Rayagada district

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Template:About Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox settlement Template:State of Odisha

Cultivated fields and trees, with people for scale
Outskirts of Sambalpur Rayagada Railway line

Rayagada district is a district in the southern Odisha state in India. Rayagada became a separate district in October 1992. Its population consists mainly of tribes, primarily the Khonds and the Soras. In addition to Odia, Kui and Sora are spoken by the district's indigenous population. It was founded by Biswanatha Deba Gajapati of the Surjyabansha dynasty of Jeypore.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="thehindu.com">Template:Cite news</ref>

About

Rayagada is a District in the southern part of Odisha, India. The district came into existence on 2nd Oct,1992.

It is known as the most famous region of the state, because of its longest human history. The region has always been the Centre of attraction because of its rich and glorious historical records which is evident by copper plates, rock inscriptions, as well as the different coins that are found.

The district is well connected by the three main ways of transportation, Roadways, Airways and Railways making if accessible to the citizens from all around India.

Rayagada covers an area of Template:Convert, and is divided into eleven blocks. Agriculture is the chief source of income, and paddy, wheat, ragi, green and black gram, groundnut, sweet potato and maize are the district's major crops.

Administrative setup

The 11 Blocks and Tahasils in Rayagada district under two administrative Sub-Divisions are listed in the following table.

11 Blocks and Tahasils
# Rayagada Sub-Division Gunupur Sub-Division
1 Rayagada Gunupur
2 Kashipur Gudari
3 Kalyansingpur Padmapur
4 Kolnara Ramanaguda
5 Bissam Cuttack
6 Muniguda
7 Chandrapur

There are 17 Police Stations under the three Police Sub-Divisions in Rayagada district. They are listed in the following table.

17 Police Stations
# Rayagada Police Sub-Division Gunupur Police Sub-Division Bissam Cuttack Police Sub-Division
1 Rayagada P.S. Gunupur P.S. Bissam Cuttack P.S.
2 Seskhal P.S. Gudari P.S. Muniguda P.S.
3 Tikiri P.S. Padmapur P.S. Ambadola P.S.
4 Doraguda P.S. Puttasing P.S. Chandrapur P.S.
5 Andirakanch P.S.
6 Kashipur P.S.
7 Chandili P.S., Jaykaypur
8 Kalyansingpur P.S.
9 Energy P.S., Rayagada

History

In the third century BC, during the reign of Ashoka, Odisha was part of the Kalinga empire. The hilly track between the Vamshadhara and Nagavali Rivers was known for its spices.<ref>Andhra Historical Journal, XXVII edition, p. 46.Template:Fcn</ref>Template:Full citation needed The Rastriks were defeated by Kharvela, the emperor of Kalinga, during the battle of Chawpagada.<ref>The rock inscription of Allahbad, inscribed by Mahamantri Harisena, provides evidence to this effect.</ref>

Vishwanath Dev Gajapati (1527 - 1571 CE), the suryavanshi king of Nandapur (later Jeypore) established his capital on the bank of Nagavali and named it Rayagada or Rai-gadh. Under his rule the place flourished economically which proved beneficial to the vast kingdom that stretched from the confines of Jharkhand and West Bengal to River Godavari in south. During his reign he fought a war with Quli Qutb Mulk, the first Qutb Shahi Sultan of Golconda and successfully stopped his advance towards his kingdom. However, he had to surrender the rich fertile land located in the middle of Godavari-Krishna Delta to execute a peace treaty which made Godavari the border of the two kingdoms. Rayagada remained under the Kingdom of Jeypore until the dissolution act of 1947.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="thehindu.com"/>

During the British Raj, Rayagada was under the then-newly demoted Jeypore Samasthanam and was part of Koraput district; it was carved from the district on 2 October 1992 as part of Odisha's district-expansion plan.

Economy

The district is reportedly rich in bauxite and silicon.Template:Citation needed In 2006, the Ministry of Panchayati Raj named Rayagada one of the country's 250 most backward districts (out of a total of 640).<ref name=brgf/> It is one of the 19 districts in Odisha receiving aid from the Backward Regions Grant Fund (BRGF).<ref name=brgf>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Template:Main The district has three Odisha Legislative Assembly (Vidhan sabha) constituencies.<ref>Assembly Constituencies and their EXtent</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

No. Constituency Reservation Blocks Member Party
138 Gunupur ST Gunupur, Gudari (NAC), Gunupur, Gudari, Ramanaguda, Padampur Raghunath Gomango BJD
139 Bissam Cuttack ST Bissam Cuttack, Muniguda, Chandrapur Jagannath Saraka BJD
140 Rayagada ST Rayagada, Kashipur, Kolnara, Kalyansinghpur Makaranda Muduli Independent

Rayagada district is part of the Koraput Lok Sabha constituency.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:AnchorRail transport

Template:Unreferenced section Rayagada railway station has direct service to Chennai, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Bhubaneswar, Raipur, Bengaluru, Ahmedabad, Mumbai, Jamshedpur, Jodhpur and New Delhi. Gunupur is also an important railway station; via Parlakhemundi, it is connected to Naupada on the main east-coast railway line from Kolkata to Chennai by a Template:Convert Template:Track gauge broad-gauge line which was converted from Template:Track gauge narrow gauge in 2011. The Template:Convert narrow-gauge line (the Paralakhemedi Light Railway, or PLR) was established by Gajpatirajas of Paralakhemundi, the former raja of Paralakhemedi, to connect his capital with Naupada. The government authorized construction in 1898, and the line was opened to traffic two years later at a cost of Template:INR700,000.

