Kurwar
As of 2011, Kurwar has a population of 10,826, in 1,785 households. It has 4 primary schools and a community health centre. Kurwar hosts a market twice per week, on Mondays and Fridays; it mostly deals in cloth, pottery and bullocks. It also hosts a large Dussehra festival involving dramatic reenactments of scenes from the Ramayana. Vendors bring items such as earthenware pottery, hosiery, hemp ropes, cloth, toys, and sweets to sell at the fair. Kurwar is also the seat of a nyaya panchayat which also includes 13 other villages.
History
Kurwar was historically the seat of the Raja of Kurwar, who was head of the Bachgoti Rajput clan and who lived in a palace here. The palace was built by the Court of Wards, and Raja Partab Bahadur Singh also built a large zanana house which was completed in 1902.
The Rajas of Kurwar claimed descent from one Prithipat Singh; the ninth raja, Niwaz Singh, had two sons named Lachhman Singh (who inherited Kurwar) and Man Singh (who received the taluqa of Bhiti; Lachhman Singh's grandsons all died without issue, and Sukhdev Singh, a descendant of Man Singh, seized Kurwar, and his descendants would subsequently reign as rajas. At the turn of the 20th century, the Kurwar estate consisted of 64 villages and 9 pattis in the parganas of Miranpur and Baraunsa, and the raja also held the Hathgaon estate of 37 villages and 15 pattis in Faizabad district.
At the turn of the 20th century, Kurwar was described as a large village with "a very flourishing upper primary school, one of the best in the district," as well as a female dispensary maintained by the Raja of Kurwar. It was not, however a trade centre. The population as of 1901 was 3,004 people, including 2,297 Hindus and 707 Muslims. The main caste groups were Brahmins, Thakurs, and Kayasths.
The 1951 census recorded Kurwar as comprising 36 hamlets, with a total population of 3,640 people (1,808 male and 1,832 female), in 852 households and 780 physical houses. The area of the village was given as 1,722 acres. The village was listed as belonging to the pargana of Miranpur and the thana of Kotwali. The village had a district board-run primary school with 276 students in attendance as of 1 January 1951.
The 1961 census recorded Kurwar as comprising 37 hamlets, with a total population of 4,112 people (2,047 male and 2,065 female), in 795 households and 760 physical houses. The area of the village was given as 1,722 acres and it had a medical practitioner, maternity and child welfare centre, and government-run dispensary with 2 male and 2 female beds. Average attendance of the twice-weekly haat was about 1,500 people, while attendance of the Dussehra fair was about 2,000.
The 1981 census recorded Kurwar as having a population of 5,876 people, in 1,031 households, and having an area of 696.89 hectares. The main staple foods were listed as wheat and rice.
The 1991 census recorded Kurwar (as "Kudwar") as having a total population of 7,428 people (3,826 male and 3,602 female), in 1,181 households and 1,156 physical houses. The area of the village was listed as 996.89 hectares. Members of the 0-6 age group numbered 1,426, or 19% of the total; this group was 53% male (757) and 47% female (669). Members of scheduled castes numbered 758, or 10% of the village's total population, while no members of scheduled tribes were recorded. The literacy rate of the village was 52% (2,152 men and 984 women, counting only people age 7 and up). 1,970 people were classified as main workers (1,736 men and 234 women), while 10 people were classified as marginal workers (all women); the remaining 5,448 residents were non-workers. The breakdown of main workers by employment category was as follows: 635 cultivators (i.e. people who owned or leased their own land); 530 agricultural labourers (i.e. people who worked someone else's land in return for payment); 0 workers in livestock, forestry, fishing, hunting, plantations, orchards, etc.; 0 in mining and quarrying; 188 household industry workers; 70 workers employed in other manufacturing, processing, service, and repair roles; 4 construction workers; 245 employed in trade and commerce; 23 employed in transport, storage, and communications; and 285 in other services.
