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Delhi
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Kausani Nainital
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Uttaranchal |
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DELHI |
Delhi (Hindi:
दिल्ली, Punjabi: ਦਿੱਲੀ, Urdu: دلی, sometimes
referred to as Dilli, is the second-largest metropolis in India
after Mumbai with a population of 13 million, and with an
extended metropolitan population of almost 22 million.[4][5]
Located in northern India on the banks of the River Yamuna,
Delhi has the political status of a federally-administered union
territory known as the National Capital Territory of Delhi (NCT).
A constitutional amendment in 1991 gave Delhi a special status
among the Union Territories; Delhi has its own legislative
assembly with limited powers. The National Capital Territory of
Delhi comprises nine districts, 27 tehsils, three statutory
towns viz. Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), New Delhi
Municipal Committee (NDMC) and Delhi Cantonment Board (DCB), 59
census towns and 165 villages.[6]
Delhi is one of the oldest continually inhabited cities in the
world. Having been the capital of several empires in ancient
India, Delhi was a major city in the old trade routes from
northwest India to the Gangetic Plains. Many ancient monuments,
archaeological sites and remains of national importance have
been erected in its history.[7] The Mughals built a section of
the city (now known as Old City or Old Delhi) that served as the
capital of Mughal Empire for a long period. During the British
Raj, New Delhi was built as an administrative quarter of the
city. New Delhi was declared the capital of India after India
gained independence from British rule in 1947. As the seat of
the Government of India, New Delhi houses important offices of
the federal government, including the Parliament of India. Delhi
has grown up to be a cosmopolitan city owing to the immigration
of people from across the country. Like many other large cities
of the world, Delhi suffers from urbanisation problems such as
pollution, traffic congestion, and scarcity of resources[8]. The
rapid development and urbanisation of New Delhi and surrounding
areas coupled with the high average income of the populace has
largely eclipsed socio-cultural traits that used to represent
Delhi until a few years after independence |
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UTTARANCHAL |
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Uttarakhand
(Hindi: उत्तराखण्ड or उत्तराखंड), known as Uttaranchal from
2000 to 2006, became the 27th state of the Republic of India on
November 9, 2000. Uttarakhand borders Tibet to the north, Nepal
to the east, and the states of Himachal Pradesh and Uttar
Pradesh (of which it formed a part before 2000) in the west and
south respectively. The region is traditionally referred to as
Uttarakhand in Hindu scriptures and old literature, a term which
derives from the Sanskrit for Northern Country or Section. In
January 2007, the name of the state was officially changed from
Uttaranchal, its interim name, to Uttarakhand, according to the
wishes of a large section of its people. The provisional capital
of Uttarakhand is Dehradun which is also a rail-head and the
largest city in the region. The small hamlet of Gairsen has been
mooted as the future capital owing to its geographic centrality
but controversies and lack of resources have led Dehradun to
remain provisional capital. The High Court of the state is in
Nainital.
Recent developments in the region include initiatives by the
state government to capitalise on the handloom and handicrafts
burgeoning tourist trade as well as tax incentives to lure
high-tech industry to the state. The state also has big-dam
projects, controversial and often criticised in India, such as
the very large Tehri dam on the Bhagirathi-Bhilangana rivers,
conceived in 1953 and about to reach completion.[1] Uttarakhand
is also well known as the birthplace of the Chipko environmental
movement,[2] and a myriad other social movements including the
mass agitation in the 1990s that led to its formation. |
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Meaning of name and history |
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Uttarakhand is both the new and traditional name of the state
that was formed from the hill districts of Uttar Pradesh, India.
Literally North Country or Section in Sanskrit, the name of
Uttarakhand finds mention in the early Hindu scriptures as the
combined region of Kedarkhand and Manaskhand. Uttarakhand was
also the ancient Puranic term for the central stretch of the
Indian Himalayas. Its peaks and valleys were well known in
ancient times as the abode of gods and goddesses and source of
the Ganga River. Today, it is often called "the Land of the
Gods" (Dev Bhoomi) because of the presence of a multitude of
Hindu pilgrimage spots. The Pauravas,
Kushanas, Kunindas, Guptas,
Katyuris, Palas, the Chands, and Parmars and the British have
ruled Uttarakhand in turns.[3]
The region was originally settled by Kols, an aboriginal people
of the Dravidian physical type who were later joined by
Indo-Aryan Khas tribes that arrived from the northwest by the
Vedic period. At that time, present-day Uttarakhand also served
as a haunt for Rishis and Sadhus. It is believed that Sage Vyasa
scripted the Mahabharata here as the Pandavas are believed to
have traveled and camped in the region. Among the first major
dynasties of Garhwal and Kumaon were the Kunindas in the 2nd
century B.C. who practiced an early form of Shaivism. They
traded salt with Western Tibet. It is evident from the Ashokan
edict at Kalsi in Western Garhwal that Buddhism made some
inroads in this region. Folk shamanic practices deviating from
Hindu orthodoxy also persisted here. However, Garhwal and Kumaon
were restored to nominal Brahmanical rule due to the travails of
Shankaracharya and the arrival of migrants from the plains. In
the fourth century, the Kunindas gave way to the Rawat Dynasty.
