Arabic-English Lexicon, p. 82, and the Oxford Hebrew and English Lexicon, pp. 61 ff.
ALLAHABAD, a city of British India, the capital of the
United Provinces of Agra and Oudh, giving its name to a district
and a division. The city is situated at the confluence of the
Ganges and the Jumna in 25° 26′ N. lat. and 81° 50′ E. long., 564 m.
from Calcutta by rail. Its most conspicuous feature is the
fort, which rises directly from the banks of the confluent rivers
and completely commands the navigation of both streams.
Within the fort are the remains of a splendid palace, erected by
the Emperor Akbar, and once a favourite residence of his. A
great portion of it has been destroyed, and its hall is converted
into an arsenal. Outside the fort the places of most importance
are the sarai and gardens of Khasru, the son of the Emperor
Jehangir, and the Jama Masjid or Great Mosque. When the
town first came into the hands of the English this mosque was
used as a residence by the military officer commanding the
station, and afterwards as an assembly room. Ultimately it
was returned to its former owners, but the Mahommedans considered
it desecrated, and it has never since been used as a place
of worship. Allahabad (Illahabad) was the name given to the
city when Akbar built the great fort. To the Hindus it is still
known by its ancient name of Prag or Prayag (“place of sacrifice”), and it remains one of the most noted resorts of Hindu
pilgrimage. It owes its sanctity to its being the reputed
confluence of three sacred streams—the Ganges, the Jumna
and the Saraswati. This last stream, however, actually
loses itself in the sands of Sirhind, 400 m. north-west of
Allahabad. The Hindus assert that the stream joins the other
two rivers underground, and in a subterraneous temple below
the fort a little moisture trickling from the rocky walls is pointed
out as the waters of the Saraswati. An annual fair is held at
Allahabad at the confluence of the streams on the occasion of
the great bathing festival at the full moon of the Hindu month
of Magh. It is known as the Magh-mela, lasts for a whole month,
and is attended by as many as 250,000 persons in ordinary years,
either for religious or commercial purposes. Every twelfth year
there is a special occasion called the Kumbh-mela, which is
attended by a million of devotees at one time. Allahabad was
taken by the British in 1765 from the wazir of Oudh, and assigned
as a residence to Shah Alam, the titular emperor of Delhi. Upon
that prince throwing himself into the hands of the Mahrattas,
the place was resumed by the British in 1771 and again transferred
to the nawab of Oudh, by whom it was finally ceded
together with the district to the British in 1801, in commutation
of the subsidy which the wazir had agreed to pay for British
protection. During the Mutiny of 1857, Allahabad became the
scene of one of the most serious outbreaks and massacres which
occurred in the North-Western Provinces. The fort was held
by a little garrison of Europeans and loyal Sikhs, until it was
relieved by General Neill on June 11th of that year.
The modern buildings of Allahabad include Government House, the High Court, the Mayo memorial and town hall, the Muir central college, the Thornhill and Mayne memorial library and museum, the Naini central jail, and the Anglican and Roman Catholic cathedrals. The Jumna is crossed by a railway bridge and there are two bridges of boats over the Ganges. The military cantonments contain accommodation for all three arms and are the headquarters of a brigade in the 8th division of the eastern army corps. At Allahabad is published the Pioneer, perhaps the best known English paper in India. There is an American mission college. Here is the junction of the great railway system which unites Bengal with Central India and Bombay, and is developing into a great centre of inland and export trade. The population in 1901 was 172,032.
The District of Allahabad has an area of 2811 sq. m. In shape it is an irregular oblong, and it is very difficult to define its boundaries, as at one extremity it wanders into Oudh, while on the south the villages of the state of Rewa and those of this district are hopelessly intermingled. The Jumna and the Ganges enclose within their angle a fertile tract well irrigated with tanks and wells. The East Indian railway and the Grand Trunk road afford the principal means of land communication. In 1901 the population was 1,489,358, showing a decrease of 4% in the decade due to famine.