Villages
Kurwar CD block has the following 99 villages:
Village name | Total land area (hectares) | Population (in 2011) |
---|---|---|
Basantpur Tivaripur | 135.5 | 1,489 |
Khajapur | 77.6 | 645 |
Marha | 176.8 | 1,027 |
Madhopur Acharya | 77.8 | 1,426 |
Bahubara | 209.8 | 1,885 |
Agai | 421.9 | 3,371 |
Mudva | 321.5 | 2,948 |
Avadha | 88 | 285 |
Sarav | 128.6 | 1,195 |
Soti | 49 | 34 |
Madhopur | 82.3 | 375 |
Nougbatir | 491.3 | 2,821 |
Uapadh Yaypur | 38.9 | 359 |
Pratappur | 341.7 | 2,148 |
Bhandar Parasrampur | 1,318.5 | 5,656 |
Tirachha | 25.8 | 700 |
Nirsahiya | 229.8 | 1,505 |
Kumhai | 171.9 | 905 |
Sohgouli | 645.1 | 6,339 |
Bhagvanpur | 50.4 | 818 |
Utmanpur | 61.6 | 551 |
Gajahati | 154.7 | 3,905 |
Bhdahara | 136.4 | 1,422 |
Khadar Basantpur | 283.6 | 1,454 |
Nayora | 92.2 | 859 |
Kurwar (block headquarters) | 671.8 | 10,826 |
Isauli | 98.5 | 1,349 |
Devalpur | 191.7 | 1,631 |
Chitaipur | 51.9 | 845 |
Harkhpur | 157.7 | 2,310 |
Grantkurvar | 328 | 1,101 |
Dhanrava | 389 | 7,354 |
Sarkoura | 464.9 | 4,849 |
Kapurpur | 70 | 65 |
Jagdishpur | 59 | 719 |
Pataipur | 115.6 | 826 |
Mahmudpur Bangir | 29 | 387 |
Pipri | 227.3 | 1,478 |
Purejrekhi | 152.8 | 584 |
Mithnepur | 171.1 | 2,011 |
Pahrauli | 199.2 | 810 |
Kota | 431.6 | 2,143 |
Vinaykpur | 272.7 | 1,492 |
Balapashchim | 473.2 | 3,807 |
Pureudayram | 78.1 | 346 |
Narottampur | 49.6 | 403 |
Maviya | 77.9 | 1,249 |
Chak Mavaiya | 14.6 | 229 |
Kotiya | 348.1 | 5,861 |
Purepavar | 110.2 | 896 |
Rajapur | 205.1 | 2,521 |
Domanpur | 358.6 | 4,814 |
Rampur Matha | 155.4 | 1,228 |
Dhusyariya | 225.8 | 1,530 |
Uchgaon | 424.3 | 4,036 |
Khadsa | 55.3 | 1,242 |
Sarayapurevishan | 312.9 | 3,651 |
Masetva | 55.2 | 1,042 |
Maniyari | 191.4 | 2,931 |
Tikariya | 259.9 | 1,270 |
Baburi | 269.8 | 2,461 |
Ajiyavardabi | 212 | 917 |
Sanibhar | 179.1 | 253 |
Majhna | 728.8 | 3,352 |
Senduri | 68.3 | 917 |
Daudpatti | 251.7 | 3,672 |
Devalpur | 151.5 | 1,023 |
Hajipatti | 654.2 | 5,777 |
Karamchandpur | 163.9 | 881 |
Bukunpur | 83.7 | 1,337 |
Rampur | 136.5 | 1,359 |
Dharupur | 230.2 | 1,552 |
Bhati | 475.2 | 3,729 |
Shanichara | 201.6 | 1,158 |
Narahi | 461.9 | 3,021 |
Shahpur Sarkande Dih | 597.9 | 5,990 |
Pureladaie | 78.5 | 893 |
Bahmarpur | 296.4 | 2,438 |
Uttar Gaaon | 129 | 848 |
Harkhi Purbiripur | 111.1 | 1,017 |
Badauliya | 33.5 | 401 |
Khokhipur | 295.5 | 3,042 |
Khaniya Pashchim | 311.8 | 2,225 |
Bahlolour | 192.3 | 2,253 |
Khaniyapurva | 388.4 | 3,382 |
Surjipur | 170.3 | 1,619 |
Asaroga | 97.2 | 1,248 |
Naaugva | 289.1 | 2,888 |
Miranpur | 176.6 | 2,277 |
Parsipur | 139.1 | 1,662 |
Ajhuie | 500.7 | 4,265 |
Kotva | 89.3 | 1,288 |
Rankedih | 236.7 | 3,462 |
Mudainavada | 135.1 | 1,442 |
Bramhjitpur | 60.7 | 979 |
Pratap Pur | 73.6 | 1,173 |
Mahamud Pur | 73 | 515 |
Maniyar Pur | 248.6 | 3,593 |
Judupur | 135.1 | 2,213 |
Block total | 203,850 | 22,516 |
Village name | Total land area (hectares) | Population (in 2011) |
Schools
- Aadarsh primary school Pragya Academy Nursery School
- RDL Public School
- BP Inter College
- Bhuvneshwari Pratap Sanskrit Maha Vidyalaya
- Dr. Mahadevi Verma Inter College
References
- ^ "Geonames Search". Do a radial search using these coordinates here.
- ^ "Census of India 2011: Uttar Pradesh District Census Handbook – Sultanpur, Part A (Village and Town Directory)" (PDF). Census 2011 India. pp. 318–35. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
- ^ Nevill, H.R. (1903). Sultanpur: A Gazetteer, Being Volume XLVI Of The District Gazetteers Of The United Provinces Of Agra And Oudh. Allahabad: Government Press. pp. 94, 191, 195–6. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
- ^ Census 1961: District Census Handbook, Uttar Pradesh (44 – Sultanpur District) (PDF). Lucknow. 1965. pp. 121–2, 144–5, 148, lxxiv–lxxv. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Census 1991 Series-25 Uttar Pradesh Part-XII B Village & Townwise Primary Census Abstract District Census Handbook District Raebareli (PDF). 1992. pp. xxiv–xxviii, 230–1. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
- ^ Census of India, 1951: District Census Handbook Uttar Pradesh (49 – Rae Bareli District) (PDF). Allahabad. 1955. pp. 148–9, 199. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Census 1981 Uttar Pradesh: District Census Handbook Part XIII-A: Village & Town Directory, District Rae Bareli (PDF). 1982. pp. 166–7. Retrieved 1 December 2021.