CENSUS OF 1971

SERIES 18

RAJASTHAN

PARTS XA. XB DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK

4. .JIIUNJHUNUN DISTRICT

v. S. VERMA Of the Indian Administrative Service Director of Census Operations, The motif on the cover IS a montage presenting constructions tyPlfymg the rural and urban areas. set against a background formed by specimen Census notional maps of a urban and a rural block. The drawing has been speclallv mede for us by Shrj Paras Bhansell LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

Census of India 1971-Series-18 Rajasthan is being published in the following parts: Government of India Publications Part I-A General Report. Part I-B An analysis of the demographic, social, cultural and migration patterns. Part I-C Subsidiary Tables. Part II-A General Population Tables. Part II-B Economic Tables. Part II-C(i) Distribution of Population, Mother Tongue and Religion, Scheduled Castes & Scheduled Tribes. Part II-C(ii) Other Social & Cultural Tables and Fertility Tables. Tables on Household Composition, Single Year Age. Marital Status, Educational Levels, Scheduled Castes & Scheduled Tribes. etc., Bilingualism. Part III-A Report on Establishments. Part III-B Establishment Tables. Part IV Housing Report and Tables. Part V Special Tables and Notes on Scheduled Castes & Scheduled Tribes. Part VI-A Town Directory. Part VI-B Special Survey Report on Selected Towns. Part VI-C Survey Report on Selected Villages. Part VII Special Report on Graduate and Technical Personnel. Part VIII-A Administration Report-Enumeration. } . Part VIII-B Administration Report-Tabulation. For offic1al use only. Part IX Cenl!ius Atlas. Part IX-A Administrative Atlas. Government of Rajasthan PubllcatioDS Part X-A&X-B District Census Hand Book-Town and Village Directory & Primary Census Abstract. Part X-C District Census Hand Book-Census Tables and Official Statistics. Population Statistics 1971 (Pocket book).

FOREWORD

The bringing out of the District Census Handbooks is one of the various ways in which the State Govern­ ment collaborates with the Government of India in the work of census-taking and the dissemination of the resulting information. While the various census publications give a lot of diverse and detailed information for the bigger units of administration i.e. state. district, tehsil and town. it is left to these District Census Handbooks to present some vital data for the stiIllower units i.e. wards and blocks in towns and viUages in tehsils. Secondly, these handbooks present some non-census data also which is collected and processed in addition to the normal census operations.

The present series of District Ccnsus Handbook volumes combine parts A and B of the handbooks for each district. Part C, consisting of some other census tables at tehsil and town level as well as some other data, will appear in the form of a separate series. I am gratified to note tbat Sbri V. S. Verma, Director Census Operations, Rajasthan and his colleagues have endeavoured to briDg out these exhaustive and informative volumes with precision and promptitude. I am happy to learD that the maps being included in the various district volumes are also to be published later on in the form of a comprehensive Administrative Atlas of the state. I am sure. these publications will be found useful and interesting by scholars and administrators as well as tbe lay reader.

Jaipur S. L. KHURANA 2nd, October, 1972 Chiel SecTltary to th' Government of RajastMn

PREFACE The District Census Handbooks are a special and important feature of the whole scheme of Census data collection and the analysis and presentation thereof. The regular Census publications do, of course, present a multitudinous information but they do not go upto the Village and Census Block levels, for the rural and urban areas respectively. Secondly, tbey bave to depend on the data collected only as a part of tbe House­ listing and Enumeration Operations. The twofold purpose of the District Census Handbooks, like that of certain other special and ancillary studies tbat the Department undertakes, tberefore, is to go down to these lower units of presentation and to present some data wbich is collected in addition to tbat produced by the above mentioned operations. The District Handbook series were first introduced in the t951 Census. While the 1961 series were an improvement over tbeir counterparts in 1951, tbe present series for the 1971 Census are more elaborate and have been so planned tbat tbey present aU tbe essential Census data and important demograpbic details alongwith sue neceS.iary orientation and background wbich is very relevant for tbe proper understanding of a district. 1971 Census envisages the pUblication of District Census Handbooks in three parts viz. A, Band C for all the districts of Rajastban. Tbe first two of these are being presented in tbis series of volumes, eacb volume dealing witb one district of the State, because these two parts have much in common and they present infor­ mation which the reader might like to interlink at various stages in his study. Part C, containing both the data conected from the various dapartments of the State Government as well as certain Census tables, districtwise and down to the level of tehsils, will appear as a separate series of volumes, again, one for each district. Parts A & B have been explained in detail in the respective introductions pertaining thereto. For the sake of convenience and better presentability this volume has been divided into three sections, viz. Town and Village Directories, Primary Census Abstract and certain common appendices and maps. A look at the Contents will funher elucidate this arrangement. This Department has produced these District Census Handbooks for and on behalf of the Government of Rajasthan. We are grateful to the unfailing assistance and encouragement which we have received at each stage from the Chief Secretary, Shri S. L. Khurana, and the Deputy Secretary in the General Administration Department Sbri D. R. Mehta. The ex-Chief Secretary Shri Z. S. Jbala and the ex-Deputy Secretary Shri Yatindra Singh also gave us valuable advice and support during the earlier stages of this work. We are also grateful to Shri Khurana for having consented to write a Foreword for this series of volumes. As regards the whole scheme of these volumes and their contents, we owe a deep debt of gratitude to the guidance we have received from Shri A. Chandra Sekhar, Registrar General of India, Dr. B.K. Roy Burman, Deputy Registrar General of India, Social Studies, and Dr. B.K. Roy, Map Officer. Sbri Jagat Pal Singh, Deputy Director, Social Studies, and a team of dedicated workers including Shri Shamsher Singh, Tabulation Officer, and Shri WaU Haider, Statistical Assistant, have laboured really hard to give shape to the Town and Village Directories with the help of heaps of data collected from various sources. For the Primary Census Abstract the credit goes to Dr. U. B. Mathur, Deputy Director Headquarters, Shri S.R. Luhadia, Assistant Director, Sbri R.C. Bhargava. Senior Investigator and Shri S. P. Kasbyap. Senior Technical Assistant, and the persons working in Technical Section. Shri Kashyap will soon be retiring and I will like to place on record bere my gratitude and admirdtion for his hard and consistent work. The Art Section had to carry a tremendous load in preparing tbe maps going with these volumes. I am happy to say that the band of old and experienced bands as well as the new recruits have risen to the occasion in an admirable manner under the-supervison of Dr. R.K. Tyagi. Geographer. Shri M.M. Goyal, Tabulation Officer, has been instrumental in seeing the volumes through the press and has spared no pains in the process. For the fine quality of printing, we are indebted to Shri P.C. Patni of the Jubilee Block and Printing Works. He made special arrangements for the job and personally supervised all processes.

It is hoped that this volume as well as its companion volume namely Part C of the District Census Handbook will be found useful by the readers.

Rambagh Palace Annexe, V. S. VERMA JAIPUR Director Dated tbe 2nd Oct., 1972. Census Operations, Rajasthan. MEMBERS OF THE STAFF ASSOCIATED WITH THIS WORK

In preparation of Town and Village Directory: 1. Shri M. M. Saraswat Investigator 2. Shri R. L. Sharma Proof Reader 3. Late Shri C. L. Mabavar Asstt. Compiler 4~ Shri A. K. Srivastava Asstt. CompiJer S. Shri K. B. Bharti U.D.C 6. Shri J. D. Verma L.D.C

In preparation of Primary Census Abstract: 1. Shri T. R. Chobisa Tabulation Officer 2. Shri R. N. Verma Tabulation Officer 3. Shri K. B. Sharma (..omputor 4. Shri S. N. Misra Computor 5. 8hri S. L. Pareekh Computor

In preparation of Maps : 1. Shri M. L. Kumawat Arlist 2. Shri D. L. Verma Sr. Draughtsman 3. Shri G. L. Verma Draughtsman 4. Shri R. S. Sharma Draughtsman S. Sbri S. S. Verma Draughtsman 6. Sbri H. S. Mehrwal Draughtsman 7. Shri M. S. Panwar Draughtsman 8. Shri Abdul Karim Com pu tor 9. Shri P. K. Sharma Asstt. Compiler 10. Shri M. P. Pareek Asstt. Compiler 11. Shri R. C. Bansal Asstt. Compiler 12. Shri G. R. Kapooria Compiler Checker 13. Shri R. L. Sharma Compiler Checker 14. Shri J. P. Tak Compiler Checker 15. Shri R. S. Shekhawat Compiler Checker 16. 8hri Sohan LaJ Compiler Checker

In Printing : I. Shri Moti Singh Statistical Asstt. 2. Shri T. C. Patni Statistical Abstt. 3. Shri Hassan Mohammed Proof Reader 4. Shri Dilip Singh Cbandrawal Proof Reader CONTENTS

PAGES FOREWORD

PREFACE

SECfION I - DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK PART-A TOWN AND VILLAGE DIRECTORIES

INTRODUcnON (i}o(xil)

ANAL meAL NOTES (xiii)-(xxiii)

A. Town Directory (xiii) B. Village Directory (x.vii)

TOWN DIRECTORY 1-8 Statement I Status. Growth HIstory and Functional Category 2 Statement II Physical Aspects and Location 3 Statement III Municipal Finance (1968-69) 4 Statement IV Civic and other Amenities ... 5 Statement V Medical. Educational. Recreational and Cultural Facilities 6 Statement VI Trade. Commerce. Industry and Banking 8

VILLAGE DIRECTORY 7-39

1. Jbunjhunun Tebsil 8 2. Cbirawa Tehsil 16 3. Tebail 24 4. Tebsil 32

APPENDICES 41.46

Appendix 11 Particulars regarding part-villages (Rural) 43 Appendix III-A Abstract of Amenities 44 Appendix I1I-B Land Utilisation 46

SECTION lJ- DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK PART-B PRIMARY CENSUS ABSTRACf

INTRODUCTION (iHil)

ANALYTICAL NOTE l iii)-(viii) PRIMARY CENSUS ABSTRACT 1-65 District Primary Census Abstract 2-5 Rural Primary Census Abstract 6-31 1. Jhunjhunun Tehail ... 6 2. Tehsil 14 3. Khetri Tehsil 22 4. Udaipurwati Tehsil 30 Urban Primary Census Abstract 38-65

I Bagar Town 38 II Jbunjnunun Town 38 III Town 44 IV Bisau Town 46 V Town 48 VI Vidya Vihar Town \ SO VlI Town 50 VIII Cbirawa Town S2 IX Khetri Town 56 X Nawalgarh Town 58 XI Udaipur Town 60 XII Town 62

APPENDICES 67-70 Appendix I List of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes 68 Appendix II Primary Census Abstract for Special Charge 10

SECTION m-COMMON APPENDICES AND MAPS ~

APPENDICES 1-11

Appendix I Alpbabeticallist of Towns and Villages 1 Appendix II Distribution of Population by Religion 10

