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Final Electoral Roll
FINAL ELECTORAL ROLL - 2021 STATE - (S12) MADHYA PRADESH No., Name and Reservation Status of Assembly Constituency: 16-GWALIOR Last Part EAST(GEN) No., Name and Reservation Status of Parliamentary Service Constituency in which the Assembly Constituency is located: 3-GWALIOR(GEN) Electors 1. DETAILS OF REVISION Year of Revision : 2021 Type of Revision : Special Summary Revision Qualifying Date :01/01/2021 Date of Final Publication: 15/01/2021 2. SUMMARY OF SERVICE ELECTORS A) NUMBER OF ELECTORS 1. Classified by Type of Service Name of Service No. of Electors Members Wives Total A) Defence Services 1202 74 1276 B) Armed Police Force 0 0 0 C) Foreign Service 2 1 3 Total in Part (A+B+C) 1204 75 1279 2. Classified by Type of Roll Roll Type Roll Identification No. of Electors Members Wives Total I Original Mother roll Integrated Basic roll of revision 1200 75 1275 2021 II Additions Supplement 1 After Draft publication, 2021 11 0 11 List Sub Total: 11 0 11 III Deletions Supplement 1 After Draft publication, 2021 7 0 7 List Sub Total: 7 0 7 Net Electors in the Roll after (I + II - III) 1204 75 1279 B) NUMBER OF CORRECTIONS/MODIFICATION Roll Type Roll Identification No. of Electors Supplement 1 After Draft publication, 2021 0 Total: 0 Elector Type: M = Member, W = Wife Page 1 Final Electoral Roll, 2021 of Assembly Constituency 16-GWALIOR EAST (GEN), (S12) MADHYA PRADESH A . Defence Services Sl.No Name of Elector Elector Rank Husband's Address of Record House Address Type Sl.No. Officer/Commanding Officer for despatch of Ballot Paper (1) (2) (3) -
Administrative Report on the Census of the Central India Agency, Madhya Pradesh
ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT ON THE CENSUS OF THE CENTRAL INDIA AGENCY, 1921 BY Lieut.-Colonel C. E. LUARD, C.I.E., M.A. (Oxon.), 1.A., Superintendent of Census Operations CALOUTTa SUl'ElUXTENDENT GOVERNMENT PRINTING, INDIA 19;?·~ Agents tor the Sale of Books Published by the Superintendent of Government Printing, India, Calcutta.. OJ EUROPE. COl1:stable & Cn., 10, Or .. n·~c StrJet, L)i'Jester Squa.re, Wneldon & Wesley. Ltd., 2, 3 & 4, Arthur Street, London, W.C. New Oxford Street, London, W. C. 2. Kegan Pa.nl, Tr'cndl, Trnbne" & Co., 68.;4, Carter L"ne, E.C., "au :J\I,New OKlord Street, London, Messrs. E~st and West Ltd.., 3, Victoria St., London, W.C S. W 1. BernMd Quaritch. 11. Gr",fton Stroot, New Bond n. H. Blackwell, GO & 51, Broad SLreet, OxfonJ:. Streot, London, W. Deighton Bell & Co., Ltd., Ca.mbridge. P. S. King & Sons, 2 & 4. Grea.t Smith Street Westminst~r, London, S.W. Oliver & Boyd, Tw"eddalo Ccmrt, Edinburgh. H. S. King & Co .• 65, Cornhill, E.C., and 9, Pal E. Ponsonby, Ltd., l!6, Grafton Stroot, Dublin. Mall, London, W. Ea.rnest Leroux, 28, Rue Bonap"rte, Pal'is. Grindla.v & Co., 54. Parliament Street, London, S.W. Lnzac & Co, 46, Grea.t Hussell Street, London, W.C· MarLinu. Nijhoil', Tho Hague, Holla.nd. W. Thacker & Co., 2, Crew La.no, London, E.C. Otto Harrassowitz" Leipzig. T. }<'isher Unwin, Ltd., No. I, Adelphi Terrace, Friedlander and Sohn, Berlin. London, W.C. IN INDIA AND CEYLON. Thacker, Splllk & Co., Calcutta and Simla. -
Treaties, Engagements and Sanads
