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Masthangor oldest city of Bngladesh in bogra





In the light of these preliminaries, now let us see the importance of Pundranagara i.e. 
Mahasthan as a historic city and an emporium of inland trade in the history of North 
Bengal. Pundranagara which is considered  as a metropolitan city of North Bengal in 
ancient and medieval times stands on the western bank of the river Karatoya. This river 
has now been reduced to an insignificant stream, even in some places it has silted up. But 
in the thirteenth century A.D., as stated by Minhaj Siraj, it was as wide as three times of 
the Ganges.
 This river, as it seems, springing from the Himalayan mountain on the 
furthest north of the Bhutan border passed through the districts of Darjeeling and 
Jalpaiguri, and touching the districts of Dinajpur, Rangpur, Bogra and Pabna it fell in to 
the Ganges i.e. Padma as shown in the map of Von Den Brooke.
 Passing through the 
various channels and under the different names, the Karatoya threw her water in the Bay 
of Bengal and established her connection with the sea port of Chittagong. In the Karatoya 
Mahatmya it is stated that from quite ancient time in the Push Narayanijug, the people of 
Hindu extraction used to come to have bath for the purification of their sins in the bank of 
Karatoya where now Mahasthan stands.
ix[9]
 In the Periplus of the Erythraen sea of about 
the first century A.D. and the Geography of Plotemy of about the second century A.D. 
there comes a reference to the province of 'Kirada’.
 This is possibly the places on 
either side of the river Karatoya as it is presumed that 'kirada' is a Greek version of the 
river Karatoya. On the basis of this presumption the river Karatoya can be traced to a 
long antiquity. In the seventh century A.D.  Hiuen Tsang, the Chinese pilgrim, had to 
cross a river ka-lo-tu i.e. Karatoya while reaching Kampura from Pundravardhana".
The river Bagmati
 which according to Muslim chronicles was three times larger than 
the Ganges and has been identified with the Karatoya flew close by the eastern side of 
Mahasthan. The inscriptional and literary sources, if analysed, bear witness to this fact 
that the Karatoya had always been a navigable river either carrying the merchandise-ships 
or the war flotilla