Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/mithila

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

North Bihar


FieldValue
nameNorth Bihar
settlement_typeGeographic Region
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameIndia
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Bihar
timezone1IST
utc_offset1+5:30
blank1_name_sec1Lok Sabha
blank1_info_sec121
website
blank2_name_sec1Vidhan Sabha
blank2_info_sec1127+2
blank3_name_sec1Districts
blank3_info_sec121
blank4_name_sec1Main Languages
blank4_info_sec1Maithili, Bhojpuri, and Hindi
blank5_name_sec1Emerging towns
blank5_info_sec1Samastipur, Supaul, Araria, Madhepura, Samastipur, Madhubani, Bettiah, Gopalganj, Saharsa, Sitamarhi
blank6_name_sec1Emerged towns
blank6_info_sec1Muzaffarpur, Darbhanga, Motihari, Purnea, Begusarai,Katihar
blank7_name_sec1Industrial and Financial capital
blank7_info_sec1Begusarai
image_skylineNorth Bihar.gif
image_sealBihar Government Banner.png
seal_altEmblem of Bihar

North Bihar is the northern region of the Indian state of Bihar. It lies between the Ganga River in the south and the India–Nepal border in the north. The region forms part of the fertile Gangetic Plain and is mainly flat in terrain.

Geography

North Bihar lies in the northern part of the Indian state of Bihar. It is bounded by the Ganga River to the south and the India–Nepal border to the north. The region forms a part of the Middle Gangetic Plain and is one of the most fertile areas of eastern India due to continuous deposition of alluvium by Himalayan rivers.

Physiography

The terrain of North Bihar is almost entirely flat and low-lying, with a gentle slope from north to south. The average elevation ranges between 40 and 100 metres above sea level. The land is composed mainly of recent alluvial deposits, making it suitable for intensive agriculture.

Rivers

North Bihar is drained by several perennial rivers originating in the Himalayas. Major rivers include the Kosi, Gandak, Bagmati, Burhi Gandak, Kamla, Mahananda and the Adhwara river system. Most of these rivers flow southwards and ultimately join the Ganga.

The Kosi River is known for frequent changes in its course and is often referred to as the Sorrow of Bihar due to recurrent floods and heavy sediment deposition.

Floodplains

Large parts of North Bihar fall within active floodplains. Seasonal flooding during the monsoon is common, especially in districts such as Saharsa, Supaul, Madhepura, Darbhanga, Sitamarhi and Muzaffarpur. While floods enrich the soil, they also cause regular damage to crops, settlements and infrastructure.

Soil

The soil of North Bihar is predominantly alluvial. Sandy loam soils are found near riverbanks, while clayey soils occur in low-lying areas. These fertile soils support crops such as rice, wheat, maize, pulses and sugarcane.

Climate

North Bihar experiences a humid subtropical climate with hot summers, a monsoon season from June to September, and cool winters. The average annual rainfall ranges between 1,100 and 1,400 mm, most of which is received during the southwest monsoon.

Seismicity

The region falls under Seismic Zones IV and V, indicating high seismic risk due to its proximity to the Himalayan tectonic region.

Divisions and Districts of North Bihar

DivisionDivision HQDistrictDistrict HQDistrict Area (km2)District Population
TirhutMuzaffarpurWest ChamparanBettiah5,2283,935,042
East ChamparanMotihari3,9695,082,868
MuzaffarpurMuzaffarpur3,1744,801,062
SitamarhiSitamarhi2,2943,419,622
SheoharSheohar443656,246
VaishaliHajipur2,0363,495,249
SaranChhapraSaranChhapra2,6413,951,862
SiwanSiwan2,2193,330,464
GopalganjGopalganj2,0332,562,012
DarbhangaDarbhangaDarbhangaDarbhanga2,2793,937,385
MadhubaniMadhubani3,5014,487,379
SamastipurSamastipur2,9044,261,566
KosiSaharsaSaharsaSaharsa1,6861,900,661
MadhepuraMadhepura2,4072,001,762
SupaulSupaul2,4102,229,076
PurneaPurneaPurniaPurnia3,2293,264,619
KatiharKatihar3,0573,071,029
ArariaAraria2,8302,811,569
KishanganjKishanganj1,8841,690,400

Languages

  • Bajjika, is predominantly Spoken in Muzaffarpur district, Vaishali, Sitamarhi, Samastipur & its Nearby Districts
  • Bhojpuri is predominantly spoken in West Champaran, East Champaran districts and Saran division.
  • Maithili is spoken in Darbhanga division, Kosi division and in some parts of Purnia division.
  • Surjapuri is spoken in Kishanganj and in some eastern parts of Purnia district and Katihar.

Economy & Industries in North Bihar

North Bihar, spanning the fertile plains north of the Ganga river, remains a region deeply rooted in agriculture, while also showing signs of growing industrial diversification.

Economy & Industry

Muzaffarpur is the most industrialized district of North Bihar and is often referred to as the economic and financial capital of the region. Muzaffarpur and Vaishali are among the fastest-growing and most developed districts of Bihar after Patna.

Reowned Indsutrial Units

  • Diesel Locomotive Factory- Saran
  • Muzaffarpur Bag Cluster
  • Kanti Thermal Power Station - Muzaffarpur
  • Mega Food Park Muzaffarpur
  • Oswal Logistics - Hajipur
  • AFP Manufacturing Co. Pvt. Ltd - hajipur

Rivers and floods

There are several rivers flowing through this region from north to south and merge in the Ganges river. These rivers, along with floods, bring fertile soil to the region on a yearly basis. However, sometimes government sponsored floods causes loss of thousands of lives. Major rivers of North Bihar are Mahananda, Gandak, Kosi, Bagmati, Kamala, Balan, Budhi Gandak.