MAPS (SUPPLEMENT) District Map. Tehsil Maps & Town Maps

ERRATA RAJASTHAN IN INDIA HOltS , ,,-oIUI:,clnaditt.t.M u"t ~ fllOlll • • 'IN ....,HO-.., IthM~_lSlIOlrlP"'.tO nit I 0 ~ ~~~ ::~~~II ~~'~:~',~:,~ :~:!I:~ ~~~IIOM~: yillQt"'II"'n"lotM""nICIlo',Ua."'PIltlIIl .. l~~lnd'$dO't 1.t.!'wtrOIoIHtlOI.1otlltdIII0l\!I.AhQarh, JIlldDl,DtlMi, ..... lIdttlll bl,ftl" v~~. ,"p"unl~, ~ , 1II,j'llIY~ /014' 1M I,y, ,, hf," lit .... ~ •• 11' bi~k, .td I"~ tJi'lt ~O;OIll ~ .. Ij

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\ IMPORTANT ROAD DISTANCES (APP){KMS)

JAIPUR - KOTPVTLI- lSi

2. JAIPUR ·ALIIAR· DELHI 310

3. JAlPUR - ILWAR 146

4. JAIPUA -AJMEA 132 • 5. JAIPUR' BEAWAR' UDAIPUR 392 -J, \. 6. JAIPUR-CHITTAURGARH-uDAIPUR 435 ,.~ • 1. UDAIPUR 'AHMADABAD 250 8. UDAIPUR' DUN GAR PUR 106 I 9. DUNGARPUR - 8ANSWARA 105 • J,} J :i-'-' , 10. UDAIPUR - BALI· MOUNT ABU 320 f·'" ''', ...i II. JAIPUR ·AJMER - MOUNT ABU 508 ~ ~ 12 JAIPUR' AJMEA • JODHPuR )18

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HUMIEROF PERSONS fEA Sq,llll, .{ D40ANOBElO' 0 41 -'° ~ O:~A;EAV:R~GE 75 Q 00 lIIIIrl\lllOllll.SWt.II4.iCtbOltldlr",b'" 0"- IurYtv"'llIII.ltII~.OIh1r~ldri"n.1M [2jIOI AND ABOVE \ oICtII .... IO"'tLoN . ~dpltlltrlDlll

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I~RT ::~JA~:TCANALAAU ~OTU' GEOGRAPHIC REGIONS, R~ALL aTEMPERATURE 2~~~!:~~::'[IIlWU BASIN ~ aUPP£lIlUNIWIN 2cUNTLI,OIlWANA.SN,I N flALTWIN IIWI yJ UD""mPPE

DllfD!O'L

(ZJ MEDIUM 8UC~ SOil ~WIHPJilEOlllA C kiOll

SECTION I

DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK PART A TOWN & VILLAGE DIRECTORIES

INTRODUCTION

The District Census Hand Book, Part A, consists of 5,000 to 9,999 and Class VI below 5,000. During the two components viz., Town Directory and Village censuses anterior to that of 1961, existence of a self. Directory. As the very names indicate, these governing local body, such as a Municipality, was Directories present data at the town and village level res· generally the main criterion for classifying a place as pectively. While information in respect of the Town a town. If there was no .nunicipality and the popu· Directory is presented in the form of six Statements, lation was also less tban 5,000, a place could be regar­ supplemented by information given in four Tables built ded as town if in the opinion of the Census autho· into the Analytical Note, information in respect of the rities it had certain urban characteristics. There VilIa@e Directory is presented in a proforma containing were, of course, a host of such urban attributes­ 16 columns, supplemented by thirteen Tables, similarly cultural, economic and social-whicb helped the Census incorporated with the Analytical Note. Town Directory authorities to distinguish tbe urban areas from the data is further supplemented by Appendix I. Similarly, rural, depending on their local knowledge and discretion. the Village Directory data is supplemented by Appen­ In 1961, however, an objective test was prescribed for dices n, III.A and III·B. In addition, there are determining the urban areas on a uniform basis througb­ some Common Appendices and Maps relevant to the out the country. As already mentioned above, to Town and Village Directories and Part B of the District qualify as a town, 3/4th of tbe male working popUlation Census Hand Book alike. of a particular place was required to be engaged in non· agricultural pursuits. A large number of places whicb Before presenting the Town and Village Directory had been classified as towns in 1951 Census had to be particulars for this District, it is proposed to explain thus eliminated from tho 1961 list on account of the bere certain general points as also tbe layout, contents application of the above qualification. and method of compilation etc. of the Statements, Tables, Village Directory Proforma, Appendices and Of tbe total 157 towns, 11 are governed by Municipal Maps which will follow. Councils. Out of tbe rest, 134 are governed by Municipal Boards, 1 by a Notified Area Committee, 1 by a Unit. or pre.entation Cantonment Board and the remaining 10 by Panchayats. As already noted above, our units of presentation Tbe towns governed by Pancbayats have been treated are towns and villages respectively which may be defined as "Census Towns" for our purposes as per the alter­ here in some detail. The term 'town' is used here in a nate criteria given above even though they do not have generic sense for all urban units e.g. municipal towns, Municipalities. cities, cantonments and notified areas. Urban units Towns in Rajasthan can be classified from two include: angles-populatioDwise, from the point of view of (a) all places witb a Municipality, Municipal presentation of Census data, and in terms of the official Councilor Cantonment or a Notified Town area; (b) All categorisation of various Municipal Councils and Boards other places which satisfy the following criteria (i) A on the basis of population and budget. In terms of popu­ minimum population of 5,000; (ii) At least 7S per cent lation, they are divided into six classes, Of these 7 are of the male working population engaged in non-agri­ Class I towns, i.e., 'Cities', having population of one cultural pursuits; and (iii) A density of population of lakb and above; 7 are Class II with 50,000-99,999 at least 1,000 per sq. mile (390 per sq. km.). A village persons; 31 are Class III with 20,000.49,999 persons; 6J or revenue mauza, including its hamlets, on the other are Class IV with 10,000-19,999 persons; 41 are Class band, is the lowest rural unit. From th~ point of view V with 5,000.9,999 persons; and 4 are Class VI witb of the revenue records. all urban units, too, comprise population of less than 5,000. In terms of the classi· of one or more whole or part· villages depending upon fication done by the State Government, the 14S towns the extent of municipalization. (leaving out the non.municipal "Census Towns" as well as the two towns governed by a Notified Area Commi. Till 1961 the population.size class was the only ttee and a Cantonment Board, respectively) fall into criterion for classifying towns. Towns were grouped five categories. Towns which bave population of more under six classes according to population i.e., Class I than 50,000 belong to the first category, and are II in 100.000 and above, Class II 50,000 to 99,999. Class III number, ~hich means that 3 more towns are dUl" for 20,000 to 49,999, Class IV 10,000 to 19,999, Class V upgradation. (All these II are governed by Municipal ( ii )

Councils; bUl. populationwise, wfti[e 7 are Class I. 4 are Village Directory particulars regarding these rural part· only Class I[ towns). Towns which have annual income villages. wherever they occur, have been presented in of more than two Jakhs per annum belong to the second Appendix.II while in Part B of D.C.H.B., i.e. Primary category. Their number is 14. Towns having annual Census Abstract, they have been accommodated along income of more than one lakh and up to two lakhs with the whole revenue villages. In both cases, such a belong to the tbird category, and tbeir number is rural part.village has been distinguished by giving it 22. 4S towns with annual income of more than forty a sub·number of the code number of an adjoining whole tbousand and upto one lakh belong to the fourth cate. village. Thus, "32a" signifies a rural part.village gory. Lastly, towns with annual income of upto forty adjoining tbe village bearing the code number 32. thousand belong to tbe fifth category and they are 47 in number. 6 towns have not yet been classified by the As regards tbe 12 outgrowths, one of them makes a constituent of the Sawai Madbopur-Man Town urban State Government. agglomeration while tbe remaining 11, along with their In addition to towns and villages, three other respective core towns, constitute II more urban agglo. concepts, namely those of Urban Agglomeration, Out­ merations. thus giving a total of 15 urban agglomerations growth/ Part.VilIage and Standard Urban Area deserve 3 consisting only of cities/towns, 1 consistmg of towns to be discussed here. An "Urban Agglomeration" is as well as an outgrowth and 11 consisting of only single a continuous urban spread constituted by a town and core towns along with their outgrowths. Like the rural its adjoining urban outgrO\\ th or two or more physi. part-villages, the outgrowths have also been given sub. cally contiguous towns together with their outgrowths, numbers, derived from the code numbers of tbeir core if any. In this State, there are 4 cases in which whole towns. Thus. "Ill a" denotes an outgrowth of a town towns constitute Urban Agglomerations namely (1) Bika­ having the code number III. It may also be mentioned ner City along with Bhinasar and Gangashabar towns bere that while the 26 districts of the State. beginning (2) ]aipur City along with Sanganer census toWD and with Ganganagar and ending with Jbalawar, bear code Amber town (3) Pilani town along with Vidya Vibar Dumber 1 to 26, tehsils have been code-numbered district. town; and (4) Sawai Madhopur town along with Man wise in Arabic numerals whereas towns have also been Town Notified Area. In the Town Directory. data code numbered districtwise but in Roman numerals. pertaining to all the individual city ftown constituents Blocks in towns and villages in tehsils have, of course, of an Urban Agglomeration has been given been code-numbered in Arabic numerals, townwise agglomerationwise. and tehsilwise respectively. As already mentioned, full particulars regarding In the next place, we have to take note of the the city/town constituents of urban agglomerations are phenomenon of "Part Villages". Most of the towns in available in the body of tbe Town Directory itself. this State do not comprise of whole revenue villages For obvious reasons it was not possible to get or present which means that some village.portions have been left full Town Directory particulars with regard to the ] 2 out of the mUDicipallimits. In 1961, for Census purposes. outgrowths. Therefore all the relevant and available aU such part villages were treated as urbanized appen­ data with regard to these outgrowths or part.villages dascs of the towns concerned and data with regard to urban has been compiled in a consolidated form (Appen­ such part-villages was presented along with that dix·I) in the case of the Town Directories of those pertaining to the core town under the description of districts in which one or more such outgrowths occur. ··N.M.As:' i.e. Non-Municipalized Areas. This time However, as the 1961 Census data regarding the popu­ an attempt has been made, firstly, to ascertain the lation of towns included tbe population figures for all existence of all sucb non-municipalized areas and N.M.As. (whether rural or urban), the 1971 population secondly. to find out their true nature i.e. urb.lD or figures regarding these outgrowths (i.e. urban N.M.As.) rural. As a result of this enquiry 1(18 cases of such have also been given along with those of the core towns part-villages have been discovered. Further, while 9 of in Statement I of the Town Directory for the sake of these have urban characteristics, 10, are rural in better comparability. It will, however. be realised that character and the remaining 3 have urban as well as the new scheme of classification and presentation re­ rural components. The 12 cases ~of urbanized village. garding the erstwhile N.M.As. has, by and large, portions have been added to the urban agglomerations Tcsultrd in a pronounced reduction in urban area and of the concerned core towns under the description of some decrease in urban popUlation whereas urban "Outgrowths" alias "sucb.and-sucb village urban". density has, naturally. appreciated. The rural components, 1O,in number, have been treated as separate units of presentation, along with the whole As regards tbe third concept. namely Standard villages by \\ay of "such-and-such village rural". Urban Area, in all 14 S U.As. have been decided upon. ( iii )