Between the 7th and 14th centuries, the Katyuri dynasty of Khas
origin dominated lands of varying extent from the Katyur (modern
day Baijnath) valley in Kumaon. Other peoples of the
Tibeto-Burman group known as Kiratas are thought to have settled
in the northern highlands as well as in pockets throughout the
region, and believed to be the ancestors to the modern day
Bhotiya, Raji, Buksha, and Tharu peoples.[4]
By the medieval period, the region was consolidated under the
Garhwal Kingdom in the west and the Kumaon Kingdom in the east.
From the 13th-14th century, Kumaon prospered under the Chand
Rajas who had their origins in the plains of India. During this
period, learning and new forms of painting (the Pahari school of
art) developed.[5] Modern-day Garhwal was likewise unified under
the rule of Parmar Rajas, who along with a mass migration of
Brahmins and Rajputs, also arrived from the plains.[6] In 1791,
the expanding Gurkha Empire of Nepal, overran Almora, the seat
of the Kumaon Kingdom. In 1803, the Garhwal Kingdom also fell to
the Gurkhas. With the conclusion of the Anglo-Nepalese War in
1816, a rump portion of the Garhwal Kingdom was reestablished
from Tehri, and eastern British Garhwal and Kumaon ceded to the
British as part of the Treaty of Sugauli.
In the post-independence period, the Tehri princely state was
merged into Uttar Pradesh state, where Uttarakhand composed the
Garhwal and Kumaon Divisions.[7] Until 1998, Uttarakhand was the
name most commonly used to refer to the region, as various
political groups including most significantly the Uttarakhand
Kranti Dal (Uttarakhand Revolutionary Party est. 1979), began
agitating for separate statehood under its banner. Although the
erstwhile hill kingdoms of Garhwal and Kumaon were traditional
rivals with diverse lingual and cultural influences due to the
proximity of different neighbouring ethnic groups, the
inseparable and complementary nature of their geography,
economy, culture, language, and traditions created strong bonds
between the two regions.[8] These bonds formed the basis of the
new political identity of Uttarakhand, which gained significant
momentum in 1994, when demand for separate statehood (within the
Union of India) achieved almost unanimous acceptance among the
local populace as well as political parties at the national
level.[9]
However, the term Uttaranchal came into use when the BJP-led
central and Uttar Pradesh state governments initiated a new
round of state reorganization in 1998 and introduced its
preferred name. Chosen for its allegedly less separatist
connotations, the name change generated enormous controversy
among the rank and file of the separate state activists who saw
it as a political act [10], however they were not quite as
successful as Jharkhand state that successfully thwarted a
similar move to impose the name Vananchal. Nevertheless, the
name Uttarakhand remained popular in the region, even while
Uttaranchal was promulgated through official usage.
In August 2006, India's Union Cabinet assented to the
four-year-old demand of the Uttaranchal state assembly and
leading members of the Uttarakhand movement to rename
Uttaranchal state as Uttarakhand. Legislation to that effect was
passed by the State Legislative Assembly in October 2006,[11]
and the Union Cabinet brought in the bill in the winter session
of Parliament. The bill was passed by Parliament and signed into
law by the President in December 2006. Since then, Uttarakhand
denotes a state in the Union of India. |
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DEMOGRAPHICS |
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People of
Uttarakhand are generally called either Garhwali or Kumaoni
depending on their place of origin in either the Garhwal or
Kumaon region. Colloquially they are also referred to as Pahari
meaning "hill person". Many Punjabis, who migrated to India
after partition, along with migrants from the adjoining plains,
make up the majority of the Terai population. Nepalis, Bengalis,
and Tibetans of Eastern Tibet region (Khampa) have also settled
in the state. Another well known category is Gujjar, cattle
herders in the southwestern Terai.