The East Coast Railway began in 1893 with construction of the Template:Convert Cuttack-Khurda Road-Puri line, and its subsequent Template:Convert link along the East Coast to Vijayawada (the junction of Southern Maratha Railway and Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway) was opened for traffic between 1893 and 1896. The railway brought service to Naupada in 1894.

Due to a policy change by the British government, the Bengal Nagpur Railway took over East Coast Railway's northern section from Vizianagaram to Cuttack, including the Puri branch line, by 23 January 1902. The PLR was also taken over by the Bengal Nagpur Railway that year. In its first few years, the PLR had incurred losses; after 1910 it began making a profit, which increased after 1924–25. This motivated the raja to extend the line to Gunupur in two phases in 1929 and 1931. There were now ten stations between Naupada and Gunupur: Tekkali, Paddasan, Temburu, Ganguvada, Patapatnam, Paralakhemedi, Kashinagar, Lihuri, Bansidhara and Palasingi. The standard PLR locomotive was a 20-ton 0-6-4 tank engine with Template:Convert coupled wheels and a 4.75-ton axle load.

Management of the BNR was taken over by the government of India in October 1944. On 14 April 1952, when Indian Railways was regrouped, it became part of the Eastern Railway. The merger was short-lived, however, and on 1 August 1955 it was merged with the new South Eastern Railway. A set of four postage stamps was released during the 1987 BNR centennial, one stamp featuring the PL 691 locomotive.

The foundation stone was laid for the Naupada-Gunupur gauge conversion at Naupada on 27 September 2002. On 1 April 2003, PLR became a part of the East Coast Railway. The line was closed for gauge conversion on 9 June 2004. Although the Template:Convert Khurda-Bolangir broad-gauge line was approved in 1995, only about half the work has been completed.

Demographics

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Rayagada district had a population of 967,911 in the 2011 Census of India, roughly equal to that of Fiji or the US state of Montana. The district ranked 454th of India's 640 districts, and had a population density of Template:Convert.<ref name="districtcensus">Template:Cite web</ref> Its population growth rate from 2001 to2011 was 15.74 percent.<ref name=districtcensus/> Rayagada has a sex ratio of 1,048 females to 1,000 males,<ref name=districtcensus/> and a literacy rate of 50.88 percent. 15.18% of the population lives in urban areas. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 14.41% and 55.99% of the population respectively.<ref name=Orissareview>Template:Cite book</ref>

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At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 41.64% of the population in the district spoke Odia, 33.36% Kui, 10.43% Telugu, 8.37% Sora, 3.27% Kuvi and 0.66% Hindi as their first language.<ref name="census2011-langreport">Template:Cite web</ref>

The district's tribal population is 57.52 percent of the total. Its 11 blocks have been covered by a tribal sub-plan, with three micro-projects in operation for pre-literate indigenous tribal communities. Rayagada's topography helps the tribal communities maintain their cultural identity; Template:Convert is forested, Template:Convert of which is reserved forest. Its predominant tribes are the Khonds and the Soras.

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Large, grey temple surrounded by people, palm trees and other vegetation
Bhimashankara temple in Bhimapura

Education

Template:Unreferenced section Govind Chandra Dev (Zilla) High School, founded in 1938, is one of the district's oldest high schools. Government Girls' High School, in Rayagada, was founded in 1964. A primary school was founded at the Thakkar Bapa Ashram in 1958 for tribal students. The Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya of Rayagada and Kendriya Vidyalaya Rayagada are two central government boarding school in Rayagada. There are many Odisha Adarsha Vidyalaya (OAV) and welfare high schools and a EMRS strengthening district's eduacation system.

Rayagada Autonomous College, Model Degree College, Rayagada and Gunupur College, Gunupur are the main degree colleges in the district. The Utkal Gourav Madhusudan Institute of Technology is an engineering school. The Gandhi Institute of Engineering and Technology is in Gunupur. College of Nursing www.chbmck.org affiliated with Berhampur University, managed by the Christian Hospital, Bissam Cuttack offers B.Sc. Nursing program.

Notable people

  1. Ritesh Agarwal - Indian billionaire entrepreneur
  2. Purnachandra Bidika - Indian powerlifter( born 1957)
  3. Harish Chandra Buxipatra - former Odisha State Cabinet Minister & Indian politician
  4. Giridhar Gamang - Indian politician & former Chief Minister of Odisha
  5. Mangei Gomango - Tribal activist, linguist & inventor of the Saura Sorang Sompeng Script
  6. Magai Majhi - Indian Kho Kho player
  7. Tapan Misra - Indian Scientist at ISRO
  8. Raghunath Panigrahi - Odissi music Guru, musical artist
  9. Nagbhushan Patnaik - Communist Revolutionary & Indian politician
  10. N. Bhaskar Rao - Indian politician & industrialist
  11. Saptagiri Sankar Ulaka - Indian tribal leader & Member of Lok Sabha
  12. Rama Yedavalli - American engineering professor

References

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