Barabanki district is one of the five districts of Ayodhya division in the central Awadh region of Uttar Pradesh, India. Barabanki city is the administrative headquarters of Barabanki district. Total area of Barabanki district is 3891.5 Sq. km.[2]
It has a population of 2,673,581, with a population density of 686.50 per square kilometre (1,778.0/sq mi).
Barabanki district is situated between 27°19′ and 26°30′ north latitude, and 80°05′ and 81°51′ east longitude; it runs in a south-easterly direction, confined by the nearly parallel streams of the Ghaghara and Gomti. The extreme length of the district from east to west may be taken at 92 km (57 mi), and the extreme breadth at 93 km (58 mi); the total area is about 3,900 km2 (1,504 sq mi). It borders seven other districts of Uttar Pradesh. With its most northern point it shares borders with the Sitapur district, while its north-eastern boundary is defined by the Ghagra, beyond which lie the districts of Bahraich district and Gonda district. Its eastern border is shared with Ayodhya district, and the Gomti forms a natural boundary to the south, dividing it from the Amethi district. On the west, it adjoins the Lucknow district.
Barabanki district stretches out in a level plain interspersed with numerous lakes and marshes. In the upper part of the district the soil is sandy, while in the lower part it is clay and produces finer crops.[4] The district is fed by the rivers Ghaghra (forming the northern boundary), Gomti (flowing through the middle of the district), Kalyani and Rait and their tributaries, for the major part of the year.[5] Some rivers dry out in the summer, and become flooded during the rainy season. The changing course of the river Ghagra alters the land area of the district.
The principal crops are rice, wheat, pulse and other food grains and sugarcane.[4] Both of the bordering rivers of Barabanki are navigable. The district is traversed by two lines of the Northern Railway and North-Eastern Railway, with branches having total length of 131 km (81 mi).[6] The district roadways include connections to National Highway 28, state highways and various link roads.
Etymology
The area was once known as Jasnaul, from Jas, a Raja of the Bhar tribe, who is said to have founded it before 1000 AD. Following the Muslim conquest, the lands were divided into twelve, with the new owners quarrelling so incessantly that they were called the Barah Banke, or twelve quarrelsome men. Banka, in Awadhi, means a bully or brave. Others derive the name from ban, meaning wood or jungle, and interpret Barabanki as the twelve shares of jungle.[3]
History
The current Barabanki district was first established by the British upon their annexation of Oudh State in 1856.[7] Originally, the district was known as Daryabad district because its headquarters were at Daryabad, but in 1859 they were relocated to Barabanki.[7] The name "Barabanki" was chosen for the district's official name over "Nawabganj", then the more common name of the town, for two reasons: first, to avoid any possible confusion with other places called Nawabganj, and second, because the civil station was technically located outside of Nawabganj in the small revenue village of Barabanki.[7] Previously, under the Nawabs of Awadh, the area that would become Barabanki district was divided between five chaklas: Daryabad-Rudauli, Ramnagar, Dewa-Jahangirabad, Jagdispur, and Haidargarh.[7]
Early history and legends
Barabanki district is mostly within what was the Pachhimrath division[8] of the kingdom of Rama.[9]
Parijaat tree is a protected baobab tree in the village of Kintoor, and is considered sacred to Hindus.[10] Located near the Kunteshwar Mahadeva temple (established by Kunti), the tree is said to grow from Kunti's ashes.[11] The tree is very old, though its age has not been scientifically determined.[12]
Before 1000 AD, Jas, a raja of the Bhar tribe, is said to have founded the locality of Jasnaul which later became Barabanki.[3]
Medieval India
Muslim Infiltration was first tried in what is now the district at Satrikh, in 1030 AD (421 AH).[3] The Muslim conquest saw Sihali attacked and its Hindu sovereign killed.[3] Bhar-Pasi chief Raja Sohil Deo (or Sohel Dal) of Sahet-Mahet and Rathor monarch Sri Chandradeo of Kannauj fought a battle in Satrikh village of the district and drove out the Foreign Muslim Army in the Battle of Bahraich.[9]
In 1049 AD (441 AH), the kings of Kanauj and Manikpur were again attacked but the foreigners were defeated and driven away from Oudh. The Muslim invasion was not successful in Bara Banki as elsewhere.
