Official Name: | Bagha |
Native Name: | বাঘা |
Settlement Type: | Upazila |
Coordinates: | 24°N 88°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Bangladesh |
Subdivision Type1: | Division |
Subdivision Type2: | District |
Subdivision Name1: | Rajshahi |
Subdivision Name2: | Rajshahi |
Leader Title: | MP (Rajshahi-6) |
Leader Name: | Shahriar Alam |
Leader Title1: | Upazila Chairman |
Leader Name1: | Muhammad Layeb Uddin Lavlu |
Area Total Km2: | 185.16 |
Population Total: | 184183 |
Population As Of: | 2011 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Established Title1: | Thana |
Established Date1: | 23 March 1983 |
Established Title2: | Upazila |
Established Date2: | 14 September 1983 |
Timezone: | BST |
Utc Offset: | +6 |
Bagha (Bengali: [[:bn:বাঘা উপজেলা|বাঘা]]) is an upazila of the Rajshahi District, located in Bangladesh's Rajshahi Division.[1]
Bagha is located at 24.1917°N 88.8333°W. It has 46,711 households and total area 185.16 km2.
Bagha Upazila is bounded by Charghat Upazila and Bagatipara Upazila, the latter in Natore District, on the north, Lalpur and Bagatipara Upazilas, both in Natore District, on the east, Daulatpur Upazila in Kushtia District, on the south and Jalangi CD Block, in Murshidabad district, West Bengal, India, on the west.[2]
Alaypur village of Bagha was the headquarters of Laskar Khan Jaigirdar during the sixteenth century. Hazrat Shah Doulah settled at Bagha and started preaching Islam after being granted 42 parganas by the rulers.[3] He also established a famous madrasa here.[1] Bagha thana of present-day Rajshahi district was a thriving centre of learning in the early Muslim period. The place became famous after Shah Muazzam Danishmand (Maulana Shah Daula) from Baghdad settled there during the reign of the Sultan of Bengal Nasiruddin Nasrat Shah (1519–32) and built his khanqah there. An inscription table of the time of Sultan Nusrat Shah was discovered there that records the construction of a Jam’i mosque in 930 A.H. (1523-24 A.D.) One Abdul Latif visited the Bagha madrasah in 1609. There he met an elderly Sufi named Hawadah Main (Maulana Hamid Danishmand) son of Maulana Shah Daula, who was running a madrasah and a khanqah in a peaceful environment. Probably the madrasah was established during the reign of Nusrat Shah.[4]
During the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971, temporary camps were founded by the Pakistan Army in places such as Narayanpur, Bagha, Pakuria, Arani, Alaipur and Chawkrajapur and many brawls took place in these camps against the 400 Bengali freedom fighters of Bagha. 7 of these freedom fighters has been martyr.[1]
According to the 2011 Bangladesh census, Bagha Upazila had 46,711 households and a population of 184,183. 35,215 (19.12%) were under 10 years of age. Bagha had a literacy rate (age 7 and over) of 49.65%, compared to the national average of 51.8%, and a sex ratio of 1002 females per 1000 males. 44,173 (23.98%) lived in urban areas.[5] [6]
Bagha Upazila is divided into two Municipal Corporations and seven Union Parishads.
Municipal Corporations:
Union Parishads:
The union parishads are subdivided into 99 mauzas and 78 villages.[5]
01 | Muhammad Abdul Aziz | 15/8/1985 |
02 | Muhammad Bayezul Islam Khan | 18/2/1990 |
03 | Muhammad Bayezul Islam Khan | 23/2/2009 |
04 | Muhammad Layeb Uddin Labhlu | Present |
Bagha Upazila is home to 343 mosques, most notably the ancient Bagha Mosque complex which also contains the mazar (mausoleum) of Shah Dawlah, a key figure who propagated Islam in the region. The mazar of Dilal Bukhari is in Alaipur. The indigo factory (nilkuthi) at Mirganj is a relic of the colonial period and is currently used as a silk factory.[1] Bagha Museum is also a tourist spot of Bagha Upazila.
There a number of madrasas in Bagha Upazila which provide educational services to the local community. Some of these include:[7]
Darul Uloom Dakhil Madrasa | Muhammad Yunus Ali | |
Parsaota Alim Madrasa | Muhammad Bazlul Karim | |
Bagha Fazil Madrasa | Muhammad Abdul Ghafur Miah | |
Bausha Hedatipara Dakhil Madrasa | Muhammad Abdur Rashid | |
Arani Dakhil Madrasa | Muhammad Abu Hanif | |
Arani Chakarpara Dakhil Madrasa | Muhammad Shamimuzzaman | |
Sultanpur Gorasthan Dakhil Madrasa | Muhammad Abdul Mannaf | |
Jot Qadirpur Dakhil Madrasa | Mosammat Rafiyah Sultanah | |
Manigram Dakhil Madrasa | Muhammad Tahurul Islam |