Khiron
Khīron | |
---|---|
Village | |
Coordinates: 26°17′14″N 80°55′26″E / 26.2871°N 80.9239°E[1] | |
Country | India |
State | Uttar Pradesh |
District | Raebareli |
Area | |
• Total | 7.717 km2 (2.980 sq mi) |
Population (2011)[2] | |
• Total | 1,555 |
• Density | 200/km2 (520/sq mi) |
Languages | |
• Official | Hindi |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
PIN | 229295 |
Vehicle registration | UP-33 |
Khiron is a village and corresponding community development block in Rae Bareli district, Uttar Pradesh, India.[2] Located on the main Raebareli-Unnao road,semari Khiron is an old Muslim town that historically served as the seat of a pargana.[3] As of 2011, the village has a population of 9,955, in 1,714 households.[2] It has six primary schools and one medical clinic.[2] It serves as the headquarters of a nyaya panchayat that also includes 11 other villages.[4]
Khiron hosts an annual mela at the Balbhadreshwar Mahadeo temple[3] on Phalguna Badi 13; the festival is part of Shivratri and is dedicated to the worship of Shiva.[5] Vendors bring various everyday items to sell at the fair.[5] Khiron also hosts markets twice per week, on Mondays and Thursdays; the main items traded are cloth and vegetables.[5]
Khiron was fortified and made the seat of a pargana during the reign of Asaf-ud-Daula; the headquarters had previously been at Satanpur since its foundation and fortification by the Bais raja Sathna.[3] Khiron was also historically the seat of a taluqdari estate belonging to a Janwar dynasty, and there were also several Kayasth qanungo families, including many descended from Rai Sahib Rai, who had been a chakladar under the Nawabs of Awadh.[3] Rai Sahib Rai had built a fort at Khiron whose ruins still exist.[3] There is also the tomb of Fateh Shahid, a companion of the Muslim folk hero Sayyid Salar Masud.[3]
The population of Khiron declined sharply in the late 1800s from 3,408 in 1869 to 2,669 in 1901.[3] At the 1901 census, there were 559 Muslims, almost entirely Pathans.[3] Turn-of-the-century Khiron had a large primary school, a cattle pound, a branch post office, and two bazars called Balbhaddarganj and Raghunathganj, holding markets twice per week.[3] There was a large tank to the north and east of the town, as well as some kankar quarries and plenty of orchards.[3]
The 1951 census recorded Khiron as comprising 10 hamlets, with a total population of 2,939 people (1,474 male and 1,465 female), in 593 households and 593 physical houses.[6] The area of the village was given as 1,925 acres (779 ha)s.[6] 338 residents were literate, 295 male and 43 female.[6] The village was listed as belonging to the pargana of Khiron and the thana of Gurbakshganj.[6]
The 1961 census recorded Khiron as comprising 10 hamlets, with a total population of 3,210 people (1,679 male and 1,531 female), in 590 households and 536 physical houses.[5] The area of the village was given as 1,925 acres (779 ha)s and it had a post office at that point.[5] There was a dispensary run by a local body with five male beds and one female bed; It had one grain mill, and four small manufacturers of clothing.[5] Average attendance of market was 500 and for the festival it was 400.[5]
The 1981 census recorded Khiron as having a population of 5,243 people, in 946 households, and having an area of 973.76 hectares (2,406.2 acres).[7] The main staple foods were listed as wheat and rice.[7]