A COLLECTION OF TREATIES, ENGAGEMENTS AND SANADS RELATING TO INDIA AND NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES COMPILED BY C. U. AITCHISON, B.C.S., UNDER SECRETARY TO THE GOVERNMENT OF INDIA IN THE FOREIGN DEPARTMENT VOL. IV CONTAINING THE TREATIES, &c., RELATING TO THE CENTRAL INDIA AGENCY. PART I--CENTRAL INDIA AGENCY, BHOPAL AGENCY AND SOUTHERN STATES OF CENTRAL INDIA AND MALWA AGENCY. Revised and continued up to the end of 1930 under the authority of the Fbreign and Political Department. CALCUTTA. GOVERNMENT OF INDIA CENTRAL PUBLICATION BRANCH 1933 Price Rs. 6-4 or 10. Government of India Publications are obtainable from the Government of India Central Publi- cation Branch, 3, Government Place, West, Calcutta, and from the following Agents :- EUROPE. OFFIan OF TnE HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR INDIA. INDIA HoiUS. ALDWYCH. LONDON, W. C. 2 And at all Booksellers. INDIA AND CEYLON : Provincial Book Depots. MADRAS :-Superintendent, Government Press, Mount Road, Miadras. BOMBAY :-Superintendent, Government Printing and Stationery, Queen's Road, Bombay. SIND :-Library attached to the Office of the Commissioner in Sind, Karachi. BEKOAL :-Bengal Secretariat Book Dep~t, Writers' Buildings, Room No. 1, Ground Floor, Calcutta. UNITED PROVINCES OF AGRA AND OUDR :-Superintendent of Government Press, United Provinces of Agra and Oudh, Allahabad. pUNJAB :-Superintendent, Government Printing, Punjab, Lahore. BURMA :-Superintendent, Government Printing, Burma, Rangoon. CENTRAL PROVINCES AND BERAR :-Superintendent, Government Printing, Central Provinces, Nagpur. ASSAl :- Superintendent, Assam Secretariat Press, Sbillong. BIAQ AaD ORISSA :-Superintendent, Government Printing, Bihar and Orissa P. 0. Gulzarbagh, Patna. NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE :-Manager, Government Printing and Stationery, Peshawar. Thacker Spink & Co., Ltd., Calcutta and Simla. -
Environmental Monitoring Report IND: Madhya Pradesh District Connectivity Sector Project
Environmental Monitoring Report Project Number: 47270-001 January 2018 Period: January 2017 – June 2017 IND: Madhya Pradesh District Connectivity Sector Project Submitted by Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Limited, Bhopal This report has been submitted to ADB by the Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Limited, Bhopal and is made publicly available in accordance with ADB’s Public Communications Policy (2011). It does not necessarily reflect the views of ADB. This environmental monitoring report is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB's Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. In preparing any country program or strategy, financing any project, or by making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area in this document, the Asian Development Bank does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. MADHYA PRADESH ROAD DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION Madhya Pradesh District Connectivity Sector Projects (MPDCSP) Under ADB Loan No – 3189- IND ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING REPORT (January - June 2017) Environmental Monitoring Report Loan Number : 3189-IND Reporting period: January – June 2017 Madhya Pradesh District Connectivity Sector Project (MPDCSP) Prepared by : Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Executing Agency : Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Signed by:- (Narendra Kumar) Chief Engineer (ADB) Authorized Signatory from Executing Agency ABBREVIATION -
LEAGT'e of NATIONS Communicated to the Council And
