Portal maintenance status:(December 2018)
|
| Main | Indices | Projects |
Bangladesh, officially thePeople's Republic of Bangladesh, is a country inSouth Asia. It is theeighth-most populous country in the world and among themost densely populated with a population of over 171 million within an area of 148,460 square kilometres (57,320 sq mi). Bangladesh shares land borders withIndia to the north, west, and east, andMyanmar to the southeast. It has a coastline along theBay of Bengal to its south and is separated fromBhutan andNepal by theSiliguri Corridor, and fromChina by theIndian state ofSikkim to its north.Dhaka, the capital andlargest city, is the nation's political, financial, and cultural centre.Chittagong is the second-largest city andthe busiest port of the country.
Bangladesh is aunitaryparliamentary republic based on theWestminster system. It is amiddle power with thesecond-largest economy in South Asia. Bangladesh is home to thefourth-largest Muslim population in the world. It maintains thethird-largest military in South Asia and is the largest contributor to thepeacekeeping operations of the United Nations. Bangladesh consists ofeight divisions,64 districts, and495 sub-districts, and is home to thelargest mangrove forest in the world. However, it has one of the largestrefugee populations in the world and continues to face challenges such as endemiccorruption,human rights abuses,political instability, and adverseeffects of climate change. Bangladesh is a member state ofSAARC andseveral other international organisations. (Full article...)




| Mosque city of Bagerhat, founded by Turkish generalUlugh Khan Jahan in the early 15th century, is one of the threeUNESCOWorld Heritage Sites inBangladesh. Do you know where in Bangladesh isMosque city of Bagerhat? | ||
| This historic city is located at the meeting-point of theGanges andBrahmaputra rivers inBagerhat District, underKhulna Division in south-westBangladesh. | ||
Religions in Bangladesh
Indian Subcontinent
Other countries
Photo Credit: Azim Khan Ronnie
Photo Credit: Abdul Momin
Photo Credit:Rajiv Ashrafi
Photo Credit: Masud Rana
Photo Credit: Karl Ernst Roehl
Photo Credit:Nur-E-Saud
Photo Credit:Nahid Sultan & Saiful Aopu
Photo Credit: Lykantrop
Photo Credit: Hollingsworth, John and Karen, retouched by Zwoenitzer
Photo Credit: P.K.Niyogi
Photo Credit:Jubair1985
Photo Credit: Syedabbas321
Photo Credit:J.M.Garg
Photo Credit: Azim Khan Ronnie
Photo Credit: Francesco Renaldi
Photo Credit: Sumon Mallick
Photo Credit: Rohan Uddin Fahad
Photo Credit: Hossain Toufique Iftekher
Photo Credit:Ragib Hasan
Photo Credit:Fahad Faisal
Photo Credit:Moheen Reeyad
Photo Credit: Mirza Salman Hossain Beg, Bangladesh
Photo Credit:Jubair1985
Photo Credit: Mirza Salman Hossain Beg
Photo Credit:Metropolitan Museum of Art
Photo Credit:Azim Khan Ronnie
Photo Credit:Ragib Hasan
Photo Credit:J.M.Garg
Photo Credit: Abu Md. Jakaria
Photo Credit:Jubair1985
Photo Credit:Md. Shahed Faisal
Photo Credit: Sakib
Photo Credit: Nahian Bin Shafiq
Photo Credit:Intakhab
Photo Credit: Karl Ernst Roehl
Photo Credit: Xalan mustafa
Photo Credit: Md shahanshah bappy
Photo Credit:Nahid Sultan & Saiful Aopu
Photo Credit: Abdul Momin
Photo Credit:Nafis Ameen
Photo Credit: Fahad Faisal
Photo Credit: Mahbub Hossain Shaheed (mahosha)
Photo Credit:ed g2s
Photo Credit:Arman Aziz
Photo Credit:Masum Ibn Musa
Photo Credit: Niaz morshed Shovon
Photo Credit: Azim Khan Ronnie
Photo Credit: Shuvra Dutta
Photo Credit:Ziaul Hoque
Photo Credit:www.sterlingtimes.org
Photo Credit: Pallabkabir
Photo Credit: Syedabbas321
Photo Credit: Sabirul Islam Biplob
Photo Credit:Jubair1985
Photo Credit: Shakhawat Hossen Shafat
Photo Credit: Kazi Rashed Abdallah
Photo Credit:Rossi101
Photo Credit:Jubair1985
Photo Credit:Md. Tareq Aziz Touhid
Photo Credit:Jubair1985
Photo Credit: Md shahanshah bappy
Photo Credit: Md shahanshah bappy
Photo Credit:justinstravels
Photo Credit:Mohammad Rakibul Hasan
Photo Credit:Nasir Khan Saikat
Photo Credit: Azim Khan Ronnie
Photo Credit: Niloy
Photo Credit:RockyMasum


Bagha Jatin (Bengali:বাঘা যতীন), bornJatindranath Mukherjee (Jotindrônath Mukhopaddhæe) was aBengaliIndian revolutionary philosopher againstBritish rule. Jatin was born on 7 December 1879 in Kayagram, a village in theKushtia subdivision ofNadia district in present dayBangladesh. Jatin spent his early life at in his ancestral home atJhenaidah and in his maternal home atKushtia. He moved to Calcutta after passing the Entrance examination. Several sources mention Jatin as being among the founders of theAnushilan Samiti in 1900. TheSamiti activities subsequently spread to many of the districts of Bengal flourished particularly at Kushtia, where Jatindra Nath was the leader. In 1906 Jatin servived an attack by aBengal Tiger and managed to kill the tiger with only a dagger. This act of heroism made him famous.
A few years later Jatin became the principal leader of theYugantar party that was the central association of revolutionaries inBengal. Having personally met the German Crown-Prince in Calcutta shortly before the World War I, he had obtained the promise of arms and ammunition from Germany; as such, he was responsible for the plannedGerman Plot duringWorld War I. Another of his original contributions was the indoctrination of the Indian soldiers in various regiments in favour of an insurrection. Bagha Jatin was injured by police bullets near Chashakhand in Balasore. He died in Balasore hospital on 10 September 1915. (more)
Rules |Match log |Results page (for watching) | Last updated: 2026-02-14 19:23 (UTC)
Note: The list display can now be customized by each user. SeeList display personalization for details.
The followingWikimedia Foundation sister projects provide more on this subject: