Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/india

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

Sonbhadra district

District in Uttar Pradesh, India Purvanchal

Sonbhadra district

Summary

District in Uttar Pradesh, India Purvanchal

FieldValue
nameSonbhadra district
settlement_typeDistrict of Uttar Pradesh
total_typeTotal
native_nameSonanchal
image_skylineView from the top of Vijay Garh Fort.jpg
image_captionView from Vijaygarh Fort
image_mapIndia Uttar Pradesh districts 2012 Sonbhadra.svg
map_captionLocation of Sonbhadra district in Uttar Pradesh
coor_pinpointRobertsganj
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameIndia
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Uttar Pradesh
subdivision_type2Division
subdivision_name2Mirzapur
established_titleEstablished
established_date4 March 1989
seat_typeHeadquarters
seatRobertsganj
named_forSon River
parts_typeTehsils
parts_stylepara
p1
area_total_km26,788
population_as_of2011
population_total1,862,559
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Language
demographics1_title1Official
demographics1_info1Hindi
demographics1_title2Additional official
demographics1_info2Urdu
demographics1_title3Regional
demographics1_info3Bhojpuri
demographics_type2Demographics
demographics2_title1Literacy
demographics2_info164%
demographics2_title2Sex ratio
demographics2_info2918/1000
demographics2_title3Scheduled Castes
demographics2_info3
demographics2_title4Scheduled Tribes
demographics2_info4
leader_titleDistrict Magistrate
leader_nameBadrinath Singh, IAS
leader_title1Superintendent of Police
leader_name1Abhishek Verma
timezone1IST
utc_offset1+05:30
registration_plateUP-64
blank_name_sec1Major highways
blank_info_sec1
website
official_nameSonebhadra

Purvanchal}} , IPS

Sonbhadra district (also known as Sonebhadra) or Sonanchal is the second largest district by area of Uttar Pradesh after Lakhimpur Kheri. The district headquarters is in the town of Robertsganj. Sonbhadra is also known as the "Energy Capital of India" for hosting multiple power plants.Sonbhadra district is located in south eastern Uttar Pradesh.

Sonbhadra lies between Vindhya and Kaimur hills, and its topology and natural environment prompted the first Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru to refer to Sonbhadra as the "Switzerland of India".

[[Jawaharlal Nehru]] at inauguration of [[Rihand Dam

In 2018 Uttar Pradesh's chief minister Yogi Adityanath recognised Sonbhadra as a tourist hub in Purvanchal region and further promoted by Uttar Pradesh Tourism Department.

In February 2020, a Press Trust of India (PTI) news report incorrectly claimed that the Geological Survey of India (GSI) had found 3,000 tonne of gold deposits in Sonbhadra district. PTI later stated on Twitter that the GSI had told PTI that there had been no such discovery of large gold deposits in the district.

History

The Valley of Son and Belan Rivers abounds in caves which were the earliest dwellings of the primeval inhabitants. This area had been the centre of activities of pre-historic humans which is evident from the rock paintings (pre-historic cave art) found in abundance in this region. These paintings are of the periods ranging from Mesolithic to Paleolithic ages.

Panchmukhi Hill]], [[Robertsganj]] in Sonbhadra

Sonbhadra, whose ancient name was Gramputra or Gupt Kashi, was built by the ancient king Putrak for his queen Paatali.{{cite web | author = Patrika| title =Foundation day of Sonbhadra History| url = https://m.patrika.com/sonbhadra-news/foundation-day-of-sonbhadra-1523331/| access-date = 4 March 2018

The forts located in the district

  • Agori Fort
  • Vijaygarh Fort
  • Sodhrigarh Durg

The heroine of Famous Novel Chandrakanta written by Devaki Nandan Khatri was the princess of Vijaygarh and the daughter of king Jay Singh.