LEAGT'E OF NATIONS Communicated to the C.11.M.11.1946.XI. Council and the Members (0.C/A.K.1942/57) of the League. ANNEX (Issued in English only). Geneva, January 22nd, 1946. TRAFFIC IN OPIUM AND OTHER DANGEROUS DRUGS. ANNUAL REPORTS BY GOVERNMENTS FOR 1942. INDIAN STATES. Communicated by the Government of India. Note by the Acting,. Secretary-General. In accordance with Article 21 of. the Convention of 1931 for limiting the Manufacture and regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs, the Acting Secretary-General has the honour to communicate the above-mentioned report to the parties to the Convention. The report is also communicated to other States and to the Advisory Committee on Traffic in Opium and other Dangerous Drugs. (For the form of annual reports, see document.0.C .1600). NOTE ON PRODUCTION, CONSUMPTION, IMPORT AND EXPORT, ETC. OF OPIUM AND OTHER DANGEROUS DRUGS IN INDIAN STATES RELATING TO THE YEAR 1942.. NOTE.- Wherever figures for the calendar year‘-1942 are not available they have been given for the Hindi Sammat 1999 which corresponds closely to the British Indian financial year 1942-43. In certain cases they have.also been given for the State financial year 1941-42 which generally began either from October 1st or November 1 st, 1941. 1. General position regarding use., manufacture and sale of each drug separately.- The position during the year under report was practically the same as reported in the ’Note' for the previous year. The States are now fully conscious of the evil effects of drug addiction and the measures which they have adopted to suppress this pernicious habit have been-satisfactory. -
N GOVT- of Mnj^^Fsg
MS. I* -n * ^j GOVERNMENT OF INDIA \ WHITE PAPER ON INDIAN STATES >»rp^ONAL LIBRARY ©P „„»—» GOVT- OF mnj^^fSg Price Be. 1 -4*. 13 *r 2s. 65 21 PERSONAL LIBRARY OP PROFESSOR SHER SINGH "SHHH TABLE OF CONTENTS £age FOREWORD PART I.—INDIAN STATES UNDER PARAMOUNTCY OF THE BRITISH CROWN General Survey « 3 Historical Survey 4 Geographical Survey . • . 4 Political Diversity of States. 5 Three Categories of States 5 Chamber of Princes. 6 Treaties, Engagements and Sanads ....... 6 Relationship between Paramount Power and Indian States. 6 PART n.—THE STATES UNDER THE SCHEME OF THE GOVERNMENT OF INDIA ACT, 1935, AND SUBSEQUENT PLANS FOR INDIA'S CONSTITU TIONAL ADVANCEMENT. Federal Scheme 7 Cripps Plan 8 Simla Conference of 1945 9 Cabinet Mission's Plan 9 His Majesty's Government's Statement of June 3, 1947. 11 PART ni.—ACCESSION OF THE STATES TO THE DOMINION OF INDIA. Lapse of Paramountcy ......... 12 States Department ......... 12 Necessity of a Common Centre '......• 13 Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel's Statement of July 5, 1947. 13 special Meeting of Princes on July 25, 1947 .' 1^ Successful conclusion of Negotiations ...... 14 Instrument of Accession ......•• 14 standstill Agreements . • m m • 15 significance of Constitutional Relationship between the Indian Dominion and the States 15 PART IV.—INTEGRATION AND Problem of Smaller States 15 Popular Movements in States 16 Merger of Orissa and Chattisgarh States • 16 Hon'ble States Minister's Statement on Policy of Integration and Democratisation ........••• 17 Merger of Deccan States. .....••• 18 Merger of Gujarat States ......•• 18 Merger of other small States .••••••• 19 Consolidation of East Punjab Hill States into a Centrally Administered Unit 19 Merger of Kutch 19 Formation of Unions 20 T" :f ed State of Kathiawar (Saurashtra) . -
Madhya Pradesh.Xlsx