Kumaoni and Garhwali dialects of Central Pahari are spoken in
Kumaon and Garhwal region respectively. Jaunsari and Bhotiya
dialects are also spoken by tribal communities in the west and
north respectively. The urban population however converses
mostly in Hindi.
A majority of peoples in the state are Rajput.
Hindus form the majority of the population at 85.0%, Muslims
form 12.0%, Sikhs 2.5% and Christians, Buddhists, Jains and
others about 0.5% [12].
According to the Population Projection Report based on 2001
Census by Censusindia, table 8 page 57, Uttarkhand's estimated
population in 2007 is 9,365,000 with 4,774,000 males and
4,591,000 females. This report is no longer available online
free of charge. |
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GEOGRAPHY |
Uttarakhand is a
region of outstanding natural beauty. Most of the northern parts
of the state are part of Greater Himalaya ranges, covered by the
high Himalayan peaks and glaciers, while the lower foothills
were densely forested till denuded by the British log merchants
and later, after independence, by forest contractors. Recent
efforts in reforestation, however, have been successful in
restoring the situation to some extent. The unique Himalayan
ecosystem plays host to a large number of animals (including
bharal, snow leopards, leopards and tigers), plants and rare
herbs. Two of India's mightiest rivers, the Ganga and the Yamuna
take birth in the glaciers of Uttarakhand, and are fed by myriad
lakes, glacial melts and streams in the region.[13]
Uttarakhand lies on the south slope of the mighty Himalaya
range, and the climate and vegetation vary greatly with
elevation, from glaciers at the highest elevations to tropical
forests at the lower elevations. The highest elevations are
covered by ice and bare rock. The Western Himalayan Alpine Shrub
and Meadows ecoregion lies between 3000-3500 and 5000 meters
elevation; tundra and alpine meadows cover the highest
elevations, transitioning to Rhododendron-dominated shrublands
below. The Western Himalayan subalpine conifer forests lie just
below the tree line; at 3000-2600 meters elevation they
transition to the Western Himalayan broadleaf forests, which lie
in a belt from 2,600 to 1,500 meters elevation. Below 1500
meters elevation lies western end of the drier Terai-Duar
savanna and grasslands belt, and the Upper Gangetic Plains moist
deciduous forests. This belt is locally known as Bhabhar. These
lowland forests have mostly been cleared for agriculture, but a
few pockets remain.[14]
Indian National Parks in Uttarakhand include the Jim Corbett
National Park (the oldest national park of India) at Ramnagar in
Nainital District, Valley of Flowers National Park and Nanda
Devi National Park in Chamoli District, Rajaji National Park in
Haridwar District, and Govind Pashu Vihar National Park and
Gangotri National Park in Uttarkashi District.
Ukhimath and Khirsu are tiny, pristine hill stations with
spectacular views of the Himalaya peaks. |
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STATISTICS |
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State Symbols
State animal
:Musk Deer
State bird
:Monal
State tree
:Rhododendron
State flower :Brahma Kamal
Total
Geographical area: 51,125 km²
Hill Area: 92.57%
Plain Area: 7.43%
Area Covered By Forest: 63%
Location
Longitude 77° 34' 27" East to 81° 02' 22" E
Latitude 28° 53' 24" North to 31° 27' 50" N
Total Population: 8,479,562 (2001 Census)
Male to Female Ratio: 1000 : 964
Male: % 50.9
Female: % 49.1
Cities with population > 100,000 (2001 census)
Dehradun (530,263)
Haridwar (220,767)
Haldwani (158,896)
Roorkee (115,278)
Literacy Rate: 72%
Villages: 15620
Cities and Urban Areas: 81
Railway Stations: Kotdwara, Dehradun, Haridwar, Rishikesh,
Haldwani, Lalkuan, Kathgodam, Ramnagar, Roorkee, Tanakpur,
Laksar
Airports: Jolly Grant,
Pantnagar, Nainisain, Gauchar (Helipad)
Major Peaks (height in metres above sea level)
Nanda Devi (7816), Kamet (7756), Badrinath (7140), Chaukhamba
(7138), Trishul (7120), Dunagiri (7066), Panchchuli (6910),
Nanda Kot (6861), Gangotri (6614), Gauri Parvat (6590)
Major Passes
Mana La (5450), Niti La (5070), Lipu Lekh pass (5122), Lumpia
Dhura (5650)
Industry
Tourism, Hydroelectric Power, Dairy, Agriculture, Horticulture,
Floriculture, Sugar, Manufacturing, and other small scale
industries.