History of kingdoms in the region

Agori Barhar was an impartible estate. It originally comprised parts of the present districts of Sonbhadra and part of Mirzapur district. It was divided into two parganas of Agori and Barhar. Chandel Rajput Raja Paramardideva of Mahoba, ancestor of the family and contemporary of Raja Prithviraj III of Delhi, who attacked Mahoba as the Raja was the ally of Raja Jaichand of Kannauj, and occupied it for a time. Raja Paramardi Deva fled for his life with his friends and family, and though Mahoba was re-occupied by the Raja with the help of Jaichand of Kannauj, the glory of the capital never returned. During this time one of the sons of Raja Paramardi Deva, called Ashajit, fled eastwards in the turmoil that followed. His sons or grand sons called Barimal and Bharimal, captured Agori from the Kaharwar Raja and made themselves the independent rulers of Agori and Barhar. The elder brother Barimal took the kingdom of Agori and Barhar, and the younger brother Bharimal became the ruler of Bardi state ruled by Chandel -Rajput.

Another jagirdari in sonbhadra in Vijaygarh.it was also ruled by Chandel Dynasty after that by Narayan dynasty.

Geography

[[Son View Point

The district lies in the extreme south-east of the state, and is bounded by Mirzapur district to the northwest, Chandauli district to the north, Kaimur and Rohtas districts of Bihar state to the north-east, Garhwa district of Jharkhand state to the east, Balrampur District of Chhattisgarh state to the south, and Singrauli district of Madhya Pradesh state to the west. The northern part of the district lies on a plateau of the Vindhya Range, and is drained by tributaries of the Ganges including the Belan and Karmanasha rivers. South of the steep escarpment of the Kaimur Range is the valley of the Son River, which flows through the district from west to east. The southern portion of the district is hilly, interspersed with fertile stream valleys. The Rihand River, which rises to the south in the highlands of Surguja district of Chhattisgarh, flows north to join the Son in the center of the district. The Govind Ballabh Pant Sagar, a reservoir on the Rihand, lies partly in the district and partly in Madhya Pradesh. East of the Rihand, the Kanhar River, which originates in Chhattisgarh, flows north to join the Son.

Climate

Sonbhadra has a relatively subtropical climate with high variation between summer and winter temperatures. The average temperature is 30 to 46 °C in the summer and 2 to 15 °C in the winter. The weather is pleasant in rainy season from July to October.

Ecology

The portion of the district north of the Son River lies in the Lower Gangetic plains moist deciduous forests ecoregion. The portion south of the Son lies in the Chhota Nagpur dry deciduous forests ecoregion.

Kaimoor Wildlife Sanctuary lies mostly within the district, reaching generally east and west along the spine of the Kaimur Range, and extending to the Son River at its eastern end.

Economy

Shaktinagar]] in Sonbhadra

The district has many electrical power stations around Govind Ballabh Pant Sagar. NTPC has two coal-based thermal power plants, being Singrauli Super Thermal Power Station at Shaktinagar and Rihand Thermal Power Station at Rihand Nagar. Other power stations are at Anpara (UPRVUNL), Obra (UPRVUNL), Renusagar (Hindalco) and Pipri-Hydro (UPRVUNL). Northern Coalfields (a branch of Coal India Limited) has its headquarters and many coal mines in this region.

Hindalco has a major aluminium plant at Renukut. Owing to the limestone hills, initially one cement factory was established at Churk in 1956. Another cement factory started at Dala in 1971, with an ancillary unit at Chunar from 1980. A big dam constructed at Pipri in 1961 is named Rihand Dam; a small dam was constructed at Obra in 1968.

The Birla group set up an aluminum plant at Renukut. The company set up its own power plant at Renusagar in 1967 and started a company in Renukut called HiTech Carbon. Another industrial group initiated a company in Renukut named Grasim Industries Limited, which produces chemicals and later it started own power plant at Renukut in 1998.

