Cox's Bazar: Full of Natural Beauty
Cox's Bazar is a town, a fishing port and district headquarters in
Bangladesh. It is known for its wide sandy beach which, believed to be the
world's longest natural sandy sea beach. It is an unbroken 125 km sandy sea
beach with a gentle slope. It is located 150 km south of Chittagong. Cox’s
Bazar is also known by the name "Panowa", the literal translation of
which means "yellow flower". Its other old name was
"Palongkee". The modern Cox's Bazar derives its name from Captain Cox
(died 1799), an officer serving in British India. In the 18th century, an
officer of British East India Company, Captain Hiram Cox was appointed as the
Superintendent of Palongkee outpost after Warren Hastings became the Governor of
Bengal. Captain Cox was specially mobilised to deal with a century long
conflict between Arakan refugees and local Rakhains. The Captain was a
compassionate soul and the plight of the people touched his heart. He embarked
upon the mammoth task of rehabilitating refugees in the area, and made
significant progress. A premature death took Captain Cox in 1799 before he
could finish his work. But the work he had done earned him a place in the
hearts of the locals and to commemorate his role in rehabilitation work a
market was established and named after him as Cox's Bazaar ("Cox's
Market"). Although Cox's Bazar is one of the most visited tourist
destinations in Bangladesh, it has yet to become a major international tourist
destination, due to lack of publicity.
The Town:
Located along
the Bay of Bengal in South Eastern Bangladesh, Cox's Bazar Town is a small port
and health resort. But it is mostly famous for its long natural sandy beach.
The municipality covers an area of 6.85 km² with 27 mahallas and 9 wards and
has a population of 51,918. Cox's Bazar is connected by road and air with
Chittagong.
History:
The
greater Chittagong area including Cox's Bazar was under the rule of Arakan
Kings from the early 9th century till its conquest by the Mughals in 1666 AD. When
the Mughal Prince Shah Shuja was passing through the hilly terrain of the
present day Cox’s Bazar on his way to Arakan, he was attracted to the scenic
and captivating beauty of the place. He commanded his forces to camp there. His
retinue of one thousand palanquins stopped there for some time. A place named
Dulahazara, meaning "one thousand palanquins", still exists in the
area. After the Mughals, the place came under the control of the Tipras and the
Arakanese, followed by the Portuguese and then the British.
The
name Cox's Bazar/Bazaar originated from the name of a British East India
Company officer, Captain Hiram Cox who was appointed as the Superintendent of
Palonki (today's Cox's Bazar) outpost after Warren Hastings became the Governor
of Bengal following the British East India Company Act in 1773. Captain Cox was
especially mobilised to deal with a century long conflict between Arakan
refugees & local Rakhains at Palonki. The Captain made significant progress
in rehabilitation of refugees in the area, but had died (in 1799) before he
could finish his work. To commemorate his role in rehabilitation work a market
/ bazaar was established and was named after him as Cox's Bazaar (market of
Cox). Cox's Bazar thana was first established in 1854 and a municipality was
constituted in 1869.
After
the Sepoy Mutiny (Indian Rebellion of 1857) in 1857, the British East India
Company was highly criticised & questioned on humanitarian grounds,
specially for its Opium trade monopoly over the Indian Sub-Continent. However,
after its dissolution on 1 January 1874, all of the company's assets including
its Armed Forces were acquired by the British Crown. After this historic take
over, Cox's Bazar was declared a district of the Bengal Province under the
British Crown.
After
the end of British rule in 1947, Cox's Bazar remained as a part of East
Pakistan. Captain Advocate Fazlul Karim, the first Chairman (after independence
from the British) of Cox's Bazar Municipality established the Tamarisk Forest
along the beach to draw tourist attention in this town and also to protect the
beach from tidal waves. He also donated many of his father in law’s and his own
lands for establishing a Public Library and a Town Hall for the town. He was
inspired to build Cox's Bazar as a tourist spot after seeing beaches of Bombay
and Karachi, and one of the pioneers in developing Cox's Bazar as such. He
founded a Maternity Hospital, the Stadium and the drainage system by procuring
grants from the Ford Foundation and Rockefeller Foundation through
correspondence. Mr. T. H. Matthews, the principal of the Dacca Engineering
College (1949~1954) was his friend who had helped him in doing this. Engineer
Chandi Charan Das was the government civil engineer who had worked on all these
projects. In 1959 the municipality was turned into a town committee. In 1961
the erstwhile Geological Survey of Pakistan initiated investigation of
radioactive minerals like monazite around the Cox's Bazar sea-beach area and a
number of precious heavy minerals were identified the same year.
In
1971, Cox's bazar wharf was used as a naval port by the Pakistan Navy's
gunboats. This and the nearby airstrip of the Pakistan Air Force were the scene
of intense shelling by the Indian Navy during Bangladesh Liberation War. During
the war, Pakistani soldiers killed many people in the town including eminent
lawyer Jnanendralal Chowdhury. The killing of two freedom fighters named Farhad
and Subhash at Badar Mokam area is also recorded in history.
After
the independence of Bangladesh Cox's Bazar started to get the administrative
attention. In 1972 the town committee of Cox's Bazar was again turned into a
municipality. In 1975, The Government of Bangladesh established a pilot plant
at Kalatali, Cox's Bazar to assess the commercial viability of the heavy
mineral content in the placer deposits of the area with the cooperation of the
Australian Government. Later, in 1984 Cox's Bazar subdivision was promoted to a
district and 5 years later (in 1989) the Cox's Bazar municipality was elevated
to B-grade. In 1994 (jobs) the Marine Fisheries and Technology Station (MFTS)
was established at Cox's Bazar. MFTS is a research station of Bangladesh
Fisheries Research Institute (BFRI) headquartered in Mymensingh. The station
covers a land area of 4 hactor and is equipped with 5 specialised laboratories,
and one indoor and one outdoor cistern complex. In April 2007 Bangladesh got
connected to the submarine cable network as a member of the SEA-ME-WE-4
Consortium, as Cox's Bazar was selected as the landing station of the submarine
cable.
List of Tourist Spots in Cox's Bazar:
- Cox's Bazar Sea Beach
- Saint Martins Island
- Teknak
- Dulhazra Safari Park
- Ramu
- Aggmeda Khyang
- Rubber Dam
- Radar Station
- Himchari
- To know more about Cox's Bazar, Please visit :
- www.coxs-bazar.com
- www.tourismboard.gov.bd
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