The division of Allahabad has an area of 17,270 sq. m. The population in 1901 was 5,540,702, showing a decrease of 4% in the decade due to the famine of 1896–1897, which was severely felt throughout the division. It comprises the seven districts of Cawnpore, Fatehpur, Banda, Hamirpur, Allahabad, Jhansi and Jalaun.
ALLAMANDA, named after J. N. S. Allamand (1713–1787), of
Leiden, a genus of shrubby, evergreen climbers, belonging to the
natural order Apocynaceae, and a native of tropical America.
Several species are grown in hot-houses for the beauty of their foliage
and flowers; the latter, borne in many-flowered panicles, have
a funnel-shaped corolla with a narrow tube, and often yellow in
colour. The plants are of comparatively easy culture, and very
effective when trained to wires beneath the roof of the house.
ALLAN, DAVID (1744–1796), Scottish historical painter, was
born at Alloa. On leaving Foulis’s academy of painting at
Glasgow (1762), after seven years’ successful study, he obtained
the patronage of Lord Cathcart and of Erskine of Mar, on
whose estate he had been born. The latter furnished him with
the means of proceeding to Rome (1764), where he remained
for a number of years engaged principally in copying the old
masters. Among the original works which he then painted
was the “The Origin of Portraiture”—representing a Corinthian
maid drawing her lover’s shadow—well known through Domenico
Cunego’s excellent engraving. this gained for him the gold
medal given by the Academy of St Luke in the year 1773 for the
best specimen of historical composition. Returning from Rome
in 1777, he resided for a time in London, and occupied himself
in portrait-painting. In 1780 he removed to Edinburgh, where,
on the death of Alexander Runciman in 1786, he was appointed
director and master of the Academy of Arts. There he painted
and etched in aquatint a variety of works, those by which he is
best known—as the “Scotch Wedding,” the “Highland Dance,”
the “Repentance Stool,” and his “Illustrations of the Gentle
Shepherd”—being remarkable for their comic humour. He
was called the “Scottish Hogarth”; but his drolleries hardly
entitle him to this comparison. Allan died at Edinburgh on
the 6th of August 1796.
ALLAN, SIR HUGH (1810–1882), Canadian financier, was
born on the 29th of September 1810 at Saltcoats, Ayrshire,
Scotland, the son of Captain Alexander Allan, a shipmaster.
He emigrated to Canada in 1826, and in 1831 entered the employ
of the chief shipbuilding and grain-shipping firm of Montreal,
of which he became a junior partner in 1835. In 1853 he organized
the Allan Line of steamships, plying between Montreal,
Liverpool and Glasgow; till his death he was closely associated
with the commercial growth and prosperity of Canada, and
in 1871 was knighted in recognition of his services. In 1872–1873
he obtained from the Canadian government a charter for
building the Canadian Pacific railway, but the disclosures made
with reference to his contributions to the funds of the Conservative
party led to the Pacific scandal (see Canada, History),
and that company was soon afterwards dissolved. He died in
Edinburgh on the 9th of December 1882.
See J. C. Dent, Canadian Portrait Gallery (1881).
ALLAN, SIR WILLIAM (1782–1850), Scottish painter, was
born at Edinburgh, and at an early age entered as a pupil in
the School of Design established in Edinburgh by the Board of
Trustees for Arts and Manufactures, where he had as companions,
John Wilkie, John Burnet the engraver, and others who afterward
distinguished themselves as artists. Here Allan and Wilkie were
placed at the same table, studied the same designs, and contracted
a lifelong friendship. Allan continued his studies for
some time in London; but his attempt to establish himself there
was unsuccessful, and after exhibiting at the Royal Academy
(1805) his first picture, “A Gipsy Boy and Ass,” an imitation
in style of Opie, he determined, in spite of his scanty resources,
to seek his fortune abroad. He accordingly set out the same
year for Russia, but was carried by stress of weather to Memel,