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

Tourist attraction

[[Salkhan Fossils Park]] in Sonbhadra district

Historical places

[[Vijaygarh Fort]] on the Hill top
  • Vijaygarh Fort
  • Agori Fort
  • Veer Lorik Patthar
  • Cave Paintings of Son and Belan Valley, Sonbhadra{{cite web | author=Charu Chaudhary| title =Sonbhadra: Of Cave Paintings And Fossil Parks| url = https://www.india.com/travel/articles/sonbhadra-of-cave-paintings-and-fossil-parks-3671776/| access-date = 3 July 2020

Nature

[[Rihand Dam
  • Salkhan Fossil Park
  • Mukkha Fall
  • Son View Point, Robertsganj
  • Rihand Dam
  • Dhanraul Dam
  • Kaimoor Wildlife Sanctuary

Temples

Shivdwar Temple
[[Renukeshwar Mahadev Temple
  • Shivdwar
  • Renukeshwar Mahadev Temple
  • Vandevi Temple
  • Jwaladevi Temple, Shaktinagar
  • Maa Vaishnav Shaktipeeth Dalla
  • ambedkar park

Transport

By air

  • Muirpur Airport at Muirpur, an operational airstrip and proposed airport, currently used by chartered and private planes near Renukut
  • Varanasi International Airport in Varanasi. Flights are available to all major Indian cities including Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Lucknow, Agra, Bangalore, Chennai, Patna, Khajuraho, Hyderabad, Gaya, etc. International connections are Bangkok, Colombo, Hong Kong and Kathmandu from Varanasi International Airport.

By train

  • Mirzapur Railway Station
  • Sonbhadra Railway Station
  • Chopan Railway station
  • Renukoot Railway station near Rihand Dam
  • Anpara Railway station
  • Singrauli Railway station (in Madhya Pradesh)
  • Shaktinagar Railway station
  • Varanasi Railway station
  • Dudhi Railway station

The city is connected by rail to Delhi, Allahabad, Ranchi and Patna. Some notable trains passing through the district are Muri express (Jammu Tawi - Delhi - Tata Nagar), Jharkhand Swarna Jayanti Express/12873(Hatia - Kanpur - Delhi), Triveni Express (Bareilly - Lucknow - Shaktinagar/Singrauli/barwadih) Bhopal Express (Bhopal-Howrah) weekly and Shaktipunj Express/11448(Howrah-Bokaro - Chopan- Jabalpur). Intercity Express/03346 (Singrauli- Chopan-Varanasi).

By road

Robertsganj, the headquarters of Sonbhadra, is located about 88 km from the city of Varanasi which has the nearest airport. Robertsganj is well connected to Lucknow, Allahabad, Varanasi, Mirzapur, Gorakhpur, Faizabad, Ambikapur Sasaram & Garhwa by road. Buses are available at all hours of the day from Varanasi and it normally takes hours to cover the distance. The highway connecting Varanasi and Waidhan passes through the district. Though this is not a national highway it is a very busy road because of the towns Dalla, Renukot, Anpara, Shaktinagar which are sufficiently commercialized areas. National Thermal Power corporation is in Shaktinagar and also Northern Coalfields limited (a subsidiary company of Coal India Ltd) has different projects like Singrauli, Khadia, Jayant, Dudhichua, amlori, Kakri etc. These areas have several major coal mines which cater a big part of the coal need of the state. Churk a nearby town is situated around 10 km, where Jaypee Group is establishing a thermal power project. One of the main reasons this road is always busy is due to daily transport of around 1000 trucks of grits and sand.

Demographics

According to the 2011 census Sonbhadra district has a population of 1,862,559, of which male and female were 971,344 and 891,215 respectively. roughly equal to the nation of Kosovo or the US state of West Virginia. This gives it a ranking of 254th in India (out of a total of 640). The district has a population density of 270 PD/sqkm. Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 27.27%. 16.88% of the population lives in urban areas. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 22.64% and 20.67% of the population respectively.