After, Tarain 1192, Moslems again attacked this region and Ayodhya but were not very successful till the reign of Khiljis and Firoz Tuglaq.The foreigners followed a policy of religious persecution and conversions. They also settled many foreigners and gave them fertile tracts in Ramnagar, Daryabad, Zaidpur, Rudauli areas.[citation needed]
From 1350 to about 1750 AD, Muslim immigrants settled in great number in the district.[9] The Muslims first permanently settled in Oudh.[13]
Rudauli was occupied c. 700 AH, in the reign of Alla-ud-din Khilji, whose forces had destroyed nearly every remaining seat of Chhattri power. Rasulpur was conquered about 1350 AD. Daryabad was founded about 1444 AD by Dariab Khan Subahdar and his brother Fateh Khan colonised. Fatehpur. The villages of Barauli and Barai, near Rudauli, were occupied and became large estates until about the middle of the fifteenth century.[3]
Simultaneously, however, with this latter immigration of the Muslims, there was one of Chhattris. The mysterious tribe of Kalhans, which numbers some twenty thousand persons, are said to be descended from Achal Singh, who came in as a soldier of fortune with Dariab Khan about 1450 AD. Singh had large properties, with a possible capital at Bado Sarai on the old bank of the Ghagra.[3]
The wars had by then shifted to fighting between Muslim princes, with Hindu soldiers employed. The battleground was the Oudh borderland between Sharqis of Jaunpur (where Ibrahim Shah Shargi reigned) and the Lodis of Delhi. Dariab Khan settled Hindu soldiers as garrisons. Oudh clans, said to have emigrated from Gujarat, included the Kalhans, the Ahban, the Pan war, the Gahlot, the Gaur, and the Bais.[3]
The isolated Suryavanshi estate of Haraha and the Sombanshi Bahrelia estate of Surajpur were established by small colonies of Kshatriya foot-steps soldiers.[3]
Mughal era (1526–1732)
During Akbar's reign, the district was divided under the sirkars of Oudh, Lucknow and Manikpur.[3][14]Ain-i-Akbari mentions the following parganas (administrative units) during the reign of the Akbar:[15][relevant?]
Newal Rae, the naib of wazirSafdar Jang, was defeated and killed at the Kali river by the Bangash Afghans of Farukhabad, who then overran the province except a few of the fortified towns. In 1749 AD, Jang with an army of 60,000 men was defeated. The Mughal authority might have been overthrown had the Oudh Chhattris revolted at this time, but they waited until Jang had bribed or beaten the Rohillas out of the country in 1750 AD (1164 AH).[3]
The tribes gathered themselves together under the leadership of Raja Anup Singh of Ramnagar Dhameri, the Janwar of Balrampur, the Bisens of Gonda, and numerous other lords. The forces assembled for an attack on Lucknow, whose troops had gone into Rohilkhand. The Shekhzadas of Lucknow came out to meet the enemy, joined by the Khanziidas of Mahmudabad and Bilahra, who were connected with them by marriage.[3]
The Musalmans, headed by Nawab Muizz-ud-din Khan of Mahmudabad, were victorious in battle at Chheola Ghat on the Kalyani, on the road to Lucknow. The Balrampur raja was killed and some 15,000 were killed or wounded on both sides. The Khanzadas then rose to power. The Raikwars were proportionately depressed; the estates of both Baundi and Ramnagar were divided, and but a few villages left with the raja. The process of agglomeration commenced again c. 1816, on the death of Saadat Ali Khan II. In 1856, the Ramnagar raja had recovered the family estate and added to it, while his brother of Baundi had similarly added 172 villages to his domain.[3]
There were a total forty-three taluqa. The principal chiefs of Bara Banki during the last years of Nawabi were:[3]
Taluqa of Ramnagar – The large property of 253 villages belonged to Raja Sarabjit Singh. The raja was the head of the Raikwar clan, which immigrated to Oudh from the hill country of Kashmir c. 1400.
Taluqa of Haraha – Owned by Raja Narindr Bahadur, the head of the Surajbans Thakurs. He was the son of Raja Chbatarpat Singh, and both were afflicted with mental incapacity. The estate consisted of sixty-six villages and paid a revenue of ₹55,000. Certain members of the Raja's family held the estates of Ranimau Qiampur in a separate qubuliat[clarification needed] in the Nawabi, and thus escaped being placed under the taluqdar's sanad.[clarification needed]
Taluqa of Surajpur – This estate comprised fifty-six villages. The proprietor was Udatt Partab Singh, the head of Bahrelia. He was mentally and physically unfit to manage his estate, but so long as his maternal grandfather, Udatt Narain, lived there was no fear of under-proprietors, tenants or patwaris defrauding the family.[citation needed]
Taluqa of Jahangirabad – The taluqdar was a Qidwai Sheikh, Raja Farzand Ali Khan. He inherited the property through marriage to the daughter of Raja Razzaq Bakhsh.