The Standard Urban Area may be defined as tbe pro­ arranged in order of their code numbers. However, in jected growth area of a city or town as it would be in the four cases in which whole towns have entered into 1991. taking into account Dot only the towns and urban agglomerations, the data pertaining to the cons­ villaaes which will get merged into it but also the inter­ tituent towns have been gIVen, though separately. but vening areas which are potentially urban. The S.U.A. at one place with the names of the towns minus the has not been mado a separate unit of presentation of data occurring again in the order indicated by the code data for eitber ParC A or Part B of the D.C.H.B. numbers. Where an urb~n agglomeration consists of only the core town and its outgrowth, tbe existence of A...... such U A. has been indicated by putting an asterisk C') against the name of the concerned core town in this For the tebsillevel rural area figures appearing in statement as well as the other statements of the Town the Tables and Appendix: III-B tbe source is the Revenue Directory. Records 8S maintained by the Patwaris and as repartee. by them. for the Village Directory. For the purposes Col. 2 also gives the class of the town in question or Col. 3 of the Village Directory, the village-wise area in terms of population in Roman numerals and figures. in acres, h~ve been rounded off, wherever they within brackets. Col 5, on the other hand. indicates the have been reported by the Patwari upto decimal points. civic administration status with the help of some symbols The break-up of the total village area as given in Cols. 11 to IS of the Village Directory has similarly been as also the category of the municipal body concerned in arabic numerals and within brackets. The symbols rounded oft' following the principle of neglecting the decimal points up to 49 and adding one for all decimal used in Col. 5 are these values of 50 or more. Tehsil area figures have. how­ ever, been arnved at by first adding up the actual M Municipality; village areas, as reported, instead of the rounded oft' MC Municipal Council; figure!! in Col. 3, and then rounding oft' this total. As NA Notified Area; the area figures for part-villages do not enter into these Cantt. Cantonment; calculations, the tehsil rural area as per the PCA will p Panchayat, i.e. Census Town. naturally be in excess of the Village Directory tehsil rural area. If, therefore, the net tehsil rural ar,a is to Cots. 6 to 13 provide the decadal population figures be arrived at, the area figures for part-villages as con­ for the town in question from 1901 to 1971. A dash tained in Appendix II will have to be added to the under any of these columns indicates that the town was tehsil rural area figures in the Tables and Appendix not having an urban status at the time of the Census in lII-B. question while 'N.A.' indicates the non-availability of data. As already mentioned, the population figures The Town Directory does not give any area pertaining to an outgrowth, wherever it occurrs. have figures also been given in Col. 13 within brackets underneath the popUlation of the core town of the urban alZglomera­ Town Directory tion concerned.

In the following pJragraphs the various statements. Table No. 1 supplements the information given in tables etc. comprising the Town Directory wiJI be Columns 6-13 by giving the decadal increase or decrease described. in population in terms of percentages. Statement I : Status, growth history and functional category: Col. 14 gives the functional category of each town as per the \96\ Census. Predominance of ) on-agricul­ As indicated by the title itself, tbis statement pro­ tural occupations governs the urban cbaracterist cs of a vides some important data regarding the status, growth town. The distribution of the working population in in terms of popUlation, and functional category of the non-agricultural pursuits, therefore. pre~ents a scientific towns in a dIstrict. Col. No. I gives the serial number. mode of classification according to the predominant Col. 2 tbe name of town, and Col. 4 the name of the functional characteristic of the popUlation in a town. tehsiJ'in which a town is situated. As already explained. The industrial c1assificatioll of all workers mto the towns have been code numbered districtwise and the following nine categories, adopted at the 1961 Census. three constituents of the location code indicate the code provides a basis for the functional classification of number of the district, code number of the tehsil and code towns as it broadly corresponds to the divisions of the number of the t')wn, in that order. Towns have been Standard Industrial Classification as follows :- ( iv )

Where temperature figures (Cols. 5 and 6) for a parti­ Corresponding Divisions 11Idu3,,1a1 Catfloris of cular town were available, tbe same have been indio of 'he Standard Workers for Census cated otherwise "NA' has been put against the concer· Industrial Classification. 1961 ned town. However, in the Jatter case, temperature I Cultivator Part of 0 figures for neighbouring places have been indicated II Agricultural Labourer Part of 0 through footnotes. The neighbouring places are gene­ III Forestry, Fishing, rally the nearest as the crow flies. The nearest city for PJantation. Mining and the purpose of this statement (Col. 7) is the one situated QuarryiDg etc. Part of 0 and 1 in the district itself or in a neighbouring district or IV Household Industry Part of O. 1, 2 and 3 even in some neighbouring State. In the last case, the V Manufacturing, other name of the State concerned is also given within than Household brackets. In eols. 8, 9 and 10 the distance in km. Industry 2 and 3 from the town in question to the beadquarter concerned VI Construction 4 has also been given within brackets, after the name of VII Trade & Commerce 6 the headquarter town. The figure of zero indicates that VIII Transport, Storage, and the town in question is also the headquarter as per tbe Communications. 7 column heading. The same method of presentation IX Services 5,8 and 9 applies to information regarding the nearest railway station and bus-stand (Co Is. II and 12). Initially, These nine categories are combined and regrouped tbis statement bad three more eols. 13 to 15, for into five broad functional classes: (1) Primary Acti· the purposes of showing navigable rivers, canals etc. As vities (categories, I, II and III); (2) Industry (catego­ no such case obtained m this State, these three columns ries IV, V and Vl); (3) Trade and Commerce (category were eliminated. VII), (4) Transport {category VlII, and (5) Services (category IX). The sources of information in respect of this state. ment were: the Meteorological Department, Office of The functional characteristics of towns are deter­ the Surveyor General of India, Tehsil Offices, Muni­ mined by working out the percentage of the working cipalities and the District Statistical Officer. population under each of these five classes of econ('mic activities to the total workers If workers under one The referrent period in respect of this statement of the occupations form 40% or more of their total is the year 1969.70, generally speaking. number, it is consideled a mono-functional town. If, however, such percentage is less tban 40%. tbe nellt Statement III : Municipal Finance: predominant occupation is taken into account so that the total of the two may come to 60% or above and From this statement we learn about the annual sucb a town is called bi-functional. Again. if the total sourcewise income and head wise expenditure of the does not come upto 60%, the third predominant occu­ various urban civic administrative units in a district pation is taken into account and sucb a town is taken in terms of the financial year 1968-69. The statemenl as multi-functional. forms two parts, Receipt and Expenditure, with tbe amount in rupees rounded off to tbe nearest ·00. A Tbe data for this statement and Table 1 was dash, wherever it occurrs in tbis statement, indicates obtained from tbe Directorate of Local Bodies as well as nil or negligible amounts, and 'NA' that the information from the General Population Tables and the Census in question is not available. Atlas belong ng to the 1961 series of Census publi. cations and the 1971 urban Primary Census Abstract. We may explain here the various sources of income The referrent year for this data is 19; 1. and beads of expenditure in respect of this statement, taking first the Receipt and then the Expenditure side. Statement 11 : Physical aspects and location: Receipt tbrough taxes etc. (Col. 3) : There are two broad categories of taxes: "obligatory" and "other". The statement gives the altitude. annual rainfall, Whereas obligatory taxes (octroi, tax on land and temperature, nearest city, State Headquarter, District bUildings, tax on houses, land rent etc., and tax on Headquarter. Sub.divisional/Tehsil Headquarter. the vocation and profession) have to be imposed by every nearest railway station and tbe nearest bus-stand in municipality, taxes of "other" category (tax on vehicJes respect of each town in a district. Annual rainfall figures and conveyances meant for hire, tax on anitnals used for (Col. 4) represent the average for ten years (1961-1970). riding, driving, draught or burden, toll OD vehicle. and ( v other conveyance and animals enterin, the municipality, and places for housing the poor, aranting of loal tax on boats, tax for sc&Yengin, and cleansing private for constructing houses, providing accommodation Ii Jatrin~ etc., lighting tax, water tax where a municipality any class of servants and employees or granting loal provides for water ,upply. tax on artisans and any other to the employees for this purpose~ planting and mal: taxes) are imposed by the various municipalites by taining road-side and other trees, providing recreation, choice though under the rules. facilities, promotion of public health. infant welfD contribution towards any public funds raised for relit RneDue derived from municipal powers and pro­ of human sufferings within and without a municipaJit: perty apart from taxes (Co). 4): This source covers organising and maintaining shops and stalls for th boJdin, of fairs and exhibitions. supply of milk, Jssue sale of necessaries of life during the times of scarcit) of licenses of various types, maintaining of cattle ponds, holding fairs and exhibitions, and providing anti-rabi fines and penalties, tax on public vehicles, contracts, treatment, housing and maintaining destitute orphan traasport services, cinemas, providing boating facility; and cripples, maintaining maternity centres and chill allotment, sale and lease of land. land rent and contracts welfare clinics, private schools etc. public safety. publL relating to parks and gardens and such other items etc. health and convenience, and public works (Cola.II-13) The following are the items related to these heads 0, Government grant (Col. S): There are three types expenditure: lighting of public strec:ts, places anc of Government grants: per capita grant, P.W.D. grant, buildings, watering of public streets and places, cleansin~ and grants from the Social Welfare and other depart­ of public streets and places and sowers and all spacea ments Per capita grant is given by the State Government, not being prhate properties, removing of noxioUI vege, subject to certain conditions, to every municipality at tation and abating all public nuisances, removing filth, the rate of 15 paisa, but in the case of municipalities rubbish, night soil, odour or any other noxious or located at the district headquarters an additional sum offensive matters from privies, latrines or other common of Rs. 5,000/- is also granted. P W D. grant is given for places, extinguishing of fires. regulating of offen­ works like roads and drains. This is a matching grant sive, dangerous trade or works, protecting of public and whereas in the case of municipalities located at latrines, privies, urinals, obtaining of supply or district headquarters the Government grants only 40% an additional supply of water, naming of streets, of the total amount required for a work. in the case of numbering of houses, keeping records of birth and all other municipalities this grant amounts to 75% of death, arranging destruction or preservation of dogs the total amount required for a work. Social Welfare within the municipality, arranging of preparation Department also grants amounts for various purposes of compost manure from night soil and rubbish, e.g. conversion of dry latrines into flush ones. and for establishment and maintenance of cattle ponds etc. the purchase of tempos, scooters. vehicles, wheelbarrows There are some special duties also which consist in etc. for removing night soil etc. providing special medical aid to the sick in times of the outbreak of a dangerous disease and taking aucb Loan and Advance (Cols. 6 and 7): Loans are measures as may be required to prevent such an out­ genorally granted by the L.I.e. and State Government break or suppressing the recurrence thereof, giving tbough the municipality can borrow from private sources relief, and establishing and maintaining relief works in also subject to the condition that such loans will be times of famine or scarcity for destitute persons within the limits of a municipality. Public Institutions (Col. used for works of permanent nature only. Advances are also made by the State Government to various muni­ 14) : Such institutions are educational, cultural. religious cipalities for some specific purposes subject to the avai­ and social. The municipalities can give aid to such labiUty of funds. The "Other" sources of income (CoI.S) institntions and patronIse them; but such institutions may differ from one municipality to anotber. as for should not be Government-run. The above description example. one municipality provides boating and skating includes not all but some of the important items facilities and runs a cinema. and, another runs buses. pertaining to the receipt and expenditure amounts of General Administration (Col. 10): The main heads of a municipality. The purpose is just to give a general expenditure cover salary of staff, contingent expenditure idea of the sources of income and items of on account of administration staff, police guards etc. expenditure. wherever kept, protection of mur.icipal property and enforcement of the laws and collections of taxes etc. Two tables (Nos. 2 and 3) indicate firstly, income The secondary heads of expenditure pertain to the cons­ or expenditure under a particular group of sources or truc:tion and maintenance of new public streets, heads, as the case may be, in terms of the percentage 'dharmashalas', rest houses, other public buildings, of the total income or expenditure, and secondly, per capita income and expenditure in rupees within brackets. W Well; In order to facilitate analysis, the various sources of TW TubeweJl; income and heads of expenditure have been grouped TK Tanks and reservoirs; under three headings in each case in tbe&e tables. Tho R River; information for this statement as well as its two accom­ C Canal. panying tables came from the various municipalities and panchayats etc. Only such towns bave been treated as baving a fire-fighting service as provide for regular fire-figbting Statement IV : CMc and other amenitiel : squads. As regards the electric supply, domestic connec­ tions (Col. 12) aenote electric supply available to The purpose of this statement is to provide infor­ residential consumers for light, fans, and radiol etc. mation with regard to the various amenities available Industrial connections (Col. 13) in this context signify in a town. The road-Ien~th figures (Col. 1) include, gene­ electric supply available to industrial consumers and rally speaking, all pucca and k_utcha roads within this can be for tbe purposes of small, medium, and large the limits of a town as well as the lanes etc. in some scale industries. Commercial connections (Col. 14) are cases. Roads faIling within municipal limits of a town those which are available to non-residential premises are generally maintained by the civic bodies concerned. such as business houses, shops, cinemas, auditoria, clubs, While some of these bodies take the technical help from publtc offIces, raIlways, hospitals, schools, hostels, petrol the Public Worles Department, some others have their pumps, X-ray plants etc. and religious premises and own engineering personnel. Urban Improvement Trusts charitable homes and such portions of residential also maintain roads separately but information per. premises as are used for conducting of business. The taining t" them is not included in this statement. The category, 'Commercial' is further divided into two system of sewerage/drainage (Col. 4) is mdicated with types: (i) that for light, fans and radios etc. and (ii) the help of these symbols : for small heat and power appliances. Road-lighting points (Col. IS) denote street lighting systems lnctudlDg KD Kutcha drainage; traffic control system and lighting of public parks etc. OSD Open surface drainage; under municipalities, panchayats etc. but excluding S Sewer. private colonies. There ill yet another category 'Others' (Col. 16) which in the present context pertains to As regards latrines (Cols. 5 to 7), flusb latrines agricultural connections and mixed-load connections. of various types are given under the heading 'water borne'. while those Serviced manually by scavengers Information given under tbe various columns of feature under 'servicc'. The category of 'Others' this statement was collected from the various civic pertains to tbe various other latrines not manually or bodies as well as the Public Health and Engineering regularly serviced. In Col. 8 the actual metbod Department, Rajasthan State Electricity Board, and the of the removal of night soil, and not the final disposal various private electric supply companies. or use of the same, is indicated. The purpose was to assels the extent of the use of human labour in remo­ The information in this statement refers to tbe ving tbe night soil. The symbols used are these: year 1969 for Cols.3 to 8, and 11; to 1971 for 9 to 10; and to 19f9-70 for Cols. 12 to IS. Ht Head-load; WB Wheel barrow; T Truck/Tractor; Statement V : Medical, educational, recreational and CL Cart-load. cultural facilities : Statement V presents data in respect of medical, In the case of protected water suply, only such educational, recreational and cultural facilities. Medical towns as have a regular protected water supply scbeme institutions in Col.:3 in the present context include as per the information received from the Public Health botb the Government and tbe recognised private insti­ Engineering Department are indicated as beneficiaries tutions pertaining to allopathic, homoeopatbic, ayurve­ of this system. Where a protected water supply scheme dic, unani, and naturopathic systems. Private clinics is under execution, the symbol UE has been used. The etc. are, however, excluded. The number of beds capacity in the context of protected water supply relates for a category of medical institutions is indicated in not to the storage but to tbe pumping The symbols Col. 4. The various medical institutions are denoted used to indicate tbe various sources arc the": by these symbols: ( vii)

