Cauldron of Assam

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If there is one "melting pot" in the Himalayan region, it is the north-eastern region of India, particularly the "mother state" of Assam. Here, six different demographic strands are identifiable. The indigenous tribes, whose origins are lost in time. The Ahom, who invaded the area from the southeast in 1228 and ruled for nearly 600 years. The caste Hindus who arrived two or three centuries later from today´s Bengal, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. The remnants of Muslim contingents of Mughal power. East Bengalis, whose influx began with the British occupation of 1826 and continues to this day. The tea-garden tribal labour with origins In Bihar, Bengal, Orissa and Madhya Pradesh. And lastly, migrant Nepalis and others from as far afield as Rajasthan, attracted by economic opportunities of the Indian Northeast.

About a million people inhabited the northeastern region as a whole when the British annexed Assam in 1826. At the turn of the century, the number was up to about 3.3 million and the region as a whole still sparsely populated. The last 90 years, however, has seen a phenomenal jump in population — to more than 31 million today.

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