Famous Temples in Uttarakhand
Rudreshwar Mahadev Temple near Sanara, Golu Devta Temple, Nanda
Devi Mandir, Binsar Mahadev Temple, Bhoomiya Devta Temple, Badri
Kedar, Gangotri, Yamunotri, Kedar Temple near Masi, Bheem
Shankar (Moteshwar)Mahadev (Kashipur),Purnagiri(Tankpur),Jageswar(Almora),Devidhura
temple(barahi mata)champawat,
Festivals
Uttarani, Nanda Devi Mela, Holi, Diwali, Dasara, Kandali,
Hilljatra, Bikhoti, Bagwal, Harela, Ghugutee, Khirsu Gwarh (Mela)
Events
Sardotsav, Basantotsav, Nanda Devi Raj Jat, Chipla Kedar Jaat,
Kedarnath Yatra, Badrinath Yatra, Kumbh Mela, Ardh Kumbh Mela,
Ramleela, Uttarakhand Mahotsav (Dehradun), Mahashivatri Fair at
Rudreshwar Mahadev Temple
Trade Centers
Haldwani, Rudrapur, Roorkee, Tanakpur, Dehradun, Haridwar,
Kotdwara, Rishikesh, Kashipur |
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DISTRICTS |
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There are 13
districts in Uttarakhand which are grouped into two divisions.
Garhwal division includes Chamoli, Dehradun, Haridwar, Pauri
Garhwal (commonly known as Garhwal), Rudraprayag, Tehri Garhwal
and Uttarkashi whereas Kumaon division includes Almora,
Bageshwar, Champawat, Nainital, Pithoragarh, Udham Singh Nagar. |
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ECONOMY |
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Uttarakhand's gross
state domestic product for 2004 is estimated at $6 billion in
current prices. Born out of partition of Uttar Pradesh, the new
state of Uttarakhand produces about 8% of the output of the old
Uttar Pradesh state. Consolidated Finvest and Holdings, a S&P
CNX 500 conglomerate has its corporate office in Uttarakhand. It
reported a gross income of Rs.137 million for 2005. [citation
needed]
In 2003, a new industrial policy for the state with generous tax
benefits for investors was initiated that has led to a massive
upsurge of capital investment. SIDCUL, the State Industrial
Development Corporation of Uttaranchal (sic) has established
seven industrial estates in the southern periphery of the state,
while dozens of hydroelectric dams are being built in the upper
reaches. However, hill development remains an uphill challenge
as out migration of local peoples continues from the highland
hinterlands. |
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TOURISM |
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Leisure, adventure,
and religious tourism play a prominent role in Uttarakhand's
economy, with the Corbett National Park and Tiger Reserve and
the nearby hill-stations of Nainital, Mussoorie, Almora and
Ranikhet being amongst the most frequented destinations of
India. The state also contains numerous peaks of interest to
mountaineers, although Nanda Devi as the highest and most
well-known of these, has been off-limits since 1982. Other
national wonders include the Valley of Flowers, which along with
Nanda Devi National Park, form a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
To Uttarakhand, long called "abode of the gods" (Devbhumi),
belong some of the holiest Hindu shrines, and for more than a
thousand years, pilgrims have been visiting the region in the
hopes of salvation and purification from sin. Gangotri and
Yamunotri, the sources of both the Ganges and Yamuna fall in the
upper reaches of the state and together with Badrinath
(dedicated to Vishnu) and Kedarnath (dedicated to Shiva) form
the Chardham of Uttarakhand, one of Hinduism most spiritually
auspicious pilgrimage circuits. Rishikesh near Haridwar is known
as the preeminent yoga centre of India while the spectacular
view from Hemkund is of special significance to Sikhs. In
addition, the state has an abundance of temples and shrines,
many dedicated to local deities or manifestations of Shiva and
Durga, references to many of which can be found in Hindu
scriptures and legends.[15] The architecture of most of these
temples is typical of the region and slightly different from
other parts of India, the ancient temples at Jageshwar being the
most prominent for their distinct architectural features.