The late Raja Singji was a formidable and violent landholder until he was attacked by Maharaja Man Singh with Captain Orr of the British company's frontier police. They killed almost 70 of his inmate robbers. He was captured and taken prisoner to Lucknow, where he died in jail. Many of his inmate robbers escaped and migrated to neighbouring districts. It was mainly owing to the bad example set by Singji that the Daryabad district was so turbulent under the native government, that amils and chaklas were to use a native expression unable to breathe in it (Nak Mein Dam Karta Tha).[relevant?]
Farzand Ali was the inspector in charge of the Sikandarbagh at Lucknow. On one occasion of the last king of Oudh visiting the garden, he was struck with the appearance of this young man, and presenting him with a khilat, directed him to attend at the palace.[relevant?] With such a signal mark of the royal favour, Farzand Ali's advancement was rapid, and, under the interest of the influential eunuch, Bashir-ud-daula, he obtained a farman designating him the Raja of Jahangirabad. This taluqdar followed the deposed king to Calcutta and was there during the mutinies. Raja Farzand Ali was very intelligent and well able to manage his estate with prudence and circumspection.
Taluqa of Barai – Chaudhri Ghulam Farid, a Siddiqi Shekh, was the largest landholder of the Rudauli tahsil. He owned thirty-nine villages. In the settlement at annexation, he gave half of the estate to the children of his cousin, Mumtaz Ahmad.
Taluqas of Rudauli and parganas of Bhitauli, Daryabad and Surajpur were other important settlements.[3]
Few other later important taluqas were:
Taluqa of Usmanpur – Founded by Raja Kaunsal Singh, who obtained the estate for military service under the Mughal Emperor Humayun. His son Lakhan Singh converted to Islam, and took the name Lakhu Khan.[16]
Taluqas of Satrikh – This estate comprised 85 villages. It had been ruled by the Chaudharys, descendants of the original Usmanis who immigrated to Oudh in the early part of the millennium. They were dispossessed for resistance to the British during the 1857 rebellion, and Satrikh estate was ruled by Taluqdar Qazi a.k.a. Kazi Ikram Ahmad.
Rebellion of 1857
Unlike what occurred in the districts of Hardoi, Gonda, and Lucknow, the whole body of the taluqdars in this district joined the cause of the deposed king and the mutineers. They offered no resistance, however, of any moment to the advance of the British troops after the capture of Lucknow in the battle of Nawabganj.[3]
The Sadr station (district headquarters) was placed at annexation and also after the mutinies at Daryabad. However, due to the stagnation of water in the immediate vicinity of the town, and to the prevalence of fever, the headquarters was moved in 1859 to Nawabganj, Bara Banki.[17]
During 1869 census of Oudh, thirteen large towns or kasbahs were identified in the district:[18]
Nawabgunj,
Musauli,
Rasauli,
Satrikh,
Zaidpur,
Sidhaur,
Dariabad,
Ichaulia,
Rudauli,
Ram Nagar,
Bado Sarai,
Kintoor and
Fatehpur. The census also noted the following were tahsils and parganas:
Tahsil
Pargana
Nawaba Ganj
Nawabganj
Patabganj
Satrikh
Sidhaur
Ram Nagar
Ramnagar
Bhitouli
Bado Sarai
Fatehpur
Mohammedpur
Sani Ghat
Dariabad
Surajpur
Mawai Mahulara
Barsorhi
In 1870, before the addition of two parganas from Lucknow (i.e. Kursi & Dewa) and one pargana each from Rae Bareli and Sultanpur (i.e. Haidergarh and Subeha, respectively), Bara Banki district had area of 3,330 km2 (1,285 sq mi) and had following subdivisions:[17][page needed]
Tahsil (subdistrict)
Pargana
No. of Villages
Area
Major Talukas & Talukdars
sq miles
km2
acres
Nawabaganj
Nawabganj
77
78.9
204.3
50,484
I.— Jehangirabad, Raja Farzand Ali Khan II.— Sohailpur Bhanmau, Mir Buniad Husen and Amjad Husen. III.— Satrikh, Kazi Sarfraz Ali. IV.— Simrawan, Bissein Thakur Sheo Sahai. V.— Shahpur, Ghulam Abbas and Mahomed Amir. VI.— Gaddia, Shekh Zainulabdin. VII.— Usmanpur, Thakurain Zahur-un-nissa.