The 1991 census recorded Khiron as having a total population of 6,296 people (3,317 male and 2,979 female), in 1,127 households and 1,124 physical houses.[4] The area of the village was listed as 57 hectares (140 acres).[4] Members of the 0-6 age group numbered 1,262, or 20% of the total; this group was 52% male (658) and 48% female (604).[4] Members of scheduled castes numbered 2,029, or 32% of the village's total population, while no members of scheduled tribes were recorded.[4] The literacy rate of the village was 35% (1,581 men and 642 women).[4] 1,757 people were classified as main workers (1,613 men and 144 women), while 213 people were classified as marginal workers (all women); the remaining 4,326 residents were non-workers.[4] The breakdown of main workers by employment category was as follows: 828 cultivators (i.e. people who owned or leased their own land); 290 agricultural labourers (i.e. people who worked someone else's land in return for payment); 27 workers in livestock, forestry, fishing, hunting, plantations, orchards, etc.; 0 in mining and quarrying; 42 household industry workers; 66 workers employed in other manufacturing, processing, service, and repair roles; 12 construction workers; 200 employed in trade and commerce; 34 employed in transport, storage, and communications; and 258 in other services.[4]
Khiron CD block has the following 94 villages:[2]
Village name | Total land area (hectares) | Population (in 2011) |
---|---|---|
Aindhi | 377.1 | 2,317 |
Dandanpur | 85.4 | 537 |
Shiv Puri | 217.2 | 1,354 |
Jeti | 484 | 2,108 |
Chandauli | 234.5 | 1,286 |
Gona Mau | 161.9 | 1,247 |
Behta Satanpur | 227.5 | 1,408 |
Tarwa Barwa | 82.2 | 598 |
Dondepur | 117.8 | 1,251 |
Atarhar | 350.6 | 3,296 |
Dumarher | 326.8 | 2,577 |
Nandehari | 106.8 | 705 |
Dhurayee | 594.2 | 4,481 |
Paho | 866 | 5,620 |
Lodipur | 149.4 | 834 |
Mohanpur | 28.3 | 425 |
Sadullapur | 90.8 | 796 |
Ranapur Urf Pahrauli | 350.6 | 2,158 |
Khajuha | 180.6 | 1,260 |
Kursandi | 113.2 | 1,166 |
Lalpur | 97.4 | 546 |
Hardi | 164.9 | 1,675 |
Baraundi | 201.3 | 1,556 |
Haripur Mirdaha | 193.6 | 2,284 |
Madanapur | 113.2 | 1,031 |
Saguni | 162.8 | 1,941 |
Baraula | 197.1 | 1,305 |
Paraspur | 24.4 | 37 |
Khiron (block headquarters) | 771.7 | 9,955 |
Husenabad | 59.6 | 862 |
Rampur Majra | 139.4 | 447 |
Bhitargaon | 1,318.1 | 10,841 |
Basigawan | 222.2 | 747 |
Nau Gawn | 123.1 | 450 |
Chande Mau | 171.9 | 1,135 |
Mera Mau | 92.5 | 1,057 |
Jasaumau | 363.9 | 2,917 |
Mendauli | 468.3 | 3,345 |
Hari Ramkhera | 46.2 | 290 |
Akohriya | 177 | 1,481 |
Dokanaha | 534.1 | 4,009 |
Nunera | 175.6 | 1,717 |
Sehara Mau | 102.1 | 840 |
Jam Koriyapur | 169 | 881 |
Kamalpur | 184.8 | 1,118 |
Akhaupur | 181.1 | 1,338 |
Dahirapur | 52.6 | 386 |
Barvaliya | 159 | 1,459 |
Tikwa Mau | 156.1 | 1,065 |
Khanpur Khunti | 178.4 | 1,723 |
Mirjapur | 122.2 | 648 |
Sarai Mahmood | 62.2 | 460 |
Udwatpur | 138.4 | 847 |
Kishun Khera | 155.4 | 1,205 |
Majhigawan | 102.7 | 782 |
Deo Gaon | 143.6 | 1,233 |
Ketanpur | 50.2 | 345 |
Kalupur | 61.5 | 470 |
Mishra Khera | 61.1 | 354 |
Khandepur | 91.7 | 647 |
Sewanpur | 356.7 | 1,894 |
Surajpur Guman Khera | 124.5 | 1,206 |
Ramwapur Dubai | 386.1 | 2,537 |
Baswan Khera | 32.4 | 725 |
Chak Gajraj | 19.7 | 429 |
Chakpher Shah | 37.2 | 491 |
Semari | 626 | 5,715 |
Lakshipur | 398.2 | 2,524 |
Dewali | 99.3 | 517 |
Manpur | 122.2 | 1,188 |
Keshauli | 201.7 | 1,742 |
Khargapur | 195.8 | 2,246 |
Bhitari | 315.4 | 3,221 |
Bakuliha | 499.6 | 4,244 |
Sidhaur Semari | 129.2 | 1,169 |
Afasari | 99.4 | 731 |
Bijemau Khapura | 290.7 | 2,799 |
Kanha Mau | 272 | 886 |
Malpur | 143.3 | 592 |
Shyampur | 197.2 | 593 |
Haripur Nihastha | 123.7 | 722 |
Nihastha | 446.5 | 2,597 |
Rampur Nihastha | 110.8 | 508 |
Jagatpur Ramgari | 258 | 1,168 |
Chikhari | 273.4 | 555 |
Satanpur | 330.1 | 3,902 |
Banai Mau | 126.8 | 856 |
Ajitpur | 106.4 | 1,264 |
Raipur | 166.9 | 1,283 |
Ekauni | 168.6 | 1,466 |
Gaunha | 269.9 | 993 |
Korara | 57 | 258 |
Bari | 180.2 | 779 |
Merui | 506.1 | 2,855 |
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