Saharanpur is a city and a municipal corporation in Uttar Pradesh, India. It is also the administrative headquarters of Saharanpur district.
Saharanpur city's name was given after the Saint Shah Haroon Chishti.
Saharanpur is declared as one among the 100 Smart Cities by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs as a part of Smart Cities Mission of the Government of India.
Historical
Medieval period
During the reign of
Iltutmish (r 1211–1236), the region became a part of the
Delhi Sultanate. At that time, most of the area remained covered with forests and marshlands, through which the Paondhoi, Dhamola, and Ganda Nala rivers flowed. The climate was humid and malaria outbreaks were common. Muhammad bin Tughluq, the Sultan of Delhi (1325–1351), undertook a campaign in the northern
doab to crush the rebellion of the
Siwalik Hills kings in 1340, when according to local tradition he learned of the presence of a
sufi saint on the banks of the Paondhoi River. After visiting the sage, he ordered that henceforth this region would be known as 'Shah-Haroonpur', after the Sufi Saint
Shah Haroon Chishti.
[ History The Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 21, p. 369. 1909.] The simple but well-preserved tomb of this saint is situated in the oldest quarter of Saharanpur city, between the Mali Gate/Bazar Dinanath and Halwai Hatta. By the end of the 14th century, the power of the Sultanate had declined and it was attacked by
Timur the Lame (1336–1405) of Central Asia. Timur had marched through the Saharanpur region in 1399 to sack Delhi and people of the region fought his army unsuccessfully. A weakened Sultanate was later conquered by the Central Asian Mogul king
Babur (1483–1531).
Mughal period
In the 16th century,
Babur, a
Timurid dynasty descendant of
Timur and Genghis Khan from
Fergana Valley (modern-day
Uzbekistan), invaded across the
Khyber Pass and founded the
Mughal Empire, covering India, along with modern-day
Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Bangladesh[ The Islamic World to 1600: Rise of the Islamic Empires (The Mughal Empire) ] The Mughals were descended from Persianised Central Asian
Turkic people (with significant
Mongol admixture).
During the Mughal Empire, Akbar (1542–1605), Saharanpur became an administrative unit under the Province of Delhi. Akbar bestowed the feudal jagir of Saharanpur to the ,Raja Sah Ranveer Singh, an Aggarwal Jain who laid the foundations of the present-day city on the site of an army cantonment. The nearest settlements at that time were Shekhpura and Malhipur. Saharanpur was a walled city, with four gates: the Sarai Gate, the Mali Gate, the Buria Gate, and the Lakhi Gate. The city was divided into the neighbourhoods named Nakhasa Bazar, Shah Behlol, Rani Bazar and Lakhi Gate. The ruins of Shah Ran Veer Singh's old fort can still be seen in the Chaudharian locality of Saharanpur, not far from the better known 'Bada-Imam-bada'. He also built a large Jain temple in Muhallah/Toli Chaundhariyan,[Madhu Jain, O. C. Handa, and Omacanda Handa, Wood Handicraft: A Study of Its Origin and Development in Saharanpur, Indus Publishing (2000), pp. 22–24. ] it is now known as the 'Digamber-Jain Panchayati Mandir'.
The Sayyids and Rohillas
Mughal emperors
Akbar and later
Shah Jahan (1592–1666) bestowed the administrative
pargana of Sarwat on Muslim
Sayyid families. In 1633, one of them founded a city and named it and the surrounding region
Muzaffarnagar, in honour of his father, Sayyid Muzaffar Ali Khan. The Sayyids ruled the area until the 1739 invasion by
Nadir Shah. After his departure, anarchy prevailed across the entire
doab with the region ruled in succession by Jats. Taking advantage of this anarchy, the
Rohillas took control of the entire trans-Gangetic region.
Ahmad Shah Durrani, the Afghanistan ruler who invaded Northwestern and Northern India in the 1750s, conferred the territory of Saharanpur as Jagir on Rohilla chief Najaf Khan, who assumed the title of Nawab Najib ad-Dawlah and took up residence in Saharanpur in 1754. He made Gaunsgarh his capital and tried to strengthen his position against Maratha Empire attacks by entering an alliance with the Hindu Gurjar chieftain Manohar Singh. In 1759, Najeeb-ud-Daula issued a Deed of Agreement handing over 550 villages to Manohar Singh, who became the Raja of Landhaura.