Partabganj
54
56.0
145.0
35,834
Satrikh
43
45.9
118.8
29,358
Siddhaur
224
141.2
365.7
90,377
Daryabad-Rudauli (later named to Ram Sanehi Ghat)
Daryabad
241
214.0
554.1
136,931
I.— Surajpur Raja Udatpertab Singh, Burhelia Thakur. II.— Haraha, Raja Narindur Bahadur, Surajbans Thakur. III.— Kamiar, Shere Bahadur, Kalhans Thakur. IV.— Rampur, Rai Ibram Bali, Kaisth. V.— Saidanpur, Latafat-ullah and Inayat-ullah. VI.— Nirauli, Chaudhri Husen Baksh. VII.— Amirpur, Inayat Rassul. VIII.— Purai, Mahomed Abid. IX.- Daryabad, Rai Rajeshwar Bali.
Surajpur
107
96.3
249.5
61,645
Rudauli
196
172.7
447.4
110,553
Mawai
51
71.0
184.0
45,469
Barsorhi
44
34.3
88.9
21,958
Ramnagar
Ramnagar
168
112.1
290.4
71,756
I.— Ramnagar, Raja Sarabjit Singh, Raikwar Thakur. II.— Bilheri, Raja Ibad Ali. III.— Mahmudabad, Raja Amir Hussan Khan. IV.— Bhatwamau, Badshah Husen Khanzada. V.— Muhammadpur, Ganga Singh, Raikwar.
Fatehpur
251
154.0
398.7
98,532
Muhammadpur
83
61.8
160.1
39,568
Bado Sarai
56
47.7
123.6
30,541
Total
1,595
504.7
1,307.2
323,011
In 1871 about half the district was held by 43 talukdars; there were also 5,397 village zemindars (landowners), and 1,354 under-proprietors. The talukas were as follows:[17][page needed]
Name of Taluka
Name of Talukdar
No. of Villages
Area
sq miles
km2
acres
Ramnagar
Raja Sarabjit Singh
358
169.2
438.2
108,286
Huraha
Raja Nurindur Bahadur Singh
66
46.8
121.2
29,960
Bhanmau
Mir Umjad Hosein
10
8.2
21.2
5,233
Jehagerabad
Raja Farzand Ali Khan
72
35.5
92.1
22,751
Surajpur
Raja Talaywand Koer
64
56.9
147.3
36,388
Mahmudabad
Raja Amir Hassan Khan
89
44.8
116.1
28,680
Man Singh
Maharaja Man Singh
16
20.3
52.6
13,009
Malaraiganj
Nawab Ali Khan
11
5.1
13.1
3,235
Shahabpur
Mahomed Amir and Gholam Abbas
8
5.6
14.5
3,578
Simrawan
Thakur Sheosahai
8
6.5
16.9
4,188
Sohailpur
Mir Umjad Hosein
8
3.8
9.9
2,458
Ushdamow
Panday Bahadur Singh
16
5.8
14.9
3,684
Usmanpur
Thakur Roushan Zama Khan
25
11.4
29.6
7,325
Kharkha
Mahomed Hosein
10
7.2
18.6
4,593
Guddia
Shaikh Zainulabdin
12
3.0
7.8
1,933
Satrikh
Kazi Ikram Ahmed
85
14.7
38.1
9,420
Gootiah
Hakim Kurrum Ali
13
8.7
22.5
5,549
Subeha
Surfaraz Ahmed
1
0.9
2.3
564
Sulaunpur
Nawab Ali Khan
6
6.1
15.8
3,892
Kotwa
Abid Ali
1
0.5
1.3
331
Motree
Bhugwant singh
1
1.6
4.2
1,040
Tribadiganj
Raja Thakurpershad Tribadi
2
1.3
3.3
813
Lillowly
Buxshee Harpershad
11
3.9
10.2
2,510
Nurhowl
Shaik Boo Ali
3
2.3
5.9
1,465
Mirpur
Nusserudeen
4
3.8
9.8
2,416
Baytowly
Maharaja Runbir Singh
5
5.5
14.3
3,535
Rampur
Thakur Gooman Singh
1
0.6
1.4
357
Jubrahpur
Thakur Ruder Pratab Singh
2
1.1
2.8
700
Bilharrah
Raja Ibad Ali Khan
41
24.7
64.1
15,838
Muhammadpur
Thakur Ganga Singh
26
7.8
20.2
4,981
Bhatwamau
Badsha Hasan Khan
23
13.2
34.2
8,459
Rampur
Rai Ibram Balli
35
21.2
54.9
13,571
Kumyar
Shere Bahadur
10
21.0
54.3
13,430
Sydanpur
Latafat-ul-lah and Mayet-ul-lah
13
8.5
22.0
5,428
Pushka
Naipal Singh
4
3.3
8.6
2,129
Raneemau
Outar Singh
14
8.9
23.0
5,687
Nurrowly
Chaudhri Razah Husain
45
36.2
93.7
23,157
Barrai
Chaudhri Gholam Farid and Mahboob-ul-Rahamn
46
25.1
64.9
16,039
Purai
Meer mahomaed Abid
14
10.5
27.2
6,722
Amirpur
Chaudhri Ishan Russul
13
7.1
18.4
4,557
Burrowly
Chaudhri Wazeer Ali
25
6.0
15.7
3,871
Nearah
Shere Khan
13
4.7
12.1
2,993
Retch
Raghunath Singh
1
3.4
8.8
2,183
Total
1,158
682.1
1,766.8
436,574
In 1877, Barabanki was one of the three districts of the then Lucknow division.[19] Its area was 4,580 km2 (1,768 sq mi) and population was 1,113,430.
As per 1877 Gazetteer of the province of Oudh there were:[3]
