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  1. The Northern Circars (also spelt Sarkars) was a division of British India's Madras Presidency. It consisted of a narrow slip of territory lying along the western side of the Bay of Bengal from 15° 40′ to 20° 17′ north latitude, in the present-day Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Odisha.

  2. Rajahmundry Circar or Rajahmundry Sarkar was one of the five Northern Circars in the Golconda Sultanate, Deccan subah of Mughal empire and later in the Nizam's dominion of Hyderabad. The Northern Circars were the most prominent ones in the Deccan subah.

  3. The Northern Circars (also spelt Sarkars) was a former division of British India's Madras Presidency. It consisted of a narrow slip of territory lying along the western side of the Bay of Bengal from 15° 40' to 20° 17' north latitude, in the present-day Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Odisha.

  4. Northern Circars. This zone included the coastal areas of districts of present-day Coastal Andhra and Ganjam of Orissa. The Coramandel. The Southern Division of the Presidency comprising much of modern Tamil Nadu and present-day Chittoor district of Andhra Pradesh was called the Coramandel. Districts of the Presidency Madras

  5. Circars septentrionales o Circars del Norte (también Sarkars) era una antigua región fruto de la división de la presidencia de Madrás de la India británica. Constaba en un estrecho territorio que se extendía a lo largo de la costa occidental de la Bahía de Bengala, 1 en los actuales estados indios de Andhra Pradesh y Odisha .

  6. Doji bara famine. Map of India (1795) shows the Northern Circars, Hyderabad (Nizam), Southern Maratha Kingdom, Gujarat, and Marwar (Southern Rajputana ), all affected by the Doji bara famine. The Doji bara famine (also Skull famine) of 1791–1792 in the Indian subcontinent was brought on by a major El Niño event lasting from 1789 ...