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Kishanganj district

District in Bihar, India


District in Bihar, India

FieldValue
nameKishanganj district
settlement_typeDistrict of Bihar
total_typeTotal
image_skylineKishanganj at night.jpg
image_captionKishanganj Railway
image_mapBihar district location map Kishanganj.svg
mapframeyes
mapframe-pointnone
coor_pinpointKishanganj
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameIndia
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Bihar Government Banner.png Bihar
subdivision_type2Division
subdivision_name2Purnia
established_titleEstablished
seat_typeHeadquarters
seatKishanganj
parts_typeTehsils
parts_stylepara
area_total_km21884
population_as_of2011
population_total1,690,400
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Demographics
demographics1_title1Literacy
demographics1_info157.04 per cent
demographics1_title2Sex ratio
demographics1_info2946
leader_title1Lok Sabha constituencies
leader_name1Kishanganj
leader_title2Vidhan Sabha constituencies
leader_name2Bahdurganj, Thakurganj, Kishanganj, Kochadhaman
timezone1IST
utc_offset1+05:30
registration_plateBR-37
blank_name_sec1Major highways
blank_info_sec1*
website
Note

the district

| mapframe-point = none

Kishanganj district is the easternmost district of Bihar in India, and Kishanganj town is the administrative headquarters of this district. Kishanganj district is a part of Purnia division (Seemanchal). It is one of the most socio-economic backward and minority concentration districts of the India.Kishanganj district is in north eastern Bihar

Etymology

Kishanganj was formerly known as Krishnaganj, but the name was altered to Kishanganj.

Geography

Kishanganj district occupies an area of 1884 km2, Kishanganj district is surrounded by Araria district in the west, Purnia district in the south-west, Uttar Dinajpur district of West Bengal on the east, and Darjeeling district of West Bengal and Nepal on the north. A narrow strip of West Bengal, about 20 km wide separates it from Bangladesh.

Kishanganj district is located between 25° 20’ and 26° 30’ north latitudes, and 87° 7’ and 88° 19’ east longitudes.

River

Major rivers flowing through the district are Mahananda, Kankai, Mechi, Donk, Ratua.

Politics

|}

Economy

In 2006 the Ministry of Panchayati Raj named Kishanganj one of the country's 250 most backward districts out of a total of 640.

Kishanganj is the only tea producing district in Bihar.

History

Kishanganj district, which was previously part of Purnia district, is part of the Mithila region. Mithila first gained prominence after being settled by Indo-Aryan peoples who established the Mithila Kingdom (also called Kingdom of the Videhas) which was ruled by the Videhas, an Indo-Aryan tribe. Present Kishanganj was in the western part of the Pundra region which was initially outside the Indo-Aryan band of settlement. There are still tales of the fort of Raja Virat in Thakurganj tehsil who gave the Pandavas shelter during their exile. Pundra was included in the Mauryan Empire, and it was then included in the Gupta Empire. The region was visited by Xuanzang during his travels and was conquered by Shashanka in the early 7th century. The Palas and Senas then took over the district before the Muslim conquest.

In the 13th century Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khalji conquered the entirety of Bengal, including present Kishanganj. However the northern part of Kishanganj was held by the Kiranti tribes. The district was part of a unit along with Purnia, and was regarded as a frontier region of Bengal which always needed to maintain forces to keep the Kiranti peoples in check. During the Mughal period, territory east of the Mahananda, including Kishanganj, was part of the Sarkar of Tajpur in the Bengal Subah. The northern part of Araria and Kishanganj districts were part of the Morang Kingdom of Limbuwan. Kishanganj fell under British rule with the rest of Bengal in 1765. Kishanganj was on one of the main trade routes from Nepal into the rest of India. Kishanganj was on the front line of the Anglo-Nepalese War in 1816.

During the early 20th century Kishanganj subdivision featured in a report of absentee zamindar atrocities against the peasants and the imposition of awbabs. This region participated in the Kisan Sabha movement and later the freedom struggle. Several ashrams were built in Kishanganj and the workers of the subdivision participated in the Quit India movement of 1942, where the Congress flag was hoisted on the Kishanganj court building.

The region was a hotbed of sporadic communal tension in the Purnia district. In 1934 there was a riot in Kishanganj town over a tazia procession during Muharram. The Muslim League had major influence in the Muslim-majority regions of Purnia district including Kishanganj. During the Bihar Riots of 1946, the region was affected and saw some Muslims fleeing the region for safety in Bengal. A sabha of the Provincial Muslim League in Kishanganj in 1947 demanded erstwhile Purnia district along with parts of Bhagalpur, Munger, and the entire Santal Parganas district be transferred to Bengal (which they wanted for Pakistan). These areas were kept in India however when it gained Independence.

In 1956 during the reorganisation of states, parts of Kishanganj subdivision (the present Islampur subdivision), were transferred to West Bengal's West Dinajpur district to connect the two halves of the state which were split by Partition.

