Eidgaon (Bengali: ঈদগাঁও) is an upazila of Cox's Bazar District in the Division of Chittagong, Bangladesh. Combined with the adjoining unions of Chowfaldandi and Varuakhali, it forms the traditional region of Greater Eidgaon.

Eidgaon
ঈদগাঁও
Location of Eidgaon
Country Bangladesh
DivisionChittagong
DistrictCox's Bazar
Thana21 October 2019
Upazila26 July 2021
Government
 • MP (Cox's Bazar-3)Vacant
Area
 • Total
119.66 km2 (46.20 sq mi)
Population
 • Total
149,566
 • Density1,200/km2 (3,200/sq mi)
DemonymEidgaiya
Time zoneUTC+6 (BST)
Postal code
4702[2]
Area code0341[3]

Geography

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Eidgaon Upazila is bounded by Ramu Upazila to the east, Cox's Bazar Sadar Upazila to its south, Maheshkhali Upazila to its west, and Chakaria Upazila to its north. It has a total area of 119.66 square kilometres (46.20 sq mi).

History

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The present-day Eidgaon area of the upazila was formerly known as Nayabad. Greater Nayabad/Eidgaon encompassed the current Eidgaon Upazilas as well as the unions of Chowfaldandi and Varuakhali. The Mughal prince Shah Shuja set off with his forces to Arakan after being defeated in the war of imperial succession. They passed through Nayabad on the day of Eid al-Fitr, where they performed Eid prayers. From this event, the Nayabad area came to be known as Eidgaon (the village of Eid). Some elders have located the place of this incident to be an eidgah in the village of Yusufer Khil in Islamabad Union.[4]

In the 1900s, Khan Saheb Muzaffar Ahmad Chowdhury was the principal zamindar of Eidgaon. His capital was at Chowfaldandi (presently in Cox's Bazar Sadar Upazila), where his palace can still be seen in Khamarpara and the stairs of his kachari in the hills. Chowdhury disappeared after setting off for Hajj in 1937. He was succeeded by his grandson Mostaq Ahmad Chowdhury and Kaniz Fatimah Ahmad. Other zamindars of the area included Muhammad Shiqdar, the Amir of Masuakhali, who is credited for the development of the Eidgaon Bazar Central Mosque in 1946. It was first established by his father, Magan Ali Shiqdar, in 1905 at his own wooden cottage house near a pond. Tayyabullah Faraizi of Farazipara became the dominant zamindar of greater Eidgaon in the 1960s during the rule of Ayub Khan. In the 1970s, administration fell in the hands of Nurul Islam Chowdhury (Bedar Miah) of Shiqdarpara, better known as Bedar Mian. Other members were Jalal Ahmad Faraizi, Muzaffar Ahmad Member, Abu Khalifah, Moulvi Sayyid Nur, Moulvi Siddiq Khalwi, who distrusted Bedar Mian.[4]

After, Greater Eidgaon was divided into three unions; Eidgaon, Chowfaldandi and Pokkhali. Chowfaldandi was later divided into Chowfaldandi and Varuakhali, and Pokkhali was divided into Pokkhali and Islampur. By 1990, the Eidgaon Union was also divided into three unions; Islamabad, Jalalabad and (reduced) Eidgaon. A memorandum was sent to the Cox's Bazar District Commissioner for the declaration of Eidgaon as a separate upazila on 22 July 2019. The National Implementation Committee for Administrative Reorganization-Reform (NICAR) established Eidgaon as a thana on 21 October 2019. On 26 July 2021, Khandker Anwarul Islam upgraded the status of Eidgaon to an upazila, consisting of the northern five unions of the Cox's Bazar Sadar Upazila.[5]

Administration

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The upazila is made up of five union parishads:

  1. Islampur Union
  2. Pokkhali Union
  3. Islamabad Union
  4. Eidgaon Union
  5. Jalalabad Union

Demographics

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Religions in Eidgaon Upazila (2022)[6]
Religion Percent
Islam
95.74%
Hinduism
4.21%
Other or not stated
0.05%

As of the 2022 Bangladeshi census, Eidgaon upazila had a population of 1,49,566. 34,086 (28.33%) were under 10 years of age. Eidgaon had an average literacy rate of 45.98%, compared to the national average of 51.8%, and a sex ratio of 982 females per 1000 males. 56,045 (46.58%) of the population lived in urban areas.[7][8]

The people of the Greater Eidgaon region (Eidgaon Upazila, Chowfaldandi and Varuakhali) maintain a distinct identity in addition to their regional, ethnic and religious identities, due to their geographical and historical heritage. Before 2021, greater Eidgaon was divided into many unions but the people continued to refer to themselves to be "from Eidgaon" even to the people of Cox's Bazar, even if they weren't from the reduced "Eidgaon Union".[4]

Education

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Khan Saheb Muzaffar Ahmad Chowdhury, the zamindar of Eidgaon in the 1900s, established the ME School in Eidgaon. This school has now evolved into the Eidgaon Model High School and Eidgaon Government Primary School. Chowdhury also established the Eidgaon Almasia Madrasa, named after his wife, Almas Khatun. The madrasa is now at Kamil degree status.

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ National Report (PDF). Population and Housing Census 2022. Vol. 1. Dhaka: Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics. November 2023. p. 397. ISBN 978-9844752016.
  2. ^ "Bangladesh Postal Code". Dhaka: Bangladesh Postal Department under the Department of Posts and Telecommunications of the Ministry of Posts, Telecommunications and Information Technology of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. 20 October 2024.
  3. ^ "Bangladesh Area Code". China: Chahaoba.com. 18 October 2024.
  4. ^ a b c ঈদগাওর ইতিহাস ঐতিহ্য [The history and traditions of Eidgaon]. Eidgaon Upazila (in Bengali). Archived from the original on 2017-10-12. Retrieved 2021-07-27. আমরা যদি হই পোকখালির বা ইসলামপুরের অথবা চৌফলদন্ডীর বা ইসলামাবাদ, জালালাবাদ ও ভারম্নয়াখালীর অধিবাসি তবে কক্সবাজার বা পাশ্ববর্তী কোথাও গেলে আমরা প্রথমত: ঈদগাওর লোক বলে পরিচয় দিই। [If we are residents of Pokkhali or Islampur or Chaufaldandi or Islamabad, Jalalabad and Varuakhali, then when we go to Cox's Bazar or any other place, we first identify ourselves as people of Eidgaon.]
  5. ^ "Three new upazilas in Madaripur, Cox's Bazar and Sunamganj". Dhaka Tribune. 26 July 2021.
  6. ^ Population and Housing Census 2022 - District Report: Cox’s Bazar (PDF). District Series. Dhaka: Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics. June 2024. ISBN 978-984-475-266-5.
  7. ^ "Bangladesh Population and Housing Census 2011 Zila Report – Cox's Bazar" (PDF). bbs.gov.bd. Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics.
  8. ^ "Community Tables: Cox's Bazar district" (PDF). bbs.gov.bd. Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics. 2011. p. 103.