Sex ratio and child population

Sonbhadra has a sex ratio of 996 females for every 1000 males. In census enumeration, data regarding child undeg age six were also collected for districts Sonbhadra. There were total 323,092 children under age six against 302,834 of 2001 census. Of total 323,092 male and female were 167,870 and 155,222 respectively. Child sex ratio as per census 2011 was 925 compared to 956 of census 2001. In 2011, children under age six formed 17.35 percent of Sonbhadra District compared to 20.69 percent of 2001. There was net change of -3.34 percent in this compared to previous census.

Literacy rate

literacy rate of 64%. Male and female literacy were 74.92% and 52.14% respectively. Total literate in Sonbhadra District were 985,708 of which male and female were 601,988 and 383,720 respectively.

Language

At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 83.91% of the population in the district spoke Hindi and 14.57% spoke Bhojpuri as their first language. Around 5,000 people in the district speak Gondi and 1,800 Kurukh, both tribal languages. Bagheli is major language in southern part of district while in Northern part, Bhojpuri is spoken.

Sonbhadra District urban population

Out of the total Sonbhadra population for 2011 census, 16.88 percent lives in urban regions of district. In total 314,342 people lives in urban areas of which males are 167,999 and females are 146,343. Sex Ratio in urban region of Sonbhadra district is 871 as per 2011 census data. Similarly child sex ratio in Sonbhadra district was 868 in 2011 census. Child population (0-6) in urban region was 38,169 of which males and females were 20,434 and 17,735. This child population figure of Sonbhadra district is 12.16% of total urban population.there are 11.7% urban people belong to scheduled casts and 3.2% urban people belong to scheduled tribes.

Average literacy rate in Sonbhadra Urban as per census 2011 is 84.31% of which males and females are 90.73% and 76.93% literates respectively.

Notable people

Politicians

  • Ram Shakal
  • Lalchandra
  • Bhai Lal
  • Chhotelal
  • Pakaudi Lal Kol Artists
  • Vivek Mushran Bollywood actor
  • Srikant Dwivedi Mr. India 2017, Bollywood actor
  • Anurag Kashyap Film director
  • Abhinav Kashyap Film director
  • Saumya Mishra Indian Idol season 9 contestant (Singer)
  • Vartika Jha Dancer, Choreographer and Actress, second runner up of Dance Plus (season 4)
  • Mohammed Hanif Khan Shastri Indian Sanskrit Scholar, The Government of India awarded civilian award Padma Shri (Literature & Education) in 2019

References

References

  1. "52nd Report of the Commissioners for Linguistic Minorities in India". [[Ministry of Minority Affairs]].
  2. Sudhir Kumar. (7 July 2018). "Once hailed by PM Nehru for its beauty, 'India's Switzerland' lacks access to power, water, healthcare". Hindustan Times.
  3. (13 September 2018). "Develop Sonbhadra as a tourism hub: Yogi". Hindustan Times.
  4. (22 February 2020). "Geological Survey of India tells PTI there has been no discovery of gold deposits estimated to be around 3,000 tonnes in Uttar Pradesh's Sonbhadra district, as claimed by district mining official".
  5. (22 February 2020). "No discovery of around 3,000-tonne gold deposits in U.P.'s Sonbhadra: GSI". The Hindu.
  6. Ministry of Panchayati Raj. (8 September 2009). "A Note on the Backward Regions Grant Fund Programme". National Institute of Rural Development.
  7. "Decadal Variation In Population Since 1901".
  8. (2011). "Table C-01 Population by Religion: Uttar Pradesh". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
  9. (2011). "District Census Handbook: Sonbhadra". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
  10. "Country Comparison: Population". Central Intelligence Agency.
  11. "2010 Resident Population Data". U. S. Census Bureau.
  12. "Table C-16 Population by Mother Tongue: Uttar Pradesh". [[Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India]].
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 Sonbhadra district — 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