Maratha period
In 1757, the Maratha army captured the Saharanpur region, which resulted in Najeeb-ud-Daula losing control of Saharanpur to the Maratha rulers
Raghunathrao and
Malharao Holkar. The conflict between Rohillas and Marathas came to an end on 18December 1788 with the arrest of
Ghulam Kadir, the grandson of Najeeb-ud-Daula, who was defeated by the Maratha general
Mahadaji Shinde. The most significant contribution of Nawab Ghulam Qadir to Saharanpur city is the Nawab Ganj area and the Ahmedabadi fortress therein, which still stands. The death of Ghulam Qadir put an end to the Rohilla administration in Saharanpur and it became the northernmost district of the Maratha Empire. Ghani Bahadur Banda was appointed its first Maratha governor. The Maratha Regime saw the construction of the Bhuteshwar Temple and Bagheshwar Temple in Saharanpur city. In 1803, following the Second Anglo-Maratha War, when the British East India Company defeated the Maratha Empire, Saharanpur came under British suzerainty.
British colonial period (1803–1947 AD)
Saharanpur was the home to the first armed rebellion against British rule in
Uttar Pradesh. In 1813 there was mass revolt by the
Hindu Gujjars of Saharanpur against British rule, but it was quickly suppressed. In 1824. Raja Kunja Singh, formerly the
taluqdar of Kunja near
Roorkee, led an armed revolt against East India Company rule and established a quasi-independent state; however, after fierce battle the rebellion was quashed. It was found later by British authorities that the
Gujjars of surrounding districts were about to come to the aid of Kunja Singh, but by then he had been defeated.
[Majumdar, R. C. (1971). History of the Freedom Movement in India: Volume I. Firma KL Mukhopadhyay. p. 108.]
When India rebelled in 1857 against the foreign Company's occupation, now referred to as the First War of Indian Independence, the Saharanpur and the present-day Muzaffarnagar Districts were part of that uprising. The centre of freedom fighters' operations was Shamli, a small town in the Muzaffarnagar region which was liberated for some time. After the uprising failed, British retribution was severe. Death and destruction was particularly directed against the Muslims of the region, whom the British considered as the main instigators of the rebellion (even though Hindu Gurjars were the ones who had led the revolt ).[Stokes, E. (1969). " Rural Revolt in the Great Rebellion of 1857 in India: A Study of the Saharanpur and Muzaffarnagar Districts". The Historical Journal, 12(4), 606–627.] When social reconstruction started, the cultural and political history of Muslims began to revolve around Deoband and Aligarh. Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi and Rashid Ahmad Gangohi, both proponents of the reformer Shah Waliullah's ideology for social and political rejuvenation, established a school in Deoband in 1867. It found popularity and global recognition as the Darul Uloom Deoband. Its founders' mission was twofold: to raise and spread a team of scholars able to awaken the religious and social consciousness of Muslims through peaceful methods and to make efforts, through them, to educate Muslims in their faith and culture; and to bring about a feeling of nationalism and national unity by promoting the concept of Hindu-Muslim unity and a united India. Muslim scholars in the city of Saharanpur were active supporters of this ideology and went on to establish the Mazahir Uloom theological seminary six months later.
Geography and climate
Saharanpur is located at , about south-southeast of
Chandigarh, north-northeast of
Delhi, north-northeast of
Shamli and about south-west of
Dehradun. It has an average elevation of . Saharanpur is a part of a geographical
doab region. Saharanpur district joins four states together
Himachal Pradesh,
Uttar Pradesh,
Uttarakhand and
Haryana.
Demographics
According to the 2011 Indian census, Saharanpur had a population of 705,478, 12.5% of whom were under the age of six, living in 129,856 households within the municipal corporation limits.
The city is spread over an area of and with a population density of , is the eleventh most populous city in Uttar Pradesh.
Saharanpur had a population of 455,754 in 2001 and 374,945 in 1991.
constitute of 52.7% of the total population while constitute of 47.3% of the total population and thus, the city has a sex ratio of 891 females for every 1,000 males. The city has an average literacy rate of 76.32%. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes account for 14.2% and 0.1% of the population respectively. There are 233,196 people, constituting about 33% of the total population, who live in slums in the city.
Roughly half of the city's population are , who form a slight majority, while constitute about 45 per cent of the total population. and are also present in smaller numbers.
The most widely spoken language in Saharanpur is Hindi language, which along with Urdu language is the official language of Uttar Pradesh. There are significant numbers of Urdu and Punjabi language speakers, while Haryanvi is also spoken, as the district shares a border with Haryana. The standard dialect of Hindi spoken is the Kauravi dialect.
Government and politics
Saharanpur city is governed by Saharanpur Municipal Corporation, erstwhile municipal council.