H Hospital; Relevant matter which went into the preparation D Dispensary; of this statement and the accompanying table (No.4) TBC T.B. Clinic; came from the concerned directorates and universities HC Health Centre; etc. as well as the various local bodies. FC Family Planning Centre; MCW: Maternity and Child Welfare Centre; Information provided in this statement is for the PHL : Public Health Laboratory; year 1970-71, by and large. AYU: Ayurvedic; State~"t VI r Trade, commerce, industry and banking: HOM: Homoeopathic; UN Unani; The purpose of this statement is to provide certain NP Naturopathic. essential data in order to facilitate a study of the economy of the various towns in a district. Particulars regardmg In the case of ayurvedic, homoeopathic, unani and trade, commerce, industry have been given by mention­ naturopathic systems, only hospitals and dispensaries ing the three most important imported, exported, and have been shown. Symbol H or D, as the case may be, manufactured commodities The information provided has been added after the abbreviated symbols in respect here, however, does not reflect the volume of trade in of the four above-named systems. Table No.4 shows terms of money. The number of banks given in Col. 12 the number of beds per thousand population in respect in this statement includes botb the commercial and of the various medical institutions. co-operative banks. The credit societies are those which provide loans for agricultural or non-agricultural As regl!lrds educational facilities, information purposes. relating to certain specified categories of institutions has been given under Cols. 5 to 12. the remaining The information for this statement was collected educational institutions such as universities, agricultural from the Directorate of Industries, Reserve Bank of and veterinary colleges etc. are taken care of by Col. India, and the Registrar, Co-operative Societies. The 13 under the heading 'Others'. The figures within statement refers to the year 1969-70, but in some cases, brackets in each case represent the incidence of a parti­ as for example in the case of banks, figures for even up-to cular type of institution. In Col. 9 no symb(!)ls have been the earlier part of 1972 have been included. used and only the number of the concerned institution Appendix I: Town Directory Particulars regard;", is shown, the name of the institution in full being given Outgrowths : in a footnote. The population figures for these outgrowths, where­ In showing the various other educational insti­ they occur, are indicated below the population figures tutions in Col. 13 of Statement V, the total number of the core towns concerned, in Statement I. As regards of such institutions has been indicated within brackets, the other Statements, available and relevant particulars full names of these institutions being by way of a foot­ relating to these outgrowths have been presented in this note. In those cases, however, in which the number appendix. Information given here has been collected of a particular institution exceeds one and the insti­ separately from the concerned bodies. tutions belong to different categories, the actual number Village Directory of such institutions is also indicated against their names in the footnote, otherwise the number of institutions After having explained the layout of the Town is not given in the footnote. Directory, we may now pass on to the second component of Part A of the District Census Hand Book i.e. The symbols used are as follows: the Village Directory. Information in respect of each village in a district is presented through a 16-column Col. S: A Arts; proforma. This proforma had two more columns S Science;" originally, 17-18, which pertained to information regard­ C Commerce. ing markets/hats etc., and the places of religious, histo­ rical, and archaeological interest. Since the relevant In the case of Col. 5, where colleges with combined information has now been provided through footnotes faculties ex.ist, the symbols also have been combined these two oolumns have been omitted. The various data accordingly. In the case of parks/stadia, and auditoria given in the Village Directory proforma can be discussed and drama halls, the figures indicating these units may better if instead of following the sequence of columns, mean one of the two amenities or both of them. we follow the order of subjects dealt within the proforma. ( viii )

The information contained in the Village Directory whole on tbe basis of the fint-preference food grains proforma is of three types : general information as con­ for each village. tainocl in Cols. t-3, to and 16 as well as the footnotes; Information for Cols. 1-3, 10 and 16 as well as informatioD related to amenities (Cols. 4-9); and informa­ the footnotes was obtained from the Patwari, the reve­ tion tegarding the land-use pattern (Cols. 11-15). We nue official at the village level. In Cols. 1 to 3, 10 m.y take up these items one by one. and 16. discussed above. no symbols have been used. General Amenities Columns 1·3 of tbe Village Directory proforma The Village Directory also gives information about live tbe code number, name, and area, in acres, ot a educational. medical, power supply, drinking water, village. Col. 10 indicates the most-preferred staple communication and posts and telegrapbs amenities at foods in respect of each village, and Col. 16 shows, the village level (Cols. 4-9), This information has been for each village. the nearest town ~nd the distance of presented with the help of certain symbols. Where such tOWD from tbe concerned village in kilometre. more than one unit of a particular amenity exist. actual Villages have been presented in order of their code number thereof is given within brackets. As regards numbers. (It may be mentioned here that villages the educational amenities, primary. middle. and second­ bave been code numbered tehsil-wise and the name and ary/bigher secondary schools and colleges have been taken code number of the concerned teh~il are given at the into account. The term 'college' here stands for all types of top to tbe left of each dOUble-page spread). As regards colleges whether arts, science, commerce or any other type. the names of villages, every care was taken to standar­ 10 the case of medical institutions, wherea~ hospitals and dise the spellings of village names; yet there may be dispensaries belong to ayurvedic. unam. and aHop Ithlc variations in some cases between the spellings of systems, other instItutions belong to allopathic system village names as given in Col. 2 of the Village Directory alone. These could be either those run by the Government proforma and in the Alphabetical List being given as or private and recognized by the former. As regards one of the Common Appendices. In all such cases tbe power supply, only such villages bave been treated as version contained in the Alpbabetical List may be taken the beneficiaries of power supply as are so recognised as the standard one. Any village can. of course, be by the State Electricity Department, Whether power identified with the help of its code number also. The supply in a village is used exclusively for agricultural total area of each village (Col. 3) bas been rounded off purposes or otherwise has not been indicated. In provi­ to the nearest acre. Names of food grains in CoL 10 ding information regardIng drinking \\-ater, the sources of the proforma indicate the most·preferred food grains of drinking water in various villages have beeD indicated. and lintels. wherever used as a staple food, for each It may be mentioned here that tanks. one of the village. The purpose is to indicate tbe staple foods sources of drinking watcr, arc of two types. The usual which are consumed by a majority of the poople in a village ponds (kutcha) or excavated tanks (pUCCI or village over the major part of the year. For the pur­ kutcha) belong to tbe first type. To the second typo poaeI of Col. 16 of the Village Directory proforma, belong tanks (called 'Tankas') which are usually built at names of only such places as were classified as towns the basement of a house. a terrace attached to a house were taken into account. Such towns, however, may (usually in the front) or in the open ground. Such belons to neighbouring districts or even neighbouring tanks usually bave pUCCI fioor, roof and wall. and are states. In the Jast case, names of such states are also filled with tbe rain-water Oowing in from the roof of Siven in brackets. Information, wherever provided, regarding the day/days of fairs, markets etc. beld in a a house (usually pucca) or from the tops of the roofs village and the places of religious, historical and archaelo­ and terraces both. The tanks which are built in the open ground are also pucca and are filled with the water Sical interest has been given by way of footnotes. flowing in either from their own parapeted roofs or Some of tbe information as contained in the above catchment areas. These tanks have small openings mentioned Cols. oftbe Village Directory has been further on one side or in the middle of their tops and such analysed in two tables viz .• Table No. I and Table No.2. openings are covered with wooden planks to which are Table No.1 shows villages in terms of their number attached iron hooks etc. in order to secure these open­ as well as area at tbe district and tehsit levels. In all. ings by means of lock and key as such tanks are mostly the table contains 8 different categories of area, the privately owned. lowest area-unit being SO acres or less and the highest 5,001 acres and above. The other table shows the Protected water supply means piped water supply incidence of the use of foodgrains for a tehsil as a by means of an overhead storage tank. In terms of ( ix ) communication amenities, both "pucca" and "kutcha" Medical­ roads and rail facilities within a mile of a particular H Hospital; village are indicated. Coming to the last amenity, posts D Dispensary; and telegraphs, information for post offices, posts FC Family Planning Centre; and telegraphs offices, and telephone centres has been MCW Maternity and Child Welfare Centre; provided. HC Health Centre. The data given in Cols. 4 to 9 of the Village Power Supply - Directory proforma has been analysed with the help of seven tabular statements and one tabular abstract. E Electrified Table No.3 indicates the number of various educational Drinking Water- institutions, the number of villages in which they are located, and their incidence per 100 sq km. at the tehsil T Tap i.e. Protected Water Supply; level. This incidente is indicated within brackets W Well; below the figures of the numbers of the educational TK Tank; institutions. Tables No. 4 and 5, respectively. present TW TubeweII; information in respect of medical and posts and tele­ R River; graphs amenities and the method of presentation is o Others. identical [0 that of Table No.3. Table No. 6 shows the Communications - number of villages electrified or not electrified at the district and tehsil levels. Table No. 7 indicates the PR Pucca Road; various sources of drinking wafer at the district and KR Kutcha Road; tehsil levels. Table No.8 gives the position of villages T Train. in respect of the availability of "Pucca" and "Kutcha" Posts and Telegraphs - roads and rail facilities within a radius of a mile from a particular village, at the district and tehsil levels again. PO POlt Office; The availability of communication facilities in respect P&T Posts and Telegraphs Office; of various distance groups in terms of distance from the TL Telephone. nearest town is indicated through Table No.9. In Land-use pattern addition to these tables, a tabular abstract (Appendix II1.A) is also given at the end of the Village Directory Having discussed the gencral and amenity wise which gives an overall idea about the incidence of information as contained in the Village Directory, we the various amenities at the tehsillevel. Blay now pass on to the third aspect of this Directory, The relevant data in respect of the various amenities, namely, the villagewise land·use pattern. Cob. 11 discussed above, came initially from the Patwari during to IS of the proforma present data regarding areas 1970. It was, however, cross-checked with information under forests, irrigated cultivation, unirrigated culti­ obtained from the University of Rajasthan, the State vation, Iree-groves and orchards, fallow land, cultivable Electricity Board, the Public Health and Engineering waste, and land not available for cultivation. To begin Department, the State Education and Medical Depart. with, forest in the present context means only such ments, and the Posts and Telegraphs Departments. area as has been declared forest under some law of the State. Forest may be either private or Government. The information pertaining to the educational, owned. In some caseS where whole viUages consist medical and postal facilities relates to the year 1970-71 exclusively of forest areas, only the area figures denoting and that to drinking water to 1969·70. Position regard­ forest and as obtained from the Forest Department have ing power-supply is as on 31·3·1971., been given. Col. No. 12 presents area figures regard. ing cultivated irrigated area ID terms of net and double­ The symbols used for denoting the various amenities cropped area. Out of the two figurcs given In this are: column before the bracket, the first denotes the net sown area and the second, the double.cropped area. Educational - The source or sources of irrigation along with area P Primary School; irrigated by such source/sources is/are also given in M Middle School; this column within brackets. This 80urcewille breakup, H Secondary/Higher Secondary School; n~tural~y, adds up to the total of the figure/.figures prece­ C College. dmg thIS breakup. What Col. No. 12 does foc irrigated ( II: ,

