SUNDARBAN HISTORY
During the Mughal
period, local kings leased the forests of the Sundarbans to residents.
The legal status of the forests underwent a series of changes,
including the distinction of being the first mangrove forest in the world to be brought under scientific management. The area was mapped by the Surveyor General as early as 1764 following soon after proprietary rights were obtained from the Mughal Emperor, Alamgir II, by the East India Company in 1757. Systematic management of this forest tract started in the 1860s after the establishment of a Forest Department in the Province of Bengal, in India.
The first Forest Management Division to have jurisdiction over the
Sundarbans was established in 1869. The Sundarbans was declared a
reserved forest in 1875-76, under the Forest Act, 1865 (Act VIII of
1865). The first management plan was written for the period 1893-98.[3][4] In 1875 a large portion of the mangrove forests was declared as reserved
forests under the Forest Act, 1865 (Act VIII of 1865). The remaining
portions of forests was declared as reserve forest the following year
and the forest, which was so far was administered by the civil
administration district, was placed under the control of the Forest
Department. A Forest Division, which is the basic forest management and
administration unit, was created in 1879 with the headquarter in Khulna.
In 1911, it was described as a tract of waste country which had never been surveyed, nor had the censusHugli to the mouth of the Meghna and was bordered inland by the three settled districts of the 24 Parganas, Khulna and Backergunje. The total area (including water) was estimated at 6,526 square miles (16,902 km2). It was a water-logged jungle, in which tigers and other wild beasts abounded. Attempts at reclamation had not been very successful. The characteristic tree was the sundari (Heritiera littoralis),
from which the name of the tract had probably been derived. It yields a
hard wood, used for building, and for making boats, furniture, etc. The
Sundarbans were everywhere intersected by river channels and creeks,
some of which afforded water communication between Calcutta and the Brahmaputra Valley, both for steamers and for native boats been extended to it. It then stretched for about 165 miles (266 km) from the mouth of the
RAJSHAHI.


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