Short brief history of Assam city of India
The Koch kingdom in western Assam and present North Bengal was at its
zenith in the early reign of Naranarayana (c. 1540–1587 AD). It split
into two in c. 1581 AD, the western part as a Mughal
vassal and the eastern as an Ahom satellite state. Since c. 13th AD,
the nerve centre of Ahom polity was upper Assam; the kingdom was
gradually extended till Karatva River in the c. 17th–18th AD.
Though the Mughal made seventeen attempts to invade they were not successful. The most successful invader Mir Jumla, a governor of Aurangzeb, briefly occupied Garhgaon (c. 1662–63 AD), the then capital, but found it difficult to control people making guerrilla attacks on his forces, forcing them to leave.
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