Four tehsils:
Nawabganj
Ram Sanehi Ghat
Fatehpur
Haidergarh
Nine thanas:
Nawabganj
Zaidpur
Tikaitnagar
Sanehi Ghat
Bhilsar
Fatehpur
Kursi
Ramnagar
Haidergarh
Courts, following were officers with civil, criminal and revenue powers:
a deputy commissioner
two assistant commissioner
three extra assistant commissioner
four tehsildars
four honorary magistrates
Independence movement
In the struggle for independence from 1922 to 1934 during the Khilafat movement, the district participated in the growing movement against foreign fabrics, etc.[20] On 26 October 1942, Brij Bahadur and Hans Raj (a.k.a. Sardar) planted a bomb in a police outpost at Barabanki, known as Barabanki Outpost Bomb Case.[21]
Geography
Barabanki district is for the most part flat agricultural lands studded with groves. The most elevated point is about 130 metres (430 ft) above sea level, and there are few points of view from which any expanse of the countryside can be surveyed. In the north, the topography is broken by a 6.1-metre (20 ft) ridge running parallel to the Ghaghra at a distance of 1.6 to 4.8 km (1 to 3 mi), which is said to indicate the former right bank of this river. These lands are undulating and richly wooded, while to the south there is a gentle slope down to the Gomti. The district is intersected at various parts by rugged ravines.[3]
Rivers and waters
Ghaghra
The principal river in the district is the Ghaghra at a short distance from Bahramghat; it is formed by the Himalaya-fed rivers Chauka and Sarda, which meet in the Fatehpur tehsil. It is 2.4 to 3.2 km (1.5 to 2 mi) wide in the rainy season and about 0.80 km (0.5 mi) wide during the dry season, when the discharge is about 19,000 cubic feet per second (540 m3/s). For 77 km (48 mi), the river divides the Barabanki district from the districts of Bahraich and Gonda. It flows in a south-easterly direction past Ayodhya, and empties into the Ganges at Arrah. This river is navigable for flat-bottomed steamers as far as Bahramghat, and is used by country boats in considerable numbers between Bahramghat and Sarun district. The principal ferries are at Kaithi, Kamiar, and Paska Ghat; a floating bridge operates at Bahramghat during the cold season. The river's flood plains generally have fine crops of rice, but the water sometimes lies too long after the rains and rots them, and the spring crops cannot be sown. The river is not utilised for irrigation.[3]
Gomti
Next in importance is the Gomti, which runs through the tahsil of Haidargarh and some portion of the tehsil Ram Sanehi Ghat, and separates the Bara Banki district from the districts of Lucknow, Sultanpur and Faizabad. Like the Ghagra, it runs in a south-easterly direction, has a well-defined bank and a stream which is fordable in the dry weather, when it is about 37 m (120 ft) wide. The circuitous course of the Gomti covers 169 km (105 mi) though the direct distance is half that distance. It is therefore not very efficient for transportation, though there is considerable traffic by country boats. Its dry weather discharge is 14 cubic metres per second (500 cu ft/s). Its water is at a lower level than the Ghagra, and it is not used for irrigation. At the junction of the Kalyani, the Ghagra is only 92 metres (301 ft) above sea level.[3]
Kalyani
