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The Wari-Bateshwar region (Uari-Bôṭeshshor) in Narsingdi District, Bangladesh is the site of an ancient fort city. Based on the artifacts found here the city was active between about 2000 BC (or earlier) to 450 BC. [1] The ruins being unearthed near the old course of the Brahmaputra River are a major archaeological discovery in South Asia, which "challenges the earlier notions of early urban civilization in Bengal".
The discovery of a pit-dwelling is the first of its kind in Bangladesh. The pit-dwelling is a Copper Age or Chalcolithic artefact. Similar pit-dwellings have been found in India and Pakistan which are believed to be 4000 years old.
Later the area was part of the ancient region of Samatata, which was a region comprising modern day Greater Comilla and Greater Dhaka (above the Meghna) divisions.
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