Bengal: Revizyonlar arasındaki fark
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| '''Largest City'''
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Remnants of [[Copper Age]] settlements in the Bengal region date back 4,300 years,<ref name=bsahistory>{{cite web
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{{See also|Geography of West Bengal|Geography of Bangladesh}}
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{{main|Bengali people}}
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About 210 million people live in Bengal, around 60% of them in Bangladesh and the remainder in West Bengal.<ref name=censuswb>{{cite web
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{{main|Economy of West Bengal|Economy of Bangladesh}}
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[[Agriculture]] is the leading occupation in the region. [[Rice]] is the staple food crop. Other food crops are [[pulses]], [[potato]], [[maize]], and [[oil seeds]]. [[Jute]] is the principal [[cash crop]]. [[Tea]] is also produced commercially; the region is well known for [[Darjeeling tea|Darjeeling]] and other high quality teas. The [[service sector]] is the largest contributor to the [[gross domestic product]] of West Bengal, contributing 51% of the state domestic product compared to 27% from agriculture and 22% from industry.<ref name=IBEF1>{{cite web
397. satır:
{{main|Culture of West Bengal|Culture of Bangladesh}}
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The common [[Bengali language]] and culture anchors the shared tradition of two parts of politically divided Bengal. Bengal has a long tradition in folk literature, evidenced by the ''[[Charyapada]]'', ''[[Mangalkavya]]'', ''[[Shreekrishna Kirtana]]'', ''[[Maimansingha Gitika]]'' or ''[[Thakurmar Jhuli]]''. Bengali literature in the medieval age was often either religious (e.g. [[Chandidas]]), or adaptations from other languages (e.g. [[Alaol]]). During the [[Bengal Renaissance]] of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, [[Bengali literature]] was modernized through the works of authors such as [[Michael Madhusudan Dutta]], [[Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay]], [[Rabindranath Tagore]] and [[Kazi Nazrul Islam]].
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