Madhya Pradesh S.No. District Name of the Address Major Activity Broad NIC Owner Emplo Code Establishment Description Activity ship yment Code Code Class Interval 130MPPGCL (POWER SARNI DISTT POWER 07 351 4 >=500 HOUSE) BETUL(M.P.) DISTT GENERATION PLANT BETUL (M.P.) 460447 222FORCE MOTORS ARCADY, PUNE VEHICAL 10 453 2 >=500 LTD. MAHARASHTRA PRODUCTION 340MOIL BALAGHAT OFFICER COLONEY MAINING WORK 05 089 4 >=500 481102 423MARAL YARN KHALBUJURG A.B. CLOTH 06 131 2 >=500 FACTORY ROAD MANUFACTRING 522SHRI AOVRBINDO BHOURASALA HOSPITAL 21 861 3 >=500 MEDICAL HOSPITAL SANWER ROAD 453551 630Tawa mines pathakheda sarni COOL MINING WORK 05 051 1 >=500 DISTT BETUL (M.P.) 460447 725BHARAT MATA HIGH BAJRANG THREAD 06 131 1 >=500 SCHOOL MANDAWAR MOHHALLA 465685 PRODUCTION WORK 822S.T.I INDIA LTD. PITHAMPUR RING MAKING OF 06 141 2 >=500 ROAD 453332 READYMADE CLOTHS 921rosi blue india pvt.ltd sector no.1 454775 DAYMAND 06 239 3 >=500 COTIND&POLISING 10 30 SHOBHAPUR MINSE PATHAKERA DISTT COL MININING 05 051 4 >=500 BETUL (M.P.) 440001 11 38 LAND COLMINCE LINE 0 480442 KOLMINCE LAND 05 089 1 >=500 OFFICE,MOARI INK SCAPE WORK 12 44 OFFICE COAL MINES Bijuri OFFICE COAL COAL MINES 05 051 1 >=500 SECL BILASPUR MINES SECL BILASPUR Korja Coliery Bijuri 484440 13 38 W.C.L. Dist. Chhindwara COL MINING 05 051 4 >=500 480559 14 22 SHIWALIK BETRIES PANCHDERIYA TARCH FACTORY 06 259 2 >=500 PVT. LTD. 453551 15 33 S.S.E.C.N. WEST Katni S.S.E.C.N. RIPERING OF 10 454 1 >=500 RAILWAY KATNI WEST RAILWAY MALGADI DEEBBE KATNI Nill 483501 16 44 Jhiriya U.G.Koyla Dumarkachar Jhiriya CAOL SUPPLY WORK 06 239 4 >=500 khadan U.G.Koyla khadan Dumarkachar 484446 17 23 CENTURY YARN SATRATI 451228 CENTURY YARN 06 141 4 >=500 18 21 ret spean pithampur 454775 DHAGA PRODUCTS 06 131 4 >=500 19 21 hdfe FEBRICATION PITHAMPUR 454775 FEBRICATION 06 141 2 >=500 20 29 INSUTATOR ILE. -
S.No Folio Name Address Amount Chq No Warr No Transfer to Iepf Account
UNPAID AND UNCLAIMED FINAL DIVIDEND-2018-19 DETAILS AS ON 31 MARCH 2020 DUE DATE FOR S.NO FOLIO NAME ADDRESS AMOUNT CHQ_NO WARR_NO TRANSFER TO IEPF ACCOUNT 1 IN30007910724217 PRASHANT MUNNALAL SHAH 16, PRASHANT SAGAR, AKASH BUNGLOWS, 58.45 2098 45269 02-Nov-26 HANUMAN TEKRI, ABU HIGHWAY,ANGOLA, ROAD, PALANPUR BANAS KANTHA, PALANPUR, GUJARAT, 385001 2 IN30011810306390 RAVITA ANAND A-304, GITANJALI APARTMENT, 58.45 139 45524 02-Nov-26 KARKARDOOMA, DELHI, 110092 3 IN30018311239723 PURVI S JAIN 1303 4 BHAWANI COMPLEX C, BHAWANI 58.45 959 47036 02-Nov-26 SHANKAR ROAD, DADAR, MUMBAI, 400028 4 IN30018312587017 AKHTAR ALI 234 13, PRAKASH COLONY, JABALPUR, 167.00 1357 47461 02-Nov-26 MADHYA PRADESH, 482001 5 IN30011810701513 SURINDER KUMAR MITTAL POCKET 4, FLAT NO 53 B, MAYUR VIHAR 130.26 127 45562 02-Nov-26 PHASE I, DELHI, 110091 6 IN30001110436556 MANJU JAIN C 3/175, YAMUNA VIHAR, DELHI, , DELHI, 33.40 91 44774 02-Nov-26 110053 7 IN30007910245949 RATAN KUMAR SOMANI 338 JA, MURDHAWA, BEHIND ROTARY CLUB 58.45 251 45203 02-Nov-26 SCHOOL, DIST - SONBHADRA, RENUKOOT, UTTAR PRADESH, 231217 8 IN30011811025670 RAVI MAHAJAN E 57, , NARAINA VIHAR, NEW DELHI, 110028 95.19 1762 45637 02-Nov-26 9 IN30011811146910 ASHA DEVI GOYAL 38/51, MOTI KUNJ, LOHAMANDI, AGRA, 58.45 1840 45662 02-Nov-26 282002 10 IN30011810206947 PANKAJ MALHOTRA 3809, GALI BURNA BARA TOOTI, SADAR 58.45 28 45511 02-Nov-26 BAZAR, DELHI, 110006 11 IN30007910003301 TEJ PRAKASH QUARTER NO. 7-A, BHEL TOWNSHIP, SECTOR 95.19 1823 45153 02-Nov-26 - 17, NOIDA (U P), 201301 12 IN30011811360850 NIKITA -
Central India- Agency
