The link of today is- http://jalaun.nic.in/
            Jalaun
            is a city in Uttar
            Pradesh state in northern India. The town was formerly the residence of a
            Maratha governor, but never 
  the headquarters of the district,
            The HQ. of the District is 
  at Orai, a city on the 
  Kanpur-Jhansi NH25. 
   
    History
    
    In early times Jalaun seems to have 
  been the home of two Rajput clans, the Chandelas in the east and the 
  Kachwahas in the west. The town of Kalpi on the Yamuna was conquered by 
  the armies of Muhammad of Ghor in 1196. Early in the 14th century the 
  Bundelas occupied the greater part of Jalaun, and even succeeded in 
  holding the fortified post of Kalpi. That important possession was soon 
  recovered by the Delhi Sultanate, and passed under the way of the Mughal 
  Empire. Akbar's governors at Kalpi maintained a nominal authority over 
  the surrounding district, and the Bundela chiefs were in a state of 
  chronic revolt, which culminated in the war of independence under 
  Maharaja Chhatrasal. On the outbreak of his rebellion in 1671 he 
  occupied a large province to the south of the Yamuna. Setting out from 
  this base, and assisted by the Marathas, he conquered the whole of 
  Bundelkhand. On his death in 1732 he bequeathed one-third of his 
  dominions to his Maratha allies, who before long succeeded in annexing 
  the whole of Bundelkhand. Under Maratha rule the country was a prey to 
  constant anarchy and strife. To this period must be traced the origin of 
  the poverty and desolation which are still conspicuous throughout the 
  district. In 1806 Kalpi was made over to the British, and in 1840, on 
  the death of Nana Gobind Ras, his possessions lapsed to them also. 
  Various interchanges of territory took place, and in 1856 the boundaries 
  of the British district were substantially settled, with an area of 1477 
  square miles.
    
                    
  Jalaun was the scene of much violence during the Revolt of 1857. When 
  the news of the rising at Kanpur reached Kalpi, the men of the 53rd 
  Native Infantry deserted their officers, and in June the Jhansi rebels 
  reached the district, and began their murder of Europeans. It was not 
  until September 1858 that the rebels were finally defeated. In the later 
  19th century, the district suffered much from the invasive kans grass 
  (Saccharum spontaneum), owing to the spread of which many villages 
  were abandoned and their land thrown out of cultivation. The population 
  of the district was 399,726 in 1901, and the two largest towns are Kunch 
  and Kalpi (pop. 10,139 in 1901). The district was traversed by the line 
  of the Indian Midland railway from Jhansi to Kanpur. A small part of it 
  is watered by the Bethwa Canal. Grain, oil-seeds, cotton and ghee were 
  exported.
 
 
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