Stop including Bihar in your posts, we where never apart of Bengal, we only paid tribute to Nawabs. We had our own Rajas like the Bettiah Raj, Maksudpur Raj, Jagdispur, Sonbarsa etc.
We are completely different to Bengalis, here is how the British compared us:
Bihar, Jharkhand, west Bengal and today's Bangladesh together was called Sube-Bangalah after it was subdued by the Mughals in 1605. Before that Bihar and Jharkhand were part of the Sultanate of Bengal with Capital in GAUD, where the Darasbari Mosque is located.
Before the Mughal conquest, Bihar/Jharkhand was a part of Bengal, whatever might have been its language. And also after the Mughal conquest Bihar remained a part of Mughal Bengal, its Capital being in Dhaka. Foreign Turk and Afghan Muslims who domiciled in Bengal and Bihar dominated the politics of the eastern Hindustan for about four Centuries, and the State Capital of this greater Bengalwas almost all the time was in LUKHNOUTI,GAUD and PANDUA. All these were very near to each other.
The Mughal Bengal Capital was in Dhaka and then moved to Murshidabad and it remained so until the fall of Nawab Sirajuddowla in June 23, 1757. From 1200 to 1757 Bihar remained a part of greater Bengal. Of course, Biharis are Biharis and they should remain so. No one is challenging your statement.
Wow, very interesting.
I need more information.
You may not like what I say about the people of what is Turkey now. The main Turkic tribes live in the Central Asian countries of Uzhbekistan, Azarbaizan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgistan, Kazakhstan as well as in Uighur and partly in Afghanistan. The people here have similar facial and physical features. But, the Turkish people look so different from them.
Why? It is because in around the 11th century the
Seljuk Turks won the
Battle of Manzikert against the
Byzantine Empire in 1071 that opened the gates of
Anatolia to them.
Turkish language and
Islam were introduced and gradually spread over the region and the slow transition from a predominantly
Christian and
Greek-speaking Anatolia to a predominantly
Muslim and
Turkish-speaking one was underway.
Only 12% of central asianTurkic blood was introduced in Turkey when they took over Turkey in those early years of history. Because of the above historical facts and a continuous mixing of culture and blood, very few people today in Turkey look like their cousines living in the central asian countries. Turkic people look very similar to Greeks.