Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 38. Chapters: Bogra District, Joypurhat District, Naogaon District, Natore District, Nawabganj District, Pabna District, Populated places in the Rajshahi Division, Rajshahi District, Sirajganj District, Thakur Anukulchandra, Kalai Moyen Uddin High School, Dighapatia Raj, Gour Govinda Ray, Gole Afroz College, Tarun Majumdar, Uttara Gano Bhaban, Enayetpur, Puthia Raj family, Jadunath Sarkar, Shiroil Govt. High School, Rajshahi, Jaipurhat District, Prafulla Chaki, Shyam Sundar Chakravarthy, Mahesh Chandra Ghosh, Harimohon Government High School, Puthia Temple Complex, Nazipur, Bhabanipur, Rajshahi Division, Rajendra Lahiri, Kazipur River, Katnarpara, Sirajgonj, Shajahanpur, Chowbari, Iswardi, Khaduly, Nagar, Rajshahi Division, Pagla Raja's Palace, Singhanagar. Excerpt: Thakur Anukulchandra (Bengali: ) (1888-1969) was an Hindu guru, physician, and founder of the Satsang ashram. Anukulchandra was born on 14 September 1888 in Himaitpur village in the Pabna district of the eastern zone of Bengal in undivided India, now in Bangladesh. His father was Shibchandra Chakravarty (Shandilya Gotra Kanyakubja Brahmin) and his mother was Manmohini Devi. From the very beginning, Anukulchandra was extremely mother centric. He accepted his mother as his guru throughout his life. The lover of the mankind, Anukulchandra set up an Ashram first at Pabna (later it was named Satsang by his mother) and then at Deoghar in India 1946, for fostering spiritual development. The Satsang ashram at Deoghar has now become a major place of attraction in Deoghar. The four ideals of Satsanga are education, agriculture, industry, and good marriage. Actually Anukulchandra did not 'set up' any organization. The organization evolved around him. Schools, charitable hospitals, engineering workshops, a publishing house, and a printing press came up. He never wr...