cultivated area, Column No. 13 docs for the unirrigated Four tables and a tabular abstract further eluci. cultivated area. There is one difference, however, while date the land. use data presented in Cols. 11.1 S of the in the case of irrigated cultivated area, breakup has been Village Directory proforma, Table No. 10 presents given in terms of the source of irrigation, tbis breakup an overall picture of the lan'd·use pattern at the tehsil is in terms of the type of land i.e. dry, inundated, tank level. This table shows area breakup for each type bed or river.bed etc. in respect of tbe unirrigated of land as well as the percentage thereof to the total area. area of a tehsil. It also gives tbe total areas of land at the tebsil level. Table No 11 presents the breakup of the As per the prescribed all·India proforma for tbe total cultivated area at the tehsillevel into total irrigated Village Directory : and total unirrigated and furtber provides the breakup into gross, net. and double.cropped area under each (i) Cols. 12 and 13 were to includ~ orchards and of these categories. In addition. it provides percentage current and otber fallows of upto S years; breakups as in the case of Table No. 10. Table No. 12 projects, at the tehsil level again, further breakup of the (ii) Col. 14 was to include fallow land not culti­ irrigated area in terms of the sources of irrigation and vated for more tban S years and also shrubs shows the percentage of each source of imgation to the and jungles in addition to grazing lands. total irrigated area. The percentage figures in respect of the various items in the three tables mentioned above But as per the pettern on which land-use figures are indicated within brackets below the actual area are maintained in this State: figures in the respective cases. The last Table (No. 13) brings us to the average percentage of cultivable waste (i) Breakup of orchards into irrigated/unirrigated per village. The villages for tbis purpose have becn was not available; grouped in terms of their distance from tbe nearest towns. A tabular abstract (Appendix III·B) of land­ (ii) Data regarding orchards on tbe one hand and use given at the end of the Village Directory, gives a other trees and shrubs was not avaiJable total view of the land-use pattern at the tehsil level. separately;

(iil) Land lying fanow (or upwards of two years was A few general points may also be noted while refer­ treated as old fallow (instead of tbe upwards ring to the Village Directory. As already mentioned, of five years criterion) and break.up of fallow area figures in all cases are given in acres. The area land under the irrigated/un.irrigated categories figures for tchsils were converted from acres to sq. was not available. - kms. in the case of Tables 3. 4 and S. in order to present incidence of some amenities per 100 sq, kms. In view of these limitations the following modifica. tions in the prescribed proforma have been made: It will be seen that in some cases particulars of one village have been included with those of some other (i) Orchards as well as other trees and shrubs village. Tbis has been due to the records for the village have been given at one place, in Col. 13 A ; not having been maintained separately. Similarly. a number of villages are shown as unpopulated even (ii) All fallow land, current or old i.e. of a though they may also be found as having some standing of less than 5 years, has been given amenities, in Cot. 13 B.

In brief, therefore, while as per the all.India Common appeadices aad maps pattern, the area in Col. 13 A of our proforma should - have beeD spread over Cols. 12 and 13 on the one hand As already mentioned, the Common Appendices and Col. 14 on the otber. the area in Col. 13 B should and Maps, put io Section III of this volume, are useful have been divided between Cols. 12 and 13 from the point of view of both Pans A and B of the depending upon the extent to which such fallow land District Census Hand Book. Appendix I gives the was either irrigated or unirrigatrd. This has not been names of all towns and villages (including urban and possible due to the reasons already e~plained. Apart rural part-villages) along with Hindi equivalents, in from this, the categories in Cols. 14 (old fallow of alphabetical order. The Code No. and Page Nos. given S years and more and grazing lands) and IS (barren and against each town/village will help in easily locating the uncultivable land including mountains and land under data pertaining to the latter in Parts A and B. Appendix buildings, roads etc.) are as per tbe all·India pattern. II gives distribution of population by religion at district. ( xi ) tehsil and town levels. In case there hue been any major amenities symbols which have been placed within territorial cha!lges affecting the boundaries 0 1 the district dotted-line boxes for better readability. Hills and in question or any of it's tehsils during the intercensal mountains have been shown with the help of hachures period (1961-71) the same have been ineicated in but altitudes bave not been mentioned. A skeleton Appendix III. index accompanies eacb map; the complete index is Maps giv(n on the next page. The district map also includes one inset indicating An attempt has been made to make the maps accom­ the tehsils within the district as also the inter-censal panying this volume as helpful as possible. Among others, changes in district and tehsil boundaries, wherever tbe Survey of India, Settlement, P.W.D., Railway, and Irrigation maps as well as town maps obtained from the involved. Sub-Divisions have also been shown._ J. Town Planning Department have been consulted. While (iii) Tehsil the State maps have been put at the beginning of this The basic tehsil map shows village boundaries, volume the District, Tehsil and Town maps are village names and code numbers, village population­ being issued as a Supplement. Some of the main points size dots, towns, rivers and means of communications regarding these maps are as follows : among other things. In some cases, it has been possible (i) Slote to give only the village code numbers and not the names. A State map in colour showing district and tehsil The village-size dots do not indicate the exact village­ boundaries lind headquarter towns, major roads and sites. Each tehllil map carries an abridged index; the rivers and railways has been included. It is accompanied detailed index is available on the next page. by three insets showing Rajasthan in India, tehsilwise The tehsil map also carries an inset showing the popUlation density and the intercensal territorial popUlation density within the tehsil worked out at changes. The other State map, also in colour, shows its village level although village boundari~~ are not being physical features and is accompanied by insets dealing indicated. These insets constitute 8 special contribution with geographic regions. rainfall, and temperature, soils of this Directorate. and land utilisation pattern. The scheme of geographic Eacb tehsil map is accompanied by a set of four regions of the State has been adopted from a map on amenity maps showing the villages served by the various the subject by Shri A. K. Sen of the Central Arid Zone amenities grouped under four headings viz., Transport, Research Institute Jodbpur. Postal, Education and Medical. In each case a village (II) District baving the basic amenity in the particular category. i.e., a road or railway station. a post office, a primary school This map is also in colour and shows tehsil and or a dispensary, bas been shaded. In the case of all lIub-divisional boundaries, mountains and hills, rivers, viUsges baving railway stations or other amenities roads, railways and towns and villages among other ranking higber tban the basic amenities mentioned things. As many villages as possible have been included above, appropriate symbols and village code numbers though in most cases it has been necessary to leave out bave also been given. These amenity maps are a special some smaller villages. Village dots are in accordance project undertaken by this Directorate and it is hoped witll population size. Major amenities and village code tbat they will be found useful in giving an idea regarding number have also been given beside the village-size dot the overall spatial distribution of amfnities. The combined and village name. However. in some cases it has not index for these amenity maps is given on the next page. been possible to give the village names. In such cases, village names can be ascertained by referring to the (tv) Town/City alphabetical list. Amenity symbols have been arranged In most cases, to-the-scale maps were not available. underneath the village names. An endeavour has been In all such cases notional maps are being given. An made to locate the village-size dot as near to the actual attempt has been made to give tbe exact municipal village-site as possible with the help of the Survey of limits but as these limits are often not properly demarcated India toposheets. Still, it is not claimed tbat it has either on land or on maps, the boundaries have to be been possible to put the village-size dots with fool-proof treated as notional and approximate wherever part­ precision. As exact municipal boundaries are not villages are involved. Functional areas as well as ward known in most cases, the town areas in tbe district as boundaries and all other important sites and land-marks well as the tehsi! maps include the outgrowth and part­ have been indicated. Names of neighbouring villages villages, wherever they occur, and their approximate and part-villages have also been given. The symbols location is indicated by sub-numbers. Spberes indicating used have been explained in each case along with the population size of towns bave also been given beside map itself. ( xii)

Ward wise and tOWDwise densities have been shown The district, tehsil and town maps have been num. by way of an inset in all cases in which to.the·scale bered in the following manner :- maps were available. The densities have been town District Map District code number followed by 1. worked out in terms of persons per sq. km. and have been rounded off to the Dearest hundred. However. as Tehsil Maps District code number followed by 2, 3, tbe exact areas or ward were not available, the wardwise 4 etc. in the order of the tehsil code densities are on]y approximate. With regard to towns sequence with 'A' being added for each for which to.the.scale maps were not available, the insets set or amenity maps. pertaining to their maps carry only tbe ward boundaries Town Maps District code number followed by the and ward numbers. In both the cases, the insets also number next to that assigned to the indicate such other neighbouring towns and outgrowths last tehsil map with the district head­ as form an urban agglomeration, wherever such an agglo. quarter city'town coming first and meration exists. The boundaries \ of outgrowths are, other towns getting subsequent numbers of course, approximate. ' as per the code sequence.

