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Madarganj Upazila is located on the east bank of the Jamuna River, 34 km west of the Jamalpur district headquarters. Madarganj Upazila is situated between 24°47' to 24°59' north latitude and 89°40' to 89°50' east longitude, covering an area of 225.39 square kilometers.
Nearest city to Jamalpur is Varanasi where good students go for further studies as educational infrastructure in Jamalpur is good. Near to Jamalpur, Aharura is a tourist place where is a major movie shooting site. It is connected to Jamalpur through the roads NH-7 and NH-2.
Jabalpur is one of the most important tourist destinations in Madhya Pradesh and Central India, known for the famous Marble Rocks, various picturesque ghats, waterfalls and gorges of the Narmada river, and some noteworthy medieval historical monuments. One of the most unexplored yet gobally significant aspects of the region is its extensive ...
Munger, along with Jamalpur are the major industrial cities in Bihar. [13] Munger is also one of the most prosperous cities in Bihar with a per capita income of INR 42,793 in FY 2020-21. [14] Indian Railways operates of Asia's largest and oldest railway workshops at Jamalpur. This was set up by the British Raj in 1862. [15]
Jamalpur is a part of Munger-Jamalpur twin cities.It is main railhead for reaching Munger city. Jamalpur is best known for the Jamalpur Locomotive Workshop, which employs more than 25,000 people at its training institution, The Indian Railways Institute of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. Annual turnover is Rs. 10.56 billion with 111,485 ...
The mosque is located to south-west of Dastur Khan's Mosque near Jamalpur gate. It was built by Haibat Khan (also known as Masti Khan), one of Ahmed Shah I's nobles and paternal uncle, almost entirely of Hindu-Jain temple material. Though of little beauty, this mosque is one of the earliest attempts to combine Islamic and Hindu elements of ...
During the Mughal Empire, Sheikh Enayetullah, the Zamindar of the Jamalpur Pargana, had a garden house on this property and later added a palace, which he called Rangmahal. [5] He was buried on the northeast corner of the palace yard but his gravesite was ruined at the beginning of the 20th century.
After the establishment of the college, Alhaj Ashik Mahmud Talukdar, a well-known child of Madarganj, donated 40,000 rupees and in 1947, Jamalpur College was renamed Ashik Mahmud College. In 1979, by issuing a notification, the nationalization of a college in each subdivision town was also nationalized under that year.