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Pabna_District.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Sankardev.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Shamsuddin_Ilyas_Shah.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Society_of_Jesus.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Sonargaon.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Suhungmung.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Sukaphaa.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Sulaiman_Khan_Karrani.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Susenghphaa.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Sutiya_Kingdom.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Sylhet.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Taj_Khan_Karrani.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Tripura.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLink Zamindar.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bara Bhuiyans".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Baro Bhuyan".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Baro-Bhuyan Confederacy".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Baro-Bhuyan".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Baro-Bhuyans".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bhuyan chieftains".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageWikiLinkText "allies".
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:History_of_Assam.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:History_of_Bangladesh.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Baro-Bhuyan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Baro-Bhuyan subject Category:History_of_Assam.
- Baro-Bhuyan subject Category:History_of_Bangladesh.
- Baro-Bhuyan subject Category:History_of_Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan subject Category:History_of_West_Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan subject Category:Rulers_of_Bengal.
- Baro-Bhuyan hypernym Chiefs.
- Baro-Bhuyan type Person.
- Baro-Bhuyan comment "The Baro-Bhuyans (spelled variously as Baro-Bhuinas etc.) were warrior chiefs and landlords (zamindars) in medieval Bengal and Assam who maintained a loosely independent confederacy. In times of aggression by external powers, they generally cooperated in defending and expelling the aggressor. In times of peace, they maintained their respective sovereignty. In the presence of a strong king, they offered their allegiance.".
- Baro-Bhuyan label "Baro-Bhuyan".
- Baro-Bhuyan sameAs Q4862041.
- Baro-Bhuyan sameAs বারো_ভুঁইয়া.
- Baro-Bhuyan sameAs m.02877j3.
- Baro-Bhuyan sameAs Q4862041.
- Baro-Bhuyan wasDerivedFrom Baro-Bhuyan?oldid=700152707.
- Baro-Bhuyan isPrimaryTopicOf Baro-Bhuyan.