.: •, . .• . ·, .,. - - Census· .·of.: India; ~~1:93 i . "" VOLUME~XX -, CENTRAL.•· ·. INDIA-~ .·<4. ...... AGENCY ... ... B"". ., . ... .. ·.~C. S. VENKATACHAR_, .. :· ,OF Till INDIAN CML SERVIcE, ' · . SUPERINTENDENT. OF.• c::ENSUS OPERATIONS.· , . -~ ' . ... " . " ... ·. CALCUTTA I GOVERNMENT OF INDIA CENTRAL PUBLICATION 'BRANCH . ,, 1933 . Government of India Publications are obtainable from the Government of India Central Publication Branch, 3,- Government Place, West, Calcutta, and from the following 4gents :- BUBOPE. Oli'IIOII o• 'l'DB RIOH COMMISSIONER !!'OR IJIDIA, ladla lfoue,-Ald"JCb, LONDON, W. C. 1. • - Aac1 at an Boobellem. JIIDIA ARD CBYLOB : l'I01riDelal Book Depalo. ·- ' IIADBAB o-SuperiDiolldont., Go ..miOODt Prou. lloun~ Rood. Madru. BoxBAY :-Superintendent, Government. Printing and Stat-ionery, Queen'• Road, :BcnrlbeJ. 81110 :-Library attaohOtl to the Office of the CommiMioner in Sind, Karachi. BIIKO.U. :-Bongal Seorelariat Book Dop6t., Wrilelll' Buildinp, Room No. I, Ground li'loor, Calcutta. - Um'I'BD PBovmou o~ Aoa.& .AlfD Ovntr :-Buperiuteodont of Govemm~t Pre., United PtOTincea of A.pa aad Oudh, Allababod. Ptm.JAJJ :-Superintendent, Government Printing, Punjab, Labore. BUBMA :-Superintendent, Government Printing, Bunna, Rangoon. CBKTRAL PaoVDOBS .urn BBBAB :-Bupcrintcndcnt., Govromrnent Print(ng, Central Prorincca. Nagpur. AssAM :-Superintendent, Auam Socrotariat PrC88, SbiUong.- BmAB Al'fD OJuss' :-Baperiutendent, Government Printing, Bihar and Ori.ua, P. 0. Gutzarb4gb, Patna. NoBm~W:KB'l' Fno!ITIBB PaoVIXo& :-Manager, Government Printing and St.at.ionel')'1 Peabawar. Thacker, Spink & Co., Ltd., Caloolla and Simla. Tho Students Own Book Dcp6t, Dbanrar. W. Newman &t Co., Ltd., Ca1catta. " Shri Shankar Karnataka .Paet.ab Bhudara, )fala-- B. K. Labiri & Co., Coloutta. muddi, Dharwar. Tho Indian School Supply Dap6t., 300, Bow Bazu Tbo Englloh Book Dapot., I'Ol'OIOpur. -
Enclosing the Pristine Myth: the Case of Madhav National Park, India 1
IASCP 2006 Paper Name Kim Beazley Mailing Address Darwin College, University of Cambridge, CB3 9EU, U.K. Email [email protected] ENCLOSING THE PRISTINE MYTH: THE CASE OF MADHAV NATIONAL PARK, INDIA 1. INTRODUCTION Indian national park (NP) policy is largely exclusionary. It seeks to preserve nature from the ‘ravages’ of human use by delineating an administratively controlled, ‘empty’ and ‘pristine’ space that denies any significant place for local people in the landscape. State governments are required ‘to…prevent [park] exploitation or occupation’.1 Considerable restrictions on local access have been imposed, extending in some cases to village relocation. This exclusionary policy increasingly faces widespread opposition, primarily from local people living on the peripheries of NPs. By the late 1980s, according to an Indian Institute of Public Administration survey, the majority of protected area (PA) authorities in India were filing cases against local people for various illegal activities such as hunting and setting reserves on fire, whilst also having to deal with ever more physical confrontations between such local communities and PA staff.2 Since then the scale and intensity of such local opposition has continued to escalate. In 1998, Lisu tribals attacked forest camps and injured foresters in Namdapha, Arunachal. In July 2000 police fired seventeen rounds to disperse villagers agitating over grazing rights in Ranthambhore, Rajasthan, and in August 2002, in the same reserve, villagers assaulted police personnel, resulting in retaliation through open fire. Exclusion has become a ‘hated term’3 that precipitates severe and relentless local animosity. Such problems came to a head earlier this year when reports emerged that the tiger had been totally exterminated from the well-known Sariska Tiger Reserve in Rajasthan. -