The Kalyani River rises in the Fatehpur tahsil, and empties into the Gomti near the village of Anarpatti.[3] In the rains of 1872, the Kalyani presented a vast volume of water – 82 metres (269 ft) broad and 103 metres (337 ft) deep – rushing at 9.24 km/h (5.74 mph) with a discharge of 1,459 cubic metres per second (51,540 cu ft/s). In typical monsoons, the maximum discharge is about three-quarters of this.[3] The river is crossed by a railway bridge with six spans of 18 metres (60 ft).[3]
Jamuriha and Reth
The Jamuriha and Reth, both in the Nawabganj tehsil, are the only other notable streams in this district. Their general characteristics are the same: they have significant flows during rains which have carved steep and rugged banks broken by innumerable ravines. They flow into the Gomti. Haidergarh, Deviganj, Choury and Alapur are settlements on the Reth, while Jamuriha passes through Barabanki city (Barabanki revenue village on one side and Nawabganj Tehsil hq on other).[3]
Tanks, jheels and wetlands
There are numerous tanks and jheels,[clarification needed] especially in the tehsils of Daryabad, Ram Sanehi Ghat, and Nawabganj. Seven per cent of the area is covered with water; many of the tanks are in course of being deepened, earth is removed to replenishing cultivated land, though such efforts are complicated by conflicting rights to the tanks. Some of the jheels are navigable by small boats for sport or pleasure. The finest jheel in this district,[according to whom?] that named Bhagghar, is situated in the Suratganj; it covers less than 5.2 km2 (2 sq mi) There is another in Dewa, covering about 13 km2 (5 sq mi) with water and marsh. Parva, Nardahi, and Ganhari Jheel are the major wetlands.[3]
The Gomti-Kalyani doab
This doab is a fertile area of about 146,526 ha (362,070 acres). It is bounded by the Kalyani river to the north, the Gomti river and its tributary to the south, the Sarda Sahayak feeder channel to the west, and the confluence of the Gomti and Kalyani rivers to the east.[22][23]
According to the 2011 census, Barabanki district had a population of 3,260,699.[1] It then ranked 107th out of India's 640 districts).[1] The district had a population density of 740 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,900/sq mi).[1] Its population growth rate over the decade 2001–2011 was 26.40%.[1] Barabanki had a sex ratio of 887 females for every 1,000 males,[1] and a literacy rate of 61.75%.[1] Only 10.15% of the population lives in urban areas. Scheduled Castes made up 26.51% of the population.[1]
At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 91.54% of the district population spoke Hindi (or a related language), 6.16% Urdu and 2.11% Awadhi as their first language.[26]
One of the many languages spoken in the district is Awadhi, a vernacular in the Hindi continuum spoken by over 38 million people, mainly in the Awadh region of India.[27]
Barabanki is one of the five constituent districts of Faizabad Division. The other districts being Ayodhya, Sultanpur, Amethi and Ambedkar Nagar. The division is headed by the divisional commissioner.
As per 1991 data, there were 1,812 inhabited villages and 31 inhabited villages.[clarification needed]
In 2001, there were 14 towns and cities, 2 nagar palika parishads, 1 cantonment area, 10 nagar panchayats and 1 census town.[28]
Land administration
Barabanki District is divided into six subdivisions, popularly known as tehsils: Nawabganj, Fatehpur, Ramsanehi Ghat, Haidergarh, Ram Nagar and Sirauli Ghauspur. The District Revenue Administration is headed by the District Collector (also known as District Magistrate), with the office at the collectorate, and these tehsils are under the charge of sub-divisional magistrates.
