Fair facts about the name of Meherpur, lost much earlier than the goldfish in history. Understanding, understanding or analyzing this does not have any effect on the subject of self-satisfaction. There has been extensive writing for a long time, but the matter remains obscure.
There are two preeminent information about the name of Meherpur. One is the name of Meherpur named after the 16th century or for some time, in harmony with the name of one of the names of the Prophet, namely, Meher Ali. Secondly, Mihir and his daughter-in-law Khanna were living in this town. Meherpur is named after Mihir's name, and later it became an undergraduate name.
In the 2nd century AD, the famous and famous geographical map of Mr. Ptolemy, several small islands were found in the river basin of the Ganges. This small island was thought to be Kushtia, Chuadanga, Meherpur area. It is estimated that a group of people from different religions of Punda or Pod, from south bengal or from surrounding areas, settled in the hope of collecting cultivation or a large number of fish in the fertile islands of the Ganges or the largest zodiac. May
In the first half of the 2nd century and in the first half of the 4th century, nothing was known about the Samatata of East Bengal and the Gupta Kingdom in West Bengal or the Guptas during the Guptas in a few hundred tries about any significant history of this region. During the period of Samatata, Vanga and Gaur in Bangladesh, Meherpur region was once again ruled by Gauta and Samatata was once again ruled by Gaur. However, it is known that historians did not agree on the correct scope of these three states. Until the Christian 6th century, Meherpur was not directly under the direct rule of any king. During the reign of King Shashankar, during the reign of King Shashankar, Chinese traveler Hiuen Tsang traveled to Bangladesh to know that it was the state of Bengal (1) Kamarupa (2) flowering (3) Karna golden (4) Samatata and (5) copper script Five parts were divided. Meherpur region was estimated to have been included in the kingdom of King Shashanka in the seventh century.
There is also enough reason to speculate that Meherpur, which was within 70 kilometers of Shashanka's state capital, was under his direct rule. After the death of Shashanka, the kingdom of Gauda was scattered in an internal conflict and dispute. After the death of King Shashanka, perhaps in 642, Meharpur Kamarupa Raja Bhaskar was included in the kingdom of Burma. For almost a hundred years of Shashanka's death, there was extreme anarchy in Bengal. At that time, which monarchy had maintained their rule in any region, it is still completely covered with non-violence. Establishing the rule of the Pala dynasty of Buddhist religion in Bengal in the 1950s, it was estimated that Meherpur was under the rule of the Pala kingdom and the end of the Pala kingdom was in the region till the end of the tenth century AD.
During the reign of Laxman Sen, in 1204 AD, 120 people, from Bihar, on the way to Jharkhand, Ikhtiar Uddin Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khilji, a Turkish Muslim infinite brave commander, captured only 18 horsemen, with Lakhan Sen's capital, Nadia. Only 17 of them were able to come quickly with the cavalry of the great army behind Bakhtiyar. However, after forty years of capturing the Nadia of Bakhtiyar, it has been mentioned in the book "Tabakat-i-Nasiri" by Minhaj-us-Siraj that when only eighteen cavalry entered the city of Nadia, no one would think that they were a Turkic hawker. In fact, at that time, due to old age, due to old age, negligence in the princely state, and in the conspiracies and corruption of the nobles and the rajmahis, perhaps weaken the state structure. That is why Sen was not able to resist the Turkish invasion and the courage of Laxman Sen.
Khilji attacked the presence of the palace. At that time, the verdict was sitting on food after finishing all the tasks. When he got the news of a Muslim attack, he abandoned the sons, women, wealth, wealth, slaves and all others and fled in the boat through the inner gate. Bakhtiyar Khilji had taken possession of Nadia and went to Gaura. Although the conquest of Nadia in Bakhtiyar was the beginning of Muslim rule in this region, Muslim rule was not able to achieve any permanence at that time. After about fifty years of his conquest of Nadia, Murgis Uddin again took the river Nadia. The origins of Bengal's first Muslim rule lasted for nearly six hundred years.
In the first half of the thirteenth century, after the fall of the last independent ruler of Hinduism, Hindu Raja Laxman Sen, the rise of Muslim rule in the capital of Nadia, the development of Muslim rule all over Bengal. In the 561 years from the 1203 or 1204 AD to the British East Indies Company's Diwani, 76 sabadars, nazim, kings and nawabs ruled Bengal. Meherpur was involved in the rule of all of them. The eleven Subadar Gharis and Khilji Muslim sultans were nominated for this rule, but there were also twenty-six independent rulers, among them the rulers of the reign of Sher Shah. The remaining thirty-four Mughal emperors prefer. Among the five independent kings are Raja Ganesha, Jalal Uddin (Jadu), Shamsuddin Ahmed Shah. Almost all of them except Afghans, Turks, Iranians and Mughal dynasties, except for King Todar Mal and Raja Mansingh. Gaur's King Gias Uddin
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