INDICES

I INDEX FOR DISTRICT MAPS 2. INDEX FOR TEHSIL MAPS

INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY

STATE BOUNDARY TEHSIL BOUNDARY

DISTRICT BOUNDARY VILLAGE BOUNDARY

SUB -DIVISIONAL BOUNDARY TEHSIL HEADQU"RTER

TEHSIL BOUNDARY TAR/CEMENT CONCRETE ROAD DISTRICT HEAOQUARTER IPALI( METALLEDj GRAVELLED ROAD SUB-DIVISIONAL HEADQUARTER SOJAT UNMETALLED/FAIR WEATHER ROAD/CART TRACK c=;=.==.=n T EHSIL HE ADQUARTER 'p~~~_R! BROAD GAUGE RAILWAY WITH STATION lEI TARlcEMENT CONCRETE ROAD METER GAUGE AAILWAY WITH STATION 1IIIElIlit HIf SH I>tOTE NIf OR OH SIGNIFY NATIONAL HIGHWAY OR STATE HIGHWAYI RIVER

METALLEDI GRAVELLED ROAD TANKS elc

UNMETALLED/FAIR WEATHER ROAD/CART TRACk == ... ===-.. NOT( TOWNS AND VILLAGES IY POPULATION "ZE AS IN THE

BROAD G"UGE RAILWAY WITH STA'nON e! I"DEX FOR DISTRICT MAPS ABOVE METER GAUGE RAILWAY WITH STA.TION I I EJ I I I I 3 INDEX FOR AMENITIES MAPS RIVER TRANSpOAT TANKS lie TARICEMENT CONCRETE ROAD HILLS METALLEDI GRAVELLED ROAD

UNMETIILLED/ FillA WEATHEA ROAD/ CAAT TRACK

BROAD GAUGE RAILWAY WITH STATION TOWNS BY POPULATION SIZE' • • • TI T IV METEA GAUGE RAILWAY WITH STATION ., to 5,000 10,000 30.000 50,000 100,000 to to to to • NOTE VILLAGES SERVED BY MAJOA ROADS OR 4,.,. ',,19' 1',"9 AI ••• , '9,9" .bon HAVING RAILWAY STATION If AVE IEEN SHADED

POSTAL VILLAGES BY POPULATION SIZE. 0 • • • TELEGRAPH OFFICE PT U.popu- UplD 200 500 1,000• 2,000 5.000 to to '0 •ID •l TELEPHONE OFFICE TL lot.' 199 491 ". 4,91' abo" I.'" NOTE VILLAGES HAVING POST OFFICES AAE SHADED PAlleNAY"T SA","TI. POLICE STATION Ps0. EDUCATION"L POST. TELa.UPH, TELEPHONE I POST OFFICE PT TL PO ""DDLE SCHOOL CIRCUIt" HOUK M CH HIGH/HIGHEA SECONDARY SCHOOL H REST HOUSE I DId( 011 INSPECTION BUNGALOW"NSPECT'ON HUT ® NOTE VILLAGES HAVING PAIMARY SCHOOLS AAE SHADED HOSPIT"L E9 MEDICAL DISPe:NSAIIT,IIIATERNITY • CHILD WEL'ARE ,HEALTH.. HOSPITAL H FAMILY "LANNING CENTIle: M~TERNIT" AND CHILD WELFARE CENTRE Mew COLLEGE HEALTH CENTRE He HIGH/HIGHEA SECOND,,"T SCHOOL I MIDDLE SCHOOL FAMILY PLANNINC CENTRE Fe

MANDl. MARKET NOTE VILLAGES HAVING DISPENS~RIES AAE SHADED

As already stated, all town maps carry their respec. municipal and ward boundaries have been universally tive indices. However, it may be mentic-ned here that shown as 0_ -- 0 and ---- respectively. ANALYTICAL NOTE

A. TOWN DIRECTORY

Introductory municipal boards with Udaipur alone having a munici­ pality of category 3. As already mentioned. the Town Directory consists Functional categorywise, Surajgarh, Nawa]garh and of six Statements which follow this note. We may now Mukandgarh towns shows pronounced industrial charac­ analyse the data. thus presented, in respect of the towns teristics and Jhunjhunun shows sucb characteristics of this district with the belp of four Tables which relate secondarily. to Statements I, III and V, respectively. Pilani town in die- (listrict forms an--urban agglomeration with Vidya A study of Co1.s 6-13 in conjunction with Table No. Vihar town. I. which follows. shows that since 1921-31 the population of all the towns has registered an upward trend with the Statement I exception of Bisau, Surajgarh and Khetri towns in 194]- - - - A look at Cols. 6-13 will show that out of the twelve 51 and Nawalgarh town in 1951-61 when the population towns in this district ten are rather small-sized, with of these towns showed a decrease of 7.91, 2.83, 18.09 Jhunjhunun having a population of 32.024 being the and 6.63 per cent. respectively. As regards 1961-71, largest and Nawalgarb rolJowing it closely. Civic ad­ Vidyavihar bas returned the highest growth rate viz. miDistrationwise. all tbe twelve towns are governed by 100.87 per cent.

TABLE No.1

DECADAL POPULATION VARIATION (1901-1971)

SI.No. Name of TOWD 1901-1911 1911-1921 1921-1931 1931-1941 1941-1951 1951-1961 1961-1971

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

l. Bapr +22.91 -4.74

2. JhUDjhunuD +8.04 -9.92 +19.43 +18.23 +22.30 +20.96 +28.29

3. Mandawa +7.18 +1.70 +23.55 +13.50 +3.76 +1.20 +18.83

4. Bisau -11.49 +1.51 +11.44 +9.53 -7.91

S. Pilani +3.13 +13.28

6. Vidyavlbar +100.S7

7. Surajgarh +14.29 -10.73 +13.70 +12.28 -2.S3 +22.08 +20.73

8. Cbirawa +12.94 +0.16 +19.69 .... 21.68 +0.23 +10.81 +17.89

9. Khetri -16.54 -15.24 +22.17 +IS.28 -18.09 +12.73 +758

10. Nawalgarh +14.16 -10.59 +34.46 +22.00 +29.38 -6.63 +6.64

11. Udaipur -10.36 -16.82 +10.91 +5.12 +15.67 +11.93 +27.96

12. MuuDdgarh +28.39 +24.68 (xiv)

Statlmetll U be a municipality of category 4, has the highest total It will be seen from Col. 3 that there is a consider­ annual Receipt and Expenditure figure.. There is a able nriation in altitude from one town to another. considerable variation ,n the pattern of sources of income Jaipur is tbe nearest cIty In respect of the towns in this and heads of expenditure from one municipality to another. district. Of the twelve towns only six have raIlway Vidyavlhar shows the highest percentages of per capita stations. tbough all of them have bus stands. income in terms of revenue trom taxes as weU as in relation to government grants, loans and advances. As Statement III regards the percentages of per capita expenditure and of A look at Cols 3-16 in conjunction with Table Nos. expenditure on general administration, Vidyavibar, 2 and 3 wIll show that JhunjhunuD. which happens to again, shows the bighest figures.

TABLE No.2

RECEIPT (SOURCEWISE, IN PERCENTAGE, AND PER CAPITA)

Revenue derived SI. Name and Class of Town CivIc Adminis· ReceiPt through (rom municipal Receipt from Total ReceIpt No. trahon Status & taxes properties apart Government Category from taxes and Grant. Loans & other sources Advances

2 3 4 5 6 7

1. Bagar(V) M(S) 32.88 48.60 18.52 100.00 (0.95) (1.40) (0.53) ~2.88)

2. JhuDJbunun (III) M(4) 32.23 42.87 24.90 100.00 (3.25) (4.33) (2.S1) (10.09)

3. Mandawa (V) M(5) 22.47 66.01 11.52 100.00 (0.81) (2.39) (0.42) (3.62)

4. Bisau (IV) M(5) 49.41 50.59 100.00 (2.09) (2.14) (4.23)

S. Pilani (IV) M(4) 30.66 50.04 19.30 100.00 (2.83) (4.62) (1.78) (9.23)

6. Vidyavibar (V) M(5) 49.06 16.96 33.98 100.00 (6.91) (2.39) (4.78) (14.08)

7. Surajgarh (V) M(S) 77.82 8.21 13.97 100.00 (5.01) (0.53) (0.90) (6.44)

8. Cbirawa (IV) M(S) 49.24 42.76 8.00 100.00 (3.64) (3.16) (0.59) (7.39)

9. Kbetri(V) M(S) 41.48 41.55 16.97 100.00 (2.11) (2.12) (0.87) (5.10)

10. Nawalgarh (IV) MlS) 70.24 26.64 3.12 100.00 (3.63) (1.38) (0.16) (5.17)

11. Udaipur (IV) M(3) 36.38 28.08 35.54 100.00 (1.28) (0.98) (1.25) (3.51)

1:. Mukandgarh (IV) M(5) 26.23 68.49 5.28 100.00 (1.99) (5.20) (0.40) (7.59) (XV') -- TABLB No.3

EXPENDITURE (HEADWISE, IN PERCENTAGE, AND PER CAPITA)

SI. Name and Class Civic Administration General Public Sat'et,.. Public Other sources Total No. of Town Status &: Category Administration Health and Conve- Expenditure nience, Public Work &: Public Institutions

2 1 4 5 6 7

I. Baaar (V) M(') 3'.38 64.62 100.00 (1.14) (2.07) (3.71)

2. JhllojhunuD (Ill) Y(4) 10.20 66.09 23.71 100.00 (1.02) (6.61) (2.37) (10.00)

3. MIDdawa(V) M(') 25.98 68.44 5.58 100.00 (0.57) (1.49) (0.12) (2.18)

1". llliau (IV) M(Sr "'22:501 61.9S . 16:sr 100:00- (l.12) (3.09) (0.78) (4.99)

S. Pilani (IV) M(4) 24.45 51.62 ~t3;!}3 "100.00 (2.29) (4.83) (2.24) (9.36)

6. Vidyavibar (V, M(S) 20.60 66.06 13.34 100.00 (2.48) (7.94) (1.60) (12.021

7. Surajaarh (V) M(S) 9.72 33.77 56.51 100.00 (0.68) (2.37) (3.96) (7.01)

8. Cbirawa (IV) M(5) 33.83 58.19 7.98 100.00 (2.35) (4.04) (0.55) (6.94)

,. Khetri (V) M(5) 19.05 32.21 48.74 100.00 (0.97) 0.(4) (2.49) (5.1a,

10. Nawalaarh (IV) M(') 28.97 64.00 7.03 100.00 (1.50) (3.31) (0.36) (5.17)

U. Udaipur (IV) M(3) 36.43 49.45 14.12 100.00 (1.20) (1.63) (0.46) (3.29)

12- Muundgarb (IV) M(S) 9.67 13.29 77.04 100.00 (0.83) (1.14) (6.61) (8.S8)