Tibetan Buddhism has also made itself felt with the recent
reconstruction of Mindroling Monastery and its Buddha Stupa,
touted as the world's highest[16], southwest of Dehradun. |
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EDUCATION |
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Uttarakhand has
educational institutions of major importance to India and the
world. It is home to the oldest engineering college of Asia, the
Indian Institute of Technology at Roorkee (formerly University
of Roorkee). Other universities of prime importance include the
G. B. Pant University in Pantnagar,Gurukula Kangri University in
Haridwar, Faculty of Engineering and Technology,Gurukula Kangri
University, Kumaun University in Nainital and Almora, and the
H.N.B. Garhwal University in Srinagar. The later two were
founded in 1973 as part of the upsurge of regional sentiment
that led to Uttarakhand statehood.
Historically, Uttarakhand is believed to be the land where the
Vedas and the Shastras were composed and the great epic, the
Mahabharata, was written. Rishikesh is widely considered the
Yoga capital of the world.
Literacy rate in Uttarakhand, as per the 2001 census, is 72%
(approx.), which is above the national average of 65% (approx.).Uttaranchal
community is working together to provide education to the poor
and orphan kids in rural uttarakhand. |
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FURTHER READINGS |
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-
Husain, Z.
(1995). Uttarakhand movement: the politics of identity and
frustration, a psycho-analytical study of the separate state
movement, 1815-1995. Bareilly: Prakash Book Depot.
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Śarmā, D.
(1989). Tibeto-Himalayan languages of Uttarakhand. Studies
in Tibeto-Himalayan languages, 3. New Delhi, India: Mittal
Publications.
-
Fonia, K. S.
(1987). Uttarakhand, the land of jungles, temples, and
snows. New Delhi, India: Lancer Books.
-
Mukhopadhyay,
R. (1987). Uttarakhand movement a sociological analysis.
Centre for Himalayan Studies special lecture, 8. Raja
Rammohunpur, Dt. Darjeeling: University of North Bengal.
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REFERENCES |
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1. ^ Yadav, K.
P. S. (2002). Going Under : Tehri prepares for a watery grave as
the controversial dam becomes a grim reality. Its residents are
in mourning, their grief compounded by an uncertain future. Down
To Earth, 10(16), 20.
2. ^ Guha, R. (2000). The unquiet woods : ecological change and
peasant resistance in the Himalaya (Expanded ed.). Berkeley,
Calif.: University of California Press.
3. ^ Kandari, O. P., & Gusain, O. P. (Eds.). (2001). Garhwal
Himalaya : Nature, Culture & Society. Srinagar, Garhwal:
Transmedia.
4. ^ Saklani, D. P. (1998). Ancient communities of the Himalaya.
New Delhi: Indus Pub. Co.
5. ^ Pande, B. D. (1993). History of Kumaun : English version of
"Kumaun ka itihas". Almora, U.P., India: Shyam Prakashan : Shree
Almora Book Depot.
6. ^ Rawat, A. S. (1989). History of Garhwal, 1358-1947: an
erstwhile kingdom in the Himalayas. New Delhi: Indus Pub. Co.
7. ^ Saklani, A. (1987). The history of a Himalayan princely
state : change, conflicts and awakening : an interpretative
history of princely state of Tehri Garhwal, U.P., A.D. 1815 to
1949 A.D (1st ed.). Delhi: Durga Publications.
8. ^ Aggarwal, J. C., Agrawal, S. P., & Gupta, S. S. (Eds.).
(1995). Uttarakhand: past, present, and future. New Delhi:
Concept Pub. Co.
9. ^ Kumar, P. (2000). The Uttarakhand Movement: Construction of
a Regional Identity. New Delhi: Kanishka Publishers.
10. ^ Negi, B. (2001). "Round One to the Lobbyists, Politicians
and Bureaucrats." Indian Express, January 2.
11. ^ UNI. (2006). "Uttaranchal becomes Uttarakhand." Tribune
(India), October 12.
12. ^ http://www.censusindia.net/religiondata/ 2001 Indian
Census Data
13. ^ Negi, S. S. (1991). Himalayan rivers, lakes, and glaciers.
New Delhi: Indus Pub. Co.
14. ^ Negi, S. S. (1995). Uttarakhand: land and people. New
Delhi: MD Pub.
15. ^ Dilwali, A., & Pant, P. (1987). The Garhwal Himalayas,
ramparts of heaven. New Delhi: Lustre Press.
16. ^ PTI. (2002). "Dalai Lama Inaugurates World's Highest Stupa."
October 28.
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