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Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 6, p. 218.


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218


BAIRIA


Bairia.-Town in the District of Ballia, United Provinces, situated
in 25° 46' N. and 84° 29' E., 20 miles east of Ballia town, on the road
to Chapra in Bengal. Population (I90o), 8,635. The town is little
more than a conglomeration of mud-built houses, traversed from
east to west by one good street. It is administered under Act XX of
I856, with an income of about Rs. ,oo00. There is a considerable
export trade in sugar and coarse cotton cloth, which are manufactured
here, and the shoes made locally have some reputation in the surround-
ing Districts. Bairia contains a dispensary and a town school with
Ix6 pupils.
Baiswara.-The name given to several tracts of country in various
parts of the United Provinces, from the fact that they belong or have
belonged to the Bais Rajputs. The most important of these includes
a number of parganas (traditionally twenty-two) in the eastern half
of Unao District, the western half of Rae Bareli, and the extreme south
of Lucknow, with a total area of nearly 2,000 square miles. The Bais
Rajputs first became of importance here in the thirteenth century, when
two of them, named Abhai Chand and Nirbhe Chand (who are supposed
to have come from Mungi Patan in the Deccan), rescued the Gautam
Rani of Argal, who had been attacked by the Muhammadan governor
of Oudh. Nirbhe Chand died of his wounds, and the Raja of Argal
gave his daughter to Abhai Chand, who settled at Daundia Khera.
Tenth in descent from him was Tilok Chand, who lived about I400,
and extended the area held by the Bais to the limits described above.
Legends are numerous about Tilok Chand, who became the greatest
noble in Oudh, and opposed the Muhammadans, as did his immediate
successors. According to one account, he defeated the Chauhan Raja
of Mainpuri, who thereupon gave him a daughter to wife, though the
Bais were reckoned inferior to the Chauhans. In the eighteenth
century the bravery of the chiefs of Baiswara gained the admiration of
Saadat Khan, founder of the Lucknow dynasty. Under the Nawabs
Baiswara formed a separate administrative division, as described
above. The Baiswara Division formed by the British Government
after annexation consisted of Rae Bareli, Partabgarh, and Sultanpur,
the last two Districts having nothing to do with the real Baiswara. The
tract has given its name to a dialect of Eastern Hindi, which differs
very slightly from other dialects of that language. Its inhabitants still
bear a reputation for bravery. It was a Bais chieftain, Drigbijai Singh,
who saved the four survivors of the Cawnpore massacre from their
pursuers in I857.
[C. A. Elliott, Chronicles of Oonao, p. 66 et seq.]
Baitarani.-River of Bengal. Rising among the hills in the north-
west of Keonjhar State, Orissa, in 21° 28' N. and 85° 33' E., it flows
first in a south-westerly and then in an easterly direction, forming suc-



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