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HAS—HAW

76 shops on both sides,

the population is There

banians, and other dealers.

is

1,500, consisting of agriculturists,

a Government school attended by

30 boys.

HASANPUR— Par^a^a

SvLTASvvn—TahsU Sultanpuk- District SuLor Hasanpur Bandhua lies four miles west of Sultanpur, a little to'the north of the Lucknow road, in lat. 26°16' north, long. 82°3' east. It is the residence of the Hasanpur chiefs, by the most famous of whom, Hasan Khan, it was founded in the reign of Sher Shah. TANPUR.

—Hasanpur

It stands on the site of a former village, which probably derived its name from its proximity on the north to one of the deep ravines connected with the Gumti. The present town bears a poor and dilapidated appearance, but its prosperity is seemingly on the increase, for thirty years ago its population numbered only 600, whereas it now amounts to 4,.338. A Government school has been established in it within the last few years, and this is the only public building it contains.

Bandhua is the name of a village adjoining Hasanpur, notable for containing the tomb, and having been the seat, of Baba Sahaj Ram, a famous Nanak Shahi faqir. The Sangat or shrine is tended by a mahant, who has a large establishment of disciples living upon the revenue drawn from one The phul vessels, the manufacture of Bandhua, or two endowed villages. are much in request elsewhere.

HATHAURA*

Pargana

—(2,618 north-west from

SANDtLA

Taksil

—District

SandYla.

Har-

A

inhabitants). Chamar village of 511 mud houses, ten miles Sandila, in pargana Sandila, district Hardoi. Hathaura

DOI.

was founded a hundred years ago by the great-grandfather of Bharath Singh, the Bais Taluqdar of Atw^a.

The bazar contains between 50

or 60 petty shops. There is a daily market.

HAWELI OXJDHt Pargana— Tahsil Fyzabad—District

Fyzabad. Pargana Haweli Oudh, in the district of Fyzabad, takes its name from Oudh, the capital, and Haweli, the name generally used to indicate the

principal station of the chief revenue authorities of the Mughals. The pargana is bounded on the north and east by the river Gogra, on the

south by the river Madha and parganas Pachhimr^th and Amsin, and on the west by pargana Mangalsi. In former days the revenue collections of the pargana used to be made at the Qila-i-Mub£rak (blessed fort), which was situated at Lachhmanghat, where now stands the recently built temple of Jugla Saran. In the days of Mansfir Ali Khan (A.D 1739-54) they used to be made at Rath Haweli, and in the time of the Bahfi Begam at or near the Dilkusha, both of which latter places are in the city of Fyzabad.

The pargana differs from all others in the district, inasmuch as there never were any of the usual tappa subdivisions. It contained in the king's time 329 townships. These were reduced under summary settlement to 242 in number, and they have now been further cut down to 181 demarcated villages, under the re-distribution of the revised settlement. By Mr. A. Harington, C.S., Assistant Commissioner. tBy Mr. P. Carnegy, Commissioner. •