Jogighopa

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(Bogibeel Bridge: longest road-cum-rail bridge)
 
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of little importance, but contains a tahsil  belonging to the Bijni  
 
of little importance, but contains a tahsil  belonging to the Bijni  
 
estate.
 
estate.
 
 
=Bogibeel Bridge: longest road-cum-rail bridge=
 
[https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/bogibeel-bridge-longest-how-a-5-km-rail-bridge-brings-upper-assam-170-km-closer-to-delhi-5509311/  How a 5-km rail bridge brings upper Assam 170 km closer to Delhi, December 26, 2018: ''The Indian Express'']
 
 
 
[[File: The significance of the bridge is not just in the distance it covers across the Brahmaputra but also in the train travel time it reduces along the banks of the river.jpg|The significance of the bridge is not just in the distance it covers across the Brahmaputra but also in the train travel time it reduces along the banks of the river  <br/> From: [https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/bogibeel-bridge-longest-how-a-5-km-rail-bridge-brings-upper-assam-170-km-closer-to-delhi-5509311/  How a 5-km rail bridge brings upper Assam 170 km closer to Delhi, December 26, 2018: ''The Indian Express'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: The Bogibeel Bridge, inside Assam, is 20 km from the border with Arunachal Pradesh. It connects Dibrugarh on the Brahmaputra’s south bank to Dhemaji on the north bank.jpg|The Bogibeel Bridge, inside Assam, is 20 km from the border with Arunachal Pradesh. It connects Dibrugarh on the Brahmaputra’s south bank to Dhemaji on the north bank <br/> From: [https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/bogibeel-bridge-longest-how-a-5-km-rail-bridge-brings-upper-assam-170-km-closer-to-delhi-5509311/  How a 5-km rail bridge brings upper Assam 170 km closer to Delhi, December 26, 2018: ''The Indian Express'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
[[File: The Bogibeel Bridge upstages the 4.62-km Vembanad Bridge between Edappally and Vallarpadam in Kochi, Kerala, as well as the 4.55-km Digha-Sonpur across Ganga in Bihar.jpg|The Bogibeel Bridge upstages the 4.62-km Vembanad Bridge between Edappally and Vallarpadam in Kochi, Kerala, as well as the 4.55-km Digha-Sonpur across Ganga in Bihar <br/> From: [https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/bogibeel-bridge-longest-how-a-5-km-rail-bridge-brings-upper-assam-170-km-closer-to-delhi-5509311/  How a 5-km rail bridge brings upper Assam 170 km closer to Delhi, December 26, 2018: ''The Indian Express'']|frame|500px]]
 
 
 
Within the Northeast, the train journey between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh now reduces from 500 km to 100 km. For the rest of India too, Dibrugarh becomes accessible without travelling via Guwahati.
 
 
The record length is being widely reported: at 4.94 km, the Bogibeel Bridge is the country’s longest road-cum-rail bridge, and its fourth longest of any kind above water. The significance of the bridge, inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday, is not just in the distance it covers across the Brahmaputra but also in the train travel time it reduces along the banks of the river.
 
 
 
'''The short journey'''
 
 
The Bogibeel Bridge, inside Assam, is 20 km from the border with Arunachal Pradesh. It connects Dibrugarh on the Brahmaputra’s south bank to Dhemaji on the north bank. While railway lines run along both banks, a train crossing of the Brahmaputra was possible at only two places so far. Both these rail-cum-road options — in Jogighopa in western Assam and on the outskirts of Guwahati (Saraighat bridge) — are hundreds of kilometres from the Assam-Arunachal border, and both bring trains from the north bank into Guwahati on the south. The Bogibeel Bridge provides an alternative in the east.
 
 
Within the Northeast, the train journey between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh now reduces from 500 km to 100 km, according to details released by the project developers. So far, travellers had to make the loop via Guwahati. For the rest of India too, Dibrugarh becomes accessible without travelling via Guwahati. The train journey from Delhi to Dibrugarh reduces by 3 hours (from 37 hours to 34) and the distance by 170 km.
 
 
This boosts the defence forces by facilitating quicker movement of troops and equipment to areas near the India-China border. It also benefits tourists, trade goods and those seeking medical treatment. Dibrugarh, considered a gateway to parts of Arunachal Pradesh, is home to Assam Medical College. For patients on the north bank, the only crossing into Dibrugarh so far was by ferry. That could take up to a couple of hours; a train can cross the new bridge in 5 minutes.
 
 
 
'''The long journey'''
 
 
“The Bogibeel Bridge’s biggest benefit is saving travel time by trains and vehicles in the region and providing better connectivity,” R V R Kishore, Project Director, Hindustan Construction Company (HCC), told The Indian Express. HCC, along with Germany-based DSD Brouckenbau and VNR Infrastructures, holds the contract for building the superstructure of the bridge.
 
 
The bridge has been three decades in the making. The proposal dates back to the Assam Accord of 1985. It was approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs in 1997, the foundation stone was laid that year by then Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda, and construction was inaugurated in 2002 by then PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Work on the substructure began in 2008; the superstructure contract was awarded to HCC along with DSD and VNR in 2011. A spokesperson for Northeast Frontier Railway said the estimated sanctioned cost of the project is Rs 5,920 crore.
 
 
 
'''Length vs length'''
 
 
As a railway bridge, the Bogibeel Bridge upstages the 4.62-km Vembanad Bridge between Edappally and Vallarpadam in Kochi, Kerala, as well as the 4.55-km Digha-Sonpur across Ganga in Bihar. The former is a rail bridge across the Vembanad Lake; the latter is rail-cum-road like the Bogibeel Bridge.
 
 
In a comparison of all bridges across water, the Bogibeel comes in at fourth, after the neighbouring Dhola-Sadiya road bridge (9.15 km), the Patna-Hajipur road bridge (5.75 km), and the Bandra-Worli Sea Link (5.6 km).
 

Latest revision as of 11:19, 26 December 2018

This article has been extracted from

THE IMPERIAL GAZETTEER OF INDIA , 1908.

OXFORD, AT THE CLARENDON PRESS.

Note: National, provincial and district boundaries have changed considerably since 1908. Typically, old states, ‘divisions’ and districts have been broken into smaller units, and many tahsils upgraded to districts. Some units have since been renamed. Therefore, this article is being posted mainly for its historical value.


[edit] Jogighopa

Village in Goalpara District, Eastern Bengal and Assam, situated in 26 degree 14' N. and 90 degree 34' E., on the north bank of the Brahmaputra at the point where it is joined by the Manas. Popula- tion (1901), 734. A steam ferry plies between Jogighopa and Goal- para, and the telegraph wires are carried beneath the river at this point to the south bank. Prior to the annexation of Assam, Jogighopa was a frontier outpost of Bengal, and a number of Europeans resided here, who forcibly obtained a monopoly of the Bengal trade and were thus enabled to do a lucrative business with the natives who enjoyed similar privileges in Assam. Four large tombs remain as evidence of their occupation, but the inscriptions have disappeared. Jogighopa derives its name from some caves cut out of the rocks near the river bank, which at one time used to be occupied by ascetics. The place is now of little importance, but contains a tahsil belonging to the Bijni estate.

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