Statement IV Statement f' It will be observed that tbe system of sanitation is, generally speaking. traditional, tbough each town has In terms of medical and educational amenities, provision for latrines. In the removal of nigbt soil, Jhunjhunun town is the one best served. Of the twelve besides tbe usual head load and cart load metbods, wheel towns, only six have cinemas. Table No. 4 (which barrows and trucks are also used. Of the twelve towns, only eight have protected water supply schemes; tbough follows) shows tbat Bagar town provides for the higbeet all of them are electrified. None of the twelve towns number of beds per tbousand population in medical baa provision for fire-figbting services. institutions. (:l.vi)

TABLB No.4 MEDICAL FAClLlTJES

Sl. Total No. of beds No. of beds per Sl. Total No. of beds No. of bods per No. Name of Town in medicaJ 1,000 population No. Name of Town inmedicaJ 1,000 population insti tutions institutions

2 3 4 2 3 4 ------_ -

1. Bagar 120 17.56 7. Surajgarb ______10 _ r ______1.02

2. Jbunjhunun 62 1.94 8. Chirawa 63 4.13

3. Man

4. Bisau 12' 1.1S 10. Nawalgarh 292 10.99

S. Pilani 90 6.87 11. Udaipur 10 0.80

6. Vidyavibar 12. Mukandgarb 14 1.38

Statement VI dyed clotb. leather shoes, soap. scissors, razors, agri. cultural tools. cement articles. blankets. conduit pipes, As may be seen from the Statement, the items under and iron buckets are also worth mentioning. Each sub-heads 'imported' and 'exported' pertain to daily town has banking facilities and other credit facilities in necessities, generally speaking, though machine parts. terms of agricultural and non~agticultural credit satieties liquor, waterpots, bricks, wool, biris. milk, animals and with tbe exception of a few towns in the case of tbe stone are to be noted. Among the manufactured articles. former item. ANALYl'ICAL NOTE

B. VILLAGE DlRECl'ORY

category. The highest number of villages, 254. belongs to AI-.y be 'eeD from Table No.1 below, the entire the sixth category and there are 27 villages only in the ..rica COIIIiata of 687 villases of which 204 belong to eighth category. As regards the tebsils, the only village ~ ..hail. and 19J. 164 and 128 to Khetri. in the second category belongs to Chirawa tehsil and the Chirawa aad Udaipur"aU teh.iI. respectively. As regards only 2 villages in the third category belong, respectively, t die oJauitic:atiotl ot'YU.... in terms of area, the district • to Chirawa and Udaipurwati tehsils. The biggest con­ '" viIJaaea (all iato leVen "teaories out of the eight pro­ centration of villages obtains in the area categories fifth, \'icIed for. HoweYel'. there is only one vi1lage in the sixtb, and seventb. It will. thus, appear tbat the viJ)ages .... c:ateIOry aDd tbere are 2 villages, in the third in this district tend to be medium-sized in area .

TABLB No.1

- -VILLAGES. CLASSIEIED _BY-AREA __

Area in acres __.A._ Total No. 50 or less 51-100 101-200 201-500 501-1,000 1,001-2,000 2,001-5,COO 5,001+ of villages

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

A' ~ 687 1 2 ~O 149 254 _2~3 27 t. AujbunuD Tehsil 204 5 54 84 56 5 ~ -Ciilfwa-nbstl ---. 164 --t I- 7 - 36- - --64 - 52-- 3 J. Khetri Tehltl. )91 16 4S 76 46 7 4. Udaipurwati Tebail 128 2 14 30 69 12

• Area of village Badbar Code No. 13 included in the village Madansat Code No. 15.

Table No.2. which follows, shows that for the dis­ grain. This is also true of the tehsils in the district. A viet •• a whole, bajra is the most commonly used food- few villages, however, prefer wbeat and barley.

TABLE No.2

STAPLE FOOD (Figures mdlcate the number of villages)

Names of Staple foods Disttict(I'ebsil ._---"'-- Wheat Barley MaIze Gram Jowar Bajra Gojra Gochana Rice Moth Bejar

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

RnIlt",11 DIItrIet 29 17 1 640 1. JlaunjbuDun Tebsil 204 2. Chirawa Tebsil 164 3. -Khetri TebsiJ 17 173 4. -Udaipurwati Tebail 99 (xviii)

The varioul places where hats/markets/fairs are held 73 middle schools and 4S secondary/bigher secondary have been indicated in the footnotes. Bisau, Jbunjllunun. schools. There are 3 colleges also. In terms of the Mandawa,Bagar, Mukandgarb, Nawalgarh, Udaipurwati, number of these institutions. Khetri and Udaipurwati Khetri, Pilani. Neem-ka-Thana, Cbirawa. Surajgarh and Lobaru. and Mahendragarb (Haryana) are the fourteen tehsils. are the twq best served in respect of primary Dearest towns in respect of the various villages in the schools, Khetri enjoying similar position in respect of diilrict. Among the places of interest are temples, middle schools. The 3 colleges in the district belong to tnosque. tanks, sites of religious and otber fairs etc. Chirawa and Udaipurwati (2, I) respectively. The highest Ameaid.. incidence of primary and middle schools, per lOa Sq. (/) Educational Km. belongs to Cbirawa and Khetri tehsils respectively. The district. as a whole. has 529 primary schools.

TABLE No.3

AVAILABILITY OF EDUCATIONAL FACILmES AND THEIR INCIDENCE PER 100 SQ. KM.

Educational facilities r------A------Primary Schools Middle Schools Sec./Higher Sec. Schools Colleges______, ,------'~-----r__~ r-----'------., Total area iD District/Tebsil Sq.Km. No. of No. of No. of No. of No.afvillages No. of No. of No. of villages Primary villages Middle haviDg SecOD- Sccondaryf villages Colleges- haviDg Schools having Schools dary/Higher Higher having Prunary Middle Secondary Secondary Colleges Schools Schools Schools Schools

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

JIllm)lIumm District 459 529 71 73 43 47 3 3

1. JbunjhunuD Tehail 1.453 115 128 14 15 10 11 (8.81) (1.03) (0.76)

2. Chirawa Tehsil 1,272 120 129 14 IS 8 9 1 (10.14) (1.18) (0.71) (0.08)

3. Khetri Tehsil 1.433 122 136 23 23 11 13 (9.48) (1.60) (0.91)

4. Udaipurwati Tehsil 1,482 102 136 ·20 20 14 14 2 2 (9.18) (1.3S) (O.94) <0.13)

(iiJ Medical welf!lre centres and 28 family planning centres. The incidence of dispensaries and hospitals. per 100 Sq. Km., In the district, as a whole. there are III dispensaries, is the highest in Khetri and Udaipurwati tehsils res­ 17 hospitals, 23 health centres, I maternity and child pectively. (xix)

TABLE No.4

AVAILABILITY-OF MEDICAL FACILITIES AND mEIR INCIDENCE PER 100 SQ. KM.

Medical faealitles --'"- Dispensaries Hospitals Health Centres Maternity & Child Family PlannIng Total Welfare Centres Centres area lD r--A-----",,...---.:.---.A--, .----.A--..... ,----A----, ,---"---- Sq. Km. No. of No. of No. of No. of No. of No. of No. of No. of No. of No. of DistrictrreJ:!.si I Villages- - Dlspen- VIllages Hospitals villages Health villages MaternitY Villages Family having saries having havlDg Centres havlDg & Child havlDg Plannmg Dispen- Hospitals Health Maternity Welfare Family Centres sarles Centres & Child Centres Plannmg Welfare Centres Centres

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Jlauojbunun District 106 III 17 17 23 23 1 1 28 28

1. JbunjhllDun Tehsil 1,453 26 28 6 6 3 3 2 2 (1.93) (0.41) (0.21) (0.14)

2. Cbirawa Tehsil 1,272 21 21 3 5 5 8 8 t1.65) (0.24) (0.39) (0.63)

3. Khetri Tehsil 1,433 32 32 2 2 7 7 1 6 6 (2.23) (0.14) (0.49) (0.07) (0.42)

4. Udaipurwati Tehsil 1.482 27 30 6 6 8 8 12 12 (2.02) (0.40) (0.54) (0.81)

(iii) Posts and Telegraphs posts and telegraphs offices. and 15 telephone centres. Khetri tehsIl has the highest inCidence of tlte post offices, The district on the whole, has 275 post offices. 23 per leO Sq. Km.

TABLE No.5

AVAILABILITY OF POSTAL AND TELEGRAPHIC FACILITIES AND THEIR INCIDENCE PER 100 SQ. KM.

Postal and TelegraphIc faCilities ---A- --. Total Post Offices Posts & Telegraphs Offices Telephone Centres area In r "'------'" ,------"-- r "'-- Districtrrehsil Sq. Km. No. of villages No. of Post No. of villages No. of I'osts No. of Villages No. of Tele- havlDgPost Offices havmg Posts & Telegraphs havmg Tele- phone Centres Offices & Telegraphs Offices phone Centres OffiCes

2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Jbaojb ...ua District 275 275 23 23 IS 15

1. JbuDjbUDUD Tebsil 1,453 '68 68 5 5 3 3 (4.68) (0.34) (0.21)

2. Cbirawa Tehsil 1.272 63 63 6 6 3 3 (4.95) (0.47) (0.24)

3. Kbetri Tehsil 1.433 76 76 4 4 3 3 (5.30) (0.28) (0.21)

4. Udaipurwati Tehsil 1,482 68 68 8 8 6 6 (4.59) (0.54) (0.40) (XX)

(I.) PtrMr Suppl, the villages of tbe district are electrified. Amongst the tebsils. Cbirawa aad Uda~pu~wati have sizable number AI the followinl table shaWl. only about t/Sth of of electrified villa,el.

TABLB No.6

POWER SUPPLY

Villages having Villages not hav- Villages having Villages nat ha v- Districtrrehsil Power supply ing Power supply DistrictfFehsil Power supply ing Power supply

2 3 1 2 3

Jlullljlnmua District ~38 549 3. Khetri Tehsil 20 171 I. JhunjhunuD Tehsil 22 182

2. Chirawa Tehsil 54 110 4. Udaipurwati TehsH 42 86

(.) Drinking water coming next though their occurrence is limited. Only 6 As Table No. 7 shows. the district depends largely vjJlages have protected water supply schemes and 39 on wells as sources of drinking water, tanks and rivers villages have tube-wells facility.