Kishanganj was an old and important Sub-Division of Purnia district. After the long and hard struggle of around seventeen years by the people of Kishanganj including social workers, politicians, journalists, businessmen, farmers, etc., the Kishanganj district was carved out of Purnia district on 14 January 1990. History, Kishanganj District, retrieved 15 December 2021.

Sub-divisions

The district comprises only one sub-division, Kishanganj, which is further divided into seven blocks:

  • Bahadurganj
  • Dighalbank
  • Kishanganj
  • Kochadhaman
  • Pothia
  • Terhagachha
  • Thakurganj

Education

On 30 January 2014, the foundation stone was laid down of the Kishanganj campus of Aligarh Muslim University by Sonia Gandhi. The study centre started out by offering two courses.

Demographics

According to the 2011 census Kishanganj district has a population of 1,690,400, roughly equal to the nation of Guinea-Bissau or the US state of Idaho.{{cite web |access-date=2011-09-30 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019160532/http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/apportionment-pop-text.php |archive-date=2013-10-19

A vast majority of the people live in villages. Kishanganj is the only Muslim-majority district of Bihar, with Muslims forming about 68% of the population. Most of the inhabitants of Kishanganj speak Surjapuri.

At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 42.61% of the population in the district spoke Surjapuri, 32.62% Urdu, 9.05 Hindi, 6.66% Bengali, 3.45% Santali, 2.63% Maithili and 1.23% Bhojpuri as their first language.

Year19711981199120012011
123456
Gender Ratio926950946936948

Administrative units

Sl. no.Name of the BlocksNo. of Gram Panchayats
1Kishanganj10
2Bahadurganj20
3Thakurganj22
4Kochadhaman24
5Dighalbank16
6Pothia22
7Terhagachh12
Total number of Gram Panchayats126
  • Number of Revenue Division(s)- 1
  • Number of Blocks- 7
  • Number of Police Stations- 20
  • Number of Gram Panchayats- 126
  • Number of Census Villages- 771
  • Number of Nagar panchayat- 3 [Bahadurganj, Thakurganj, Powakhali]
  • Number of Municipal Council- 1 [ Kishanganj]

See also - Literacy In Bihar

Notable people

Asrarul Haq Qasmi

References

References

  1. किशनगंज, अब्दुल करीम. (2024-12-20). "'हमारी सरकार बनी तो सीमांचल...', बिहार के किशनगंज में तेजस्वी यादव ने कर दिया बड़ा ऐलान".
  2. [https://kishanganj.nic.in/hi/%e0%a4%9c%e0%a4%bf%e0%a4%b2%e0%a5%87-%e0%a4%95%e0%a5%87-%e0%a4%ac%e0%a4%be%e0%a4%b0%e0%a5%87-%e0%a4%ae%e0%a5%87%e0%a4%82/ Basic information about Kishanganj district.]
  3. [https://www.livehindustan.com/bihar/kishanganj/story-kishanganj-and-araria-in-the-category-of-most-backward-districts-of-the-state-7832998.html Kishanganj, one of the most backward district.]
  4. "Wayback Machine".
  5. Roy Chaudhury, P. C.. (1968). "Bihar District Gazetteers - Purnea".
  6. (2010). "India 2010: A Reference Annual". Additional Director General, Publications Division, [[Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (India)]]. [[Government of India]].
  7. "Kishanganj district map". Maps of India.
  8. "Kishanganj District (Bihar)". Kishanganj district administration.
  9. Ministry of Panchayati Raj. (September 8, 2009). "A Note on the Backward Regions Grant Fund Programme". National Institute of Rural Development.
  10. (2019-07-20). "Kishanganj Judgeship/District Court in India {{!}} Official Website of District Court of India".
  11. (2010). "Women Empowerment Through Panchayati Raj Institutions".
  12. [[Michael Witzel]] (1989), ''Tracing the Vedic dialects in Dialectes dans les litteratures Indo-Aryennes'' ed. Caillat, Paris, pages 13, 17 116–124, 141–143
  13. Kumar, Madan. (30 January 2014). "Sonia to lay foundation of AMU Kishanganj unit today".
  14. Ahmad, Wali. (2020-10-25). "The picture of a university: AMU Kishanganj centre flounders".
  15. "Table A-02 Decadal Variation in Population Since 1901: Bihar". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
  16. (2011). "District Census Handbook: Kishanganj". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
  17. US Directorate of Intelligence. "Country Comparison:Population".
  18. (2011). "Table C-01 Population by Religion: Bihar". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
  19. "The Socio-Economic and Political Scenario of Kishanganj District". Azad India Foundation.
  20. (2 July 2010). "Kishanganj: Bihar's most backward district in quest for AMU centre". TwoCircles.net.
  21. "Maithili Bhasha Sahitya: Beesam Shatabdi".
  22. (2011). "Table C-16 Population by Mother Tongue: Bihar". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
  23. "election commission ppt".
  24. (2008-05-05). "Blocks".
  25. "Blocks in Kishanganj District, Bihar".
  26. "Demography {{!}} Welcome to Kishanganj District".
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