Development
District-level developmental activities are coordinated by the Chief Development Officer whose office is at the District Rural Development Agency (DRDA) at the collectorate. The district-level offices for monitoring the developmental activities of Blocks at Barabanki are located at Vikas Bhawan.[clarification needed] Block development officers, who head each of the 15 development blocks of the district, carry out the development schemes on behalf of the government. The development blocks are: Banki, Masauli, Dewa, Harakh, Fatehpur, Haidergarh, Dariyabad, Suratganj, Siddhaur, Pure Dalai, Nindura, Trivediganj, Ram Nagar, Sirauli Ghauspur and Banikodar.
Law and order
The law and order administration is jointly coordinated by the District Magistrate and the Superintendent of Police. The district is subdivided into 22 police stations (thanas), each of which is headed by an inspector or sub-inspector of police. 12 police stations are rural and 9 are rural.[clarification needed][28] These police stations are: Haidergarh, Satrikh, Dariyabad, Baddupur, Dewa, Kursi, Zaidpur, Mohammadpur, Ram Nagar, Fatehpur, Safderganj, Kotwali, Ramsanehi Ghat, Asandra, Subeha, Tikait Nagar, Lonikatra, Masauli, Kothi, Ghungter, Badosarai and Jahangirabad.
Urban
The district has 14 urban administrative bodies for its towns, which are:
Nawabganj Nagar Parishad for Barabanki Town
Fatehpur Nagar Panchayat for Fatehpur Town Area
Zaidpur Nagar Panchayat for Zaidpur Town Area
Dariyabad Nagar Panchaya for Dariyabad Town Area
Ramnagar Nagar Panchayat for Ramnagar Town Area
Satrikh Nagar Panchayat for Satrikh Town Area
Haidergarh Nagar Panchayat for Haidergarh Town Area
Dewa Nagar Panchayat for Dewa Town Area
Siddhaur Nagar Panchayat for Siddhaur Town Area
Tikaitnagar Nagar Panchayat for Tikaitnagar Town Area
Rudauli Nagar Parishad for Rudauli Town
Banki Nagar Panchayat for Banki Town Area
Cantonment Board for Cantonment Area in Barabanki
Rampur Bhavanipur Census Town
Subeha Nagar panchayat for Subeha town (effective 2008)
Electoral
Parliament and state assembly
Barabanki district has seven state-assembly constituencies which fall under two parliamentary constituencies. They are:
Following is the list of public amenities (1999–2002 data):[28]
Communication services
Urban Post Office 26
Rural Post Office 339
Telegraph Office 19
Telephone Connections 25691
Public distribution system
Rural fair-price shops 1094
Urban fair-price shops 118
Bio-gas plants 4645
Cold storage 16
Electricity
Total electrified villages 1103
Total electrified towns/cities 13
Electrified Schedule Caste localities 1149
Water supply
Area covered under water supply using taps/ handpumps of India Mark-2:
Village 1812
Towns/city 14
Economy
The district's economy is primarily based on agriculture.[37] Agriculture, bio-gas plants, animal husbandry, and small-scale industries provide direct and indirect employment.[38][39]
Agriculture
In Barabanki the net irrigated area is 84.2% (compared to the Uttar Pradesh average of 79%). The intensity[clarification needed] of irrigation in Barabanki is 176.9% (compared to the state average of 140%). Most of irrigation in Barabanki is done through private tube wells (69%) and canals (30%).