TABLE No.7

DRINKING WATER

Sources of drinking water

Districtrrehsil Tap Well Tank River TUbewell Others

2 3 4 5 6 7

6 680 8 39 2

1. JhunjhuDUD Tebsil 2 201 7 4 2

2. Cbira.. Tcbsil 2 163 4 3 24

3. Khetri Teblil 1 189 5 5

4. Uclaipurwati Tchsil 127 9 4

(pi) Communication facilities railway stations. A fair number of villages are accessible only by kutcha roads. while a good number of them are The foJlowinl table Indicates that only a small number connected by no roads whatsoever. Not a single village of villages iQ the district arc served by pucca road and in Khetri tehsil enjoys railway facility. (ni)

TABLE No.8

MEANS OF COMMUNICATION

Means of Communication Means of Communication r------~----~ Pucca Kutcha RaIlway Pucca Kutcha Railway District(l'ehsil Road Road Station DistrictfTehsiJ Road Road StatIon

2 3 4 2 3 4

-ofhmjbunnn District 111 - 3O!t 9 3. Khetri Tehsil 28 53 1. Jhunjhunun Tehsll 33 112 6 4. Udaipurwatl Tehsil 27 83 2. Chlrawa Tehsil 23 61 2

The availability of communication faciJities, as 16-25 Km. distance group. There are only 2 villages projected in Table No.9, will show tbat the largest which have both pucca road and rail facilities and there number of villages having pucca roads falls In the 6-10 is no vIllage which bas both kutcha road and rail facilities. Km. distance group, those having kutcha roads in the

TABLE No.9

MEANS OF COMMUNICATION (VILLAGES GROUPED IN TERMS OF DISTANCE FROM THE NEAREST TOWN)

Means of Communication ____---A--- ______~ ,-­ Distance from the Total No. nearest town of villages Pllcca Kutcha Pucca Pucca Kutcha Others (in km.) Road Road Road Road Road and and and River Rail Rail

2 3 4 5 6 7 8

5 or less 70 23 28

6-10 181 33 87 3

JJ-15 106 15 53 2

16-25 243 30 103

26-50 87 4 34

51-100

101-200

101+

La.d-a.e pattei'll belong to Udaipurwati tehsil. the largest un-irrigated area and area under fallow-land belong to Jhunjhunun The following table shows tbat in terms of area, tehsit. The area under tree groves and orchards in the Udaipurwati tehail, ia the largest followed by JhuDjbunun, district is negJigibie. The highest percentages (to total Khetri and Chirawa tehsils in that order. tehsi! area) of forest area, and area under cultivable wastes belong to Khetri tehsil. of irrigated area and of tbat nol The largest forest area and area under cultivable available for cultivation to Udaipurwati tebsi!, of un­ waste belong to Khetri tebsil, and the largest area not irrigated area to Cbirawa tehsil. and of area under available for cultivation aDd the largest irrigated area fallow I-and to JhUDjhuDUD teh~i1. (XXii)

TABLE No. 10 LAND UTILISATION PATI'ERN ______(.t\r~!1!_ a<;_r~L

Tehsil Total Area Forest Irrigated Un-irrigated Tree Fallow land Culturable Not available (Rural) groves & Waste for cultiva­ Orchards tion

2 3 4 S 6 7 8 9

I. Jhunjbunun Tebsd 359.008 1,661 291,530 21,533 35,527 8,757 (100.00) (0.46) (81.20) (6.00) (9.90) (2.44)

2. Chirawa Tehsil \ 314,261 232 5,937 255,795 7 15,262 27,152 9,816 (100.00) (0.07) {J .'&9) (81.40) (Neg.) (4.86) (8.64) (3.14)

3. Khetri Tehsil 354,253 42,523 13,782 216,997 21 10,613 38,342 31,975 (100.00) (12.00) (3.89) (61.25) (0.01) (3.00) (10.82) (9.03)

4. Udaipurwau Tehsll 366,268 15,597 24,323 242,390 185 14,926 23,731 45,116 (100.00) (4.26) (6.64) (66.18) (0.05) (4.08) (6.48) (12.31)

As is evident from Table No. II, the largest gross cultivated tehsil area) of cultivated double-cropped and cultIVated area belongs to JhunJbunun tebsils, the largest un-irrigated double-cropped areas belong to Khetri tehsd, cultivated double-cropped, and the largest un-irrigated of gross irrigated, and irrigated double-cropped areas to double-cropped areas belong to Khetri tehsil, and the Udaipurwati tehsll, and of gross un.irrigatedarea to Jhun­ largest gross-irrigated and irrigated double-cropped areas jbunuD tehsll. to Udaipurwati tehsil. The highest percentages (to total

TABLE No. 11

IRRIGATED AND UN IRRIGATED AREA (Area In acres, Total cultivated area IrrIgated Un-irrigated ,..--- ,- ~-""""" Tehsil Gross Net Double""""" Gross Net Double Gross Net Double Cropped Cropped Cropped

2 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10

1. JhunjhuDuD Tehsil 294,796 293,191 1,605 1,738 1,661 77 293,058 291,530 1,528 (100.00) (99.46) (0.54) (0.59) (0.56) (0.03) (99.41) (98.90) (O.SI)

2. Chirawa Tebsil 266,866 261,732 5.134 . 6,361 5,937 424 260,505 255.195 4,710 (100.00) (98.08) (1.92) (2.38) (2.22) (0.16) (97.62) (95.86) (1.76)

3. Khetri Tehsil 24fJ,248 230,179 17,469 15,455 13,782 1,673 232,793 216,997 15,796 (100.00) (92.96) l7.04) (6.23) (S.55) (0.68) (93.77) (87.41) (6.36)

4. Udaipurwati Tebsil 282,048 266,713 15,335 30,008 24,323 5,685 252,040 242,390 9,650 (100.00) (94.56) (5.44) (10.64) (8.62,) (2.02) (89.36) (85.94) (3.42)

Table No. 12, wbicb follows, indicates tbat tbe irrigated by wells belongs to Udaipurwati tehsil. Area largest gross cultivated irrigated area as well as tbat irrigated by tanks and canals is negligible. (xxiii)

TABLE No. 12

SOURCES OF IRlUGATION (Area in acres)

Tehsil Total gross Sources of Irrigation cultivated ~------~--,_.------~ irrigated area Wells Tanks Canals Othe~ 2 3 4 5 6

]. Jhunjhunun Tebsil 1,738 ],738 (100.00) (100.00)

2. Chirawa Tehsil 6,361 6,299 62 (100.00) (99.03) (0.97)

3. Khetri Tebsil 15.455 14,777 431 247 (100.00) (95.61) (2.79) (1.60)

4. Udaipurwati Tehail 30,008 29,634 33 82 259 (100.00) (98.75) (0.11) (0.27) (0.87)

Table No. 13 projects the percentage of cultivable the lowest in 16-25 Km. distance group in terms of waste per village. It will be noted that the highest per­ distance from the nearest towns. centage obtains in the distance group 5 Km. or Jess and

TABLE No. 13

CULTIVABLE WASTE (VR..LAGES GROUPED BY DISTANCE FROM THE NEAREST TOWN)

Distance from Total No. of Average percentage Distance from Total No. of Average percentage the nearest town villages of cultivable waste the nearest town villages of cultivable waste (inkm.) per village (lQkm.) per village 2 3 2 3

5 or less 70 1.43 26- SO 87 ].15

6-10 181 0.55 51-100

11-15 106 0.94 101-200

16-25 243 0.41 201+

TOWN DIRECTORY 2

TOWN DIRECl'ORY Statement /- Status, Growth History and Functional Category

, Population of the town at the Censuses of _ ~ "s c:;'O ------:'$ II) SI. Nallle and Class Location Name of TellSll "0.2 ; ~ .§ ~ r~ No. of TOWD Code (DIstt./ ~ E~ ~~ 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 t: eo!:: Teh./Town :~.~ ~~.... § *~ Code Nos.) U c:: tiiU.S Il.~~

1 2 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10 II 12 13 14

1 Bagar (V) 4/1/1 Jh~DJhunun M(S) 5837 7174 6834 Primary activity

2 JbunjhunuD (III) 4/1/11 JhuDjhunun M(4) 12279 13266 11950 14272 16874 20637 24962 32024 Service-cum· industrtal· cum·trade& commerce

3 Mandawa (V) 4/1/Ill JhuDJhunun M(S) Sl65 5536 5630 6956 7895 8192 8290 9851 Primary activity

4 Bisau (lV) 4/1/IV Jhunjhunull M(S) 7726 6838 6941 7735 8472 7802 - 10417

Pilani Urban Agg.n. See Constituent Unit

5 Pllani (IV) 4/Z/V Chirawa M(4) 11194 11565 13101 Service

Vldya Vlbar (V) 4/2/IV Chirawa M(5) 3464 6958 Sen>ice

6 Vldya Vlhar See Pilani Urban Agglomeration

7 Surajgarh (V) 4/2/VlI Chirawa M(5) 5243 5992 5349 6082 6829 6636 8101 9780 Industnal· cum-service

8 Cbirawa (IV) 4/2/VlII Chirawa M(S) 7065 7979 7992 9566 11640 11667 12928 15241 Primary activity-cum· service

9 Khetri (V) 4/3/IX Khetri M(S) 8537 7125 6039 7378 8727 7148 8058 8669 Primar:- activlty·cum- service

JO Nawalgarh (IV) 4/4/X UdalpurwatJ M(5) 12315 14059 12570 16902 20620 26679 24911 26565 Industflal~ cum·pnmary aCllvlty-cum· service

11 Udaipur (IV) 4/4/Xl UdaipurwatJ M(3) 8638 7743 6441 7144 7510 8687 9723 12442 Pnmary activIty

J2 Mukundgarh (IV) 4/4/XII Udaipurwati M(S} 6343 8144 10154 Industnal- cUm-prlmar), activity TOWN DIRECTORY Statement [[-Physical Aspects and Location

Physical aspects Name of and road distance (in km.) from ,... &1. Name of Towa .. Annual Temperature Nearest City State District Sub-divisi- Nearest OU No. '0" rainfall (ia centigrade) (i.e. town with H.Q. H.Q. onalH.Q./ Railway Nearest :3~ (in mms.) population of Tebsil H.Q. Station Bus Stand .= e Malt. MID. ODe lakh or <.S more)

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

1 Bapr 359 N.A. N.A·t N.A·t Jaipur(198) Jaipur (198) Jbunjbunun JhunJhunun Ratan- Bagar(O) (15) (15)/ shahar(4) JhunjhunuD (IS)

2 Jbuojbunun 396 434.2 N.A.t N.A.t Jaipur(170) Jaipur (170) JhunjbuDun JhuDjhuDun Jbun­ Jhun­ (0) (0)/ bunua(3) jbunun(O) JhunjbuDUD (0)

3 Mandawa 328 505 N.A.§ N.A.§ Jaipur(I60) Jaipur (160) Jhunjhunun Jhunjhnnun Mandawa (32) (32)/ (IS) (0) Jhunjhunun (32)

4 Bisau 296 N.A. N.A.t N.A.t Jaipur(2l6) Jaipur (216) Jhu[ljhuDun ]hunjhunun Bisau (I) Bisau(O) (32) (32)/ Jhunjhunun (32) Pilaai Urban Asg.n. See Constituent Unit

.5 Pilani 259 N.A. 45.0 2.0* Jaipur (228) Jaipur (228) Jbunjhunun Jhunjhuoun Chitawa(16) Pilani(O) (45) (45)/ Cbirawa(16) Vidya Vihar(O) Vidya Vibar 291 N.A. N.A.t N.A.t Jaipur (228) Jaipur (228) Jbunjhunun Jhunjbunun (45) (45) Jhunjhunun (45)/ Chirawa(l6) 6 Vidya Vihar