or SERINGAGUZ, a town of India, in the district of British Gurkha, North-West Provinces, 1007 miles N.W. of Calcutta. It stands on the left bank of the Alukunda, an affluent of the Ganges, in a valley about four miles long and two broad, enclosed by barren mountains. The form of the town is somewhat semicircular; the houses are generally of two storeys, built of stones cemented with mud; and the streets are all exceedingly narrow, with the exception of one which contains the bazaar. Altogether the place has a monotonous and gloomy appearance. The palace of the rajah of Gurkha must have been at one time a very fine building, with three fronts adorned with porticoes; but it has been so much injured by earthquakes, that only the porticoes now remain. The numerous Hindu temples in the town are deserving of no special notice. Sireenmuggur was at one time the capital and residence of the rajah of Gurkha, and carried on a very active trade between the highlands of Tartary and the plains of India, but it has suffered very much from earthquakes, and has now no more than 3000 inhabitants.