Comilla (Bengali: কুমিল্লা), officially spelled Cumilla,[1][2] is a metropolis on the banks of the Gomti River in eastern Bangladesh.
[3] The Peasants' Movement against the king of Tripura in 1764, which originally formed under the leadership of Shamsher Gazi is a notable historical event in Comilla.
[citation needed] Communal tension spread over Comilla when a Muslim was shot in the town during the partition of Bengal in 1905.
On 21 November 1921, Kazi Nazrul Islam composed patriotic songs and tried to awaken the townspeople by protesting the Prince of Wales's visit to India.
In 1931, approximately 4000 peasants in Mohini village in Chauddagram Upazila revolted against a land revenue tax.
The main meaning of the context is that the people of Comilla have always maintained good relations and harmonized with others.
[7] Comilla Cantonment is an important military base and the oldest in East Bengal.
[10] Pakistan Army's 93,000 troops unconditionally surrendered to the Joint Coalition forces on 16 December 1971.
The Tropic of Cancer crosses Comilla town on the south side just over the Tomsom Bridge.
Comilla had a literacy rate of 87.28% for those 7 years and older and a sex ratio of 100.68 males per 100 females.
[23] One of the oldest highways of the Indian subcontinent, 'The Grand Trunk Road', passes through the city.