The city is divided into 4 zones and 70 wards,
represented by 70
who were elected by municipal or local elections in 2023.
The mayor of the city is Ajay Kumar of the Bharatiya Janata Party.
The municipal commissioner is Shipu Giri.
The city is also part of the Saharanpur Lok Sabha constituency, which elected Imran Masood from the Indian National Congress in 2024 as the Member of Parliament, and part of the Saharanpur Assembly constituency that elected Ashu Malik from the Samajwadi Party in 2022 as the MLA.
Civic utilities
There is only one
Sewage treatment located in Saharanpur,
while most of the waste water is discharged into the
Hindon River river, further polluting it.
Culture
Places of interest
Company Garden
The Saharanpur Botanical Gardens, known as the Company Garden and once the preserve of British East India Company, is one of the oldest existing gardens in India, dating to before 1750. Then named Farahat-Bakhsh, it was originally a pleasure ground set out by a local chief, Intazam ud-ullah. In 1817, it was acquired by the British East India Company
[ Sharad Singh Negi, Biodiversity and its conservation in India 2nd revised ed. New Delhi, Indus Publishing (2008) ] and placed under the authority of the District
Surgeon. Joseph Dalton Hooker says of this Botanical Garden that "
Amongst its greatest triumphs may be considered the introduction of the tea-plant from China, a fact I allude to, as many of my English readers may not be aware that the establishment of the tea-trade in the Himalaya and Assam is almost entirely the work of the superintendents of the gardens of Calcutta and Seharunpore."
["Joseph Dalton Hooker, Himalayan Journals, or Notes of a Naturalist ..., Kew (1854), vol. I, p. 5.]
In 1887, when the Botanical Survey of India was set up to reform the country's botany, Saharanpur became the centre for the survey of the northern Indian flora. The Garden is seen historically as being second only to the Calcutta Gardens for its contribution to science and economy in India. Under private auspices today, it is full of greenery and has many different kinds of plants and flowers.
Shakumbari Devi Temple
Siddhpeeth Shri Shakumbhari Devi Temple is an important and ancient Hindu temple. It is situated in the Shivalik hills in Behat tehsil, 40 km from Saharanpur in Uttar Pradesh.
It is one of the most visited pilgrimage centres in India. Every year lakhs of visitors visit the temple. Shakumbhari devi is a famous
Shakta pitha (shrine) of maa Durga.
Wood Carving City
Saharanpur, known as the "Wood Carving City," is a cultural and artistic hub in India noted for its hand-carved wooden artefacts.
Archaeological site Hulas
Situated about 40 km south of Saharanpur is an archaeological site yielding evidence of late Harappan settlement dating back to 2000 BC. It is one of the few significant Harappan sites in Western Uttar Pradesh besides
Alamgirpur (Meerut district) and Bargaon (also in Saharanpur district).
Transport
Two major National Highways pass through Saharanpur – NH 709B and NH 344. The NH 709B originates in Saharanpur and connects it to
Delhi via
Shamli and
Baghpat,
while the NH 344 connects Saharanpur with
Ambala,
Yamunanagar and
Roorkee and further connected to Panchkula in Haryana and Haridwar and Dehradun in Uttarakhand. Uttar Pradesh State Highway 57, commonly known as Delhi-Yamunotri highway, also passes through the city.
The Delhi–Saharanpur–Dehradun Expressway has also been proposed, which will be ready by March 2024.
Shamli- Ambala six lane expressway which is expected to be completed by 2025 will connect Gangoh Block of the district directly to Ambala.
Saharanpur Junction is the primary railway station serving the city. The station is under the administrative control of Ambala railway division of the Northern Railways,[ Ambala Division map and history .] and is located at the junction of Moradabad–Ambala line, Delhi–Meerut–Saharanpur line and the Delhi–Shamli–Saharanpur line. Saharanpur was connected with rail lines when the Scinde, Punjab & Delhi Railway completed the ––– line in 1870 connecting (now in Pakistan) with . Another line connecting Saharanpur with Moradabad was completed in 1886.
The Shahdara–Saharanpur light railway connecting Shahdara in Delhi with Saharanpur was opened to traffic in 1907. The railway was built in narrow gauge and total length was . However, due to increasing losses, the railway was closed in 1970. It was later converted to broad gauge and was repopened in the late 1970s. Saharanpur falls on the route of the proposed Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor project.[ Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor ]
See also
-
Saharanpuri
-
Saharanpur district
-
Saharanpur (Lok Sabha constituency)
External links