Natural floods

Since the beginning of human civilization, rivers have been an important part of human life. North Bihar has 7 major rivers and several tributaries to them. North Bihar districts are vulnerable to at least five major flood-causing rivers during the monsoon – Mahananda River, Koshi River, Bagmati River, Burhi Gandak River and Gandak – which originate in Nepal. All these rivers receive water from the Himalayas, so these rivers always have an adequate water supply. Every year, these rivers bring valuable floods for the people of North Bihar. Flood waters used to enter the agricultural land, leave their quite fertile silt and recede to the river. This pattern of humane flood was beneficial for North Bihar, making the land perfectly fertile. However, there are no more natural floods as of today.

Man-made floods

Soon after independence, the Congress Government of Bihar made several attempts to domesticate these rivers. High barriers or Bandhs were made on their both banks. This resulted in inhumane and destructive floods. Bandhs caused deposition of silts in the bottom of rivers, because of which, depth of rivers decreased, and so their water holding capacity also decreased. This is the reason these rivers bring more frequent floods now. With flood water, sand comes in force and gets deposited on the land. This way the land of the region in turning barren. Floods, once a boon for North Bihar, has now become a curse.

Kosi flood 2008,

The 2008 Kosi flood was one of the most disastrous floods in the history of North Bihar, an impoverished and densely populated region in India. A breach in the Kosi embankment near the Indo-Nepal border (at Kusha in Nepal) occurred on 18 August 2008. The river changed course and inundated areas which were not flooded in decades. The flood affected over 2.3 million people in North Bihar.

The flood killed 250 people and forced nearly 3 million people from their homes in North Bihar. More than 300,000 houses were destroyed and at least 340,000 ha of crops were damaged. Image:The Kosi, August 8, 2008.jpg|The Kosi before it flooded in August 2008 Image:The Kosi, August 24, 2008.jpg|The Kosi during the August 2008 flood

2017 North Bihar Floods

Main article: 2017 Bihar Flood

The 2017 North Bihar Floods affected 19 districts of North Bihar causing death of 514 people. This flood was result of sudden increase in water discharge through the Gandak, Burhi Gandak, Bagmati, Kamla, Kosi and Mahananda Rivers due to heavy rain in the catchment areas of the major rivers of north Bihar in Nepal. Araria district accounted for 95 deaths alone, followed by Sitamarhi (34), West Champaran (29), Katihar (26), East Champaran (19) while 22 have died in Madhubani, Supaul (13) and Madhepura (15). 11 deaths were reported in Kishanganj, while Darbhanga accounted for 19 deaths, Purnea (9), Gopalganj (9), Sheohar (4), Muzaffarpur (7), Samastipur (1) and Saharsa (4) registered four deaths each while Khagaria and Saran accounted for 7 deaths each. Nowadays, around 1.71 people on average are affected by floods alone.

References

References

  1. "Geographical Profile of Bihar".
  2. "River System of Bihar".
  3. (2006). "Geomorphology and Flood Hazard of the Kosi River". Current Science.
  4. "Floods in Bihar".
  5. "Soils of Bihar".
  6. "Climate of Bihar".
  7. "Bihar's scary new flood".
  8. Kumar, Sudhir. (22 July 2022). "Flood: राहत बंटवारे में घोटाला उजागर, 25 के नाम पर एक ने किया दस्तखत; सीओ को शोकॉज". Hindustan.
  9. "Rivers of Bihar | Bihar Articles". Bihar.ws.
  10. (9 June 2020). ["Bihar gears up to fight annual floods"](https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/patna/bihar-gears-up-to-fight-annual-floods/articleshow/76268881.cms#:~:text=The%20area%20is%20vulnerable%20to, Sone%2C%20Punpun%20and%20Falgu%20rivers.).
  11. A report by the Department of disaster management, Government of Bihar
  12. (22 June 2011). "A Dalit watch report on the flood camps in Bihar". India Water Portal.
  13. (1 September 2008). "Half of Bihar under water, 30 lakh suffer".
  14. Michael Coggan in New Delhi. (29 August 2008). "Death toll rises from Indian floods - Just In (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". ABC.
  15. Sunil Kataria. (29 August 2008). "Bihar villagers desperate as floods spread". [[Reuters]].
  16. Abhay Singh. (29 August 2017). "Floods in state not man-made, says minister". Times of India.
  17. (28 August 2017). "Flood Situation Improves In Bihar, Number Of Dead At 514". [[NDTV]].
  18. (20 August 2017). "Flood situation worsens in Bihar, death toll rises to 253". Times of India.
  19. (18 August 2017). "Bihar floods: 119 dead; bridge collapse caught on camera". Times of India.
  20. (20 August 2017). "Bihar floods: Death toll rises to 202 in 18 districts; thundershowers likely to continue today".
  21. (12 August 2017). "Alert sounded in north Bihar plains". Times of India.
  22. (21 August 2017). "Death toll in Bihar floods mounts to 304; situation grim in UP". Times of India.
  23. (27 August 2017). "Bihar Flood Deaths Rise To 440; Prime Minister Announces Rs. 500 Crore Relief". NDTV.
  24. (26 August 2017). "Bihar floods' death toll touches 440, 1.71 crore people still affected".
  25. (25 August 2017). "Bihar floods cost 39 more lives, UP staggers".
  26. (21 August 2017). "Bihar floods: Death toll rises to 304, 1.38 crore people still battling deluge in 18 districts". [[The Hindu]] [[Business Line]].
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about North Bihar — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report