3 1891 CAN.Pdf
'" ..... , ... .' \J (\~ X X Vi! l 1J{ \'(ll/ REPOR'r ON THE CENSUS OF CENTRAL INDIA, 1891. CHAPTER I. SECTION I.-GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF CENTRAL INDIA. Central India, the aggregate of States under the political care of the Geographical description of Agent to the Governor General in Central India, Central India. may be roughly described as a great triangle, the base of which is the course of the Narhada Irem Mathwar, adjoining Rewa Kantha, to about 60 miles east of Hoshilllgabad, contiGlled in an imaginary line to about 60 miles east of the town of Rewa: and the apex is the most northerly point- in the course of 'the Chambal, about 30 mL!es south of Agra. The triangle is by no means a p6.J.'fect one: Rajputana stretches -ipto it on the north-west, the North-Western Provinces on the north-east, and the'Cent!'al Pro. viQces on .the south-east; while .t~e Ind.ore territory in N~mar extends ov~~ Narbada mto Kandesh and Bntlsh Nlmar; and there IS a break of continuity near Jhansi, between the States of Urchha and Datia. 2. Central India has otherwise been described as two irregular and detached tracts of territory, converging near Jhansi, and stretching in an arc east and west across the middle of the continent. 3· This immense territory, covering 78,2 19 square miles, contains 79 Geographical confusion of States States, Thakurats, etc., more or less independent. and Agencies. The larger of these are broken up into isolated parts, Gwalior and Indore, for instance, having territory in almost all the agencies into which Central India is politically divided; and this geographical confusion is aggr~vated by the fact that parts of Tonk and Jhalawar, States under the Raj. -
Central India State Census Series, Part I & II, Volume I
CENTRAL INDIA STATE CENSUS SERIES, 1911p VOLUME I. GWALIOR STATE PART I,-Report, PART 1I.'-Tables. THE CENTRAL INDIA STATE CENSUS SERIES, VOLUME I OENSUS REPORT FOR 1911 TEXT AND TABLES PART I & II BY H. M. BULL, M. A. (CANTAB.), CENSUS COMMISSIONER, GWALIOR STATE. 1asbltar: ALIJAH DARDAR PHESS 1914 PRICE Rs. 4 OR 5 B. 4 D. Table of Contents. PART 1.- REPORT. CHAPTER. PAGE. Introduction I I Distribution of the Population 1 II Movement of Population ... 13 III Birthplace 19 IV Reljgion 24 V Age 29 VI Sex 45 VII Civil Condition 50 VIII Education 58 lX Language 66 X Infirmities 71 XI Caste, Tribe or Race 75 XII Occupation 79 ~PPENDIX I Number -of Forms supplied and used, .. 98 I I Census Divisions and Agency 99 ~, III Expenditure of Enumeration Period, .. 10,1 INTRODUCTION. --:0:-- THERE have been four Enumerations 0 f the Gwaliul' State on 17th Past Census.and Present February 1881, 26th February 1891, the 1st March 1901 and the 10th :March 1911. All the four Enumerations were synchronous ".. ith those taken in British India. The Census of 1881 was the first sy~tematic attempt to enumerate the population of the G\valior State. The undertaking was one which presented many difficulties. The State has no geographical homogeneity and may be described as two irregular and detached tracts of territory. Ethnolog ically also they comprise many divers elements. The administration of some of the .detached portions of the territory, situated at a distance from the chief controlling authority was) in these days, less efficient than at present.