Subsistence agriculture is practised in Barabanki, with up to five crops rotated per year.[40] The dominant crops are cereals (occupying 68.4 per cent of cropped areas), mainly paddy (rice) (34.4%) and wheat (31.3%). Other crops include pulses (10.1%) and sugarcane 3.6%), and potatoes[41] (2.8%). Wheat, rice and maize are chief food crops of the district.[42][43]Opium, menthol oil, sugarcane, fruits (mango, banana, etc.), vegetables (potato, tomato, mushroom, etc.), flowers (gladiolus, etc.), spices, etc. are the chief cash crops[44][45][46][47][48][49] for export.[50] Barabanki has been major hub of opium production since British rule; the district opium officer, based at Afeem Kothi, is the only one in the state.[51]
Barabanki leads the country in menthol farming, with 81 km2 (20,000 acres) under cultivation.[50][52]
The district is home to a Regional Agriculture Seed Testing & Demonstration Station of the federal Department of Agriculture.[54] In 2004, a Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVK, agricultural science centre) was established in the district under Narendra Dev University of Agriculture and Technology.[55] The Institute for Integrated Society Development established a Rural Technology Development and Dissemination Centre in 2002 at Nindura Block of Barabanki District.[38] National Fertilizers Limited has established a Soil Testing Lab in the district.[56] Information and Communication Technologies has a centre in the district.[57]
Weaving products including scarfs, shawls and stoles, some of which are exported.[60][61] These products are broadly categorised as rayon fibre or cotton yarn. Barabanki scarves were displayed at a national handloom expo.[62][relevant?] Barabanki has also emerged as a handkerchief production hub.[63]
Bharat Rubber Industries – supplies rubber and rubber-related products/[72]
Shree Shyam Industries, Tehsil Fatehpur
Solar power plant
The first 2 megawatt-capacity solar power plant project of Uttar Pradesh is situated in Sandauli village of Barabanki district, it was inaugurated on 10 May 2012 and become operational in January 2013.[73][74] The plant was set up by Technical Associates Ltd.[75]
Dr. Raja Rai Rajeshwar Bali (1889–1944), 13th Taluqdar - Rampur Dariyabad, Honorary Magistrate, Barabanki, Minister of Education & Health United Provinces
Beni Prasad Verma,(11 February 1941 – 27 March 2020) was an Indian politician and a member of the Samajwadi Party. Earlier he was with Samajwadi Party of Mulayam Singh Yadav, then he joined Indian National Congress and was elected on its ticket to Lok Sabha in 2009. In 2016 he rejoined Samajwadi Party.
Jagjivan Das (born 1727, date of death unknown), founder of the Satnaami branch of Hinduism. He wrote Aagam Paddhati, Agh Vinaash, Gyan Prakash, Maha Pralay, Param Granth, Prem-Path, and Shabd-Sagar.[77]
Sayyed Salar Sahu Ghazi of Satrikh (died 1200s), who won the recognition of his contemporaries and exerted one of the most powerful influences in Awadh spiritual history.[79][80]
Waris Ali Shah, (1819–1905), a Sufi saint from Dewa, was the founder of Warsi order of Sufism and a poet. He wrote Hans-Jawahir.[77]
National Highway 28 (NH-28) passes through the district. It is well connected to other cities by means of roadways. Passenger road transport services in Uttar Pradesh started in 1947 with the operation of bus service on the Lucknow–Barabanki route by UP Government Roadways.[98]
Bus Station/Bus Stop 93
Railway
Both the Northern Railway and the North Eastern Railway pass through Barabanki district, with a total of 131 km (81 mi) of broad-gauge line and 19 stations.
^Williams, J. Charles (1869). "Appendix B". The report on the census of OUDH], Volume II, Appendices and Statistical Tables. Oudh Government Press. p. v. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^M. Paul Lewis, ed. (2009). "Awadhi: A language of India". Ethnologue: Languages of the World (16th ed.). Dallas, Texas: SIL International. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
^"Atul wins bronze, creates history". The Hindu. Kolkata. 26 August 2014. Retrieved 27 August 2014. Atul Verma won India its first Olympic archery medal – a bronze – at the Youth Olympic Games at Nanjing on Tuesday. The boy from Barabanki (Uttar Pradesh) ...
^"Personalities: Literary". The Official Website of Barabanki. Ministry of Communication & Information Technology, Government of India; Barabanki-225001. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
^"Early History". www.shibliacademy.org. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
^Hasan, Mushirul (1 May 2006). The Nehrus: Personal Histories. Mercury Books. ISBN1845600193.
^Kumar, Girja (1997). "Mushirul Hasan: victim of academic politics". The book on trial: fundamentalism and censorship in India. Har-Anand Publications. pp. 253–272. ISBN978-81-241-0525-2.
^"UPSRTC". Archived from the original on 4 January 2010. Retrieved 27 October 2009. UPSRTC History
^Singh, Neelam; Pathak, M. D.; Zaidi, Najam W.; Singh, H. N.; Srivastava, P. C.; Singh, U. S. (2007). "Natural Biodiversity for Salinity and Alkalinity Tolerance in Scented Rice Cultivar Kalanamak". Journal of Crop Improvement. 20 (1–2): 205–221. doi:10.1300/J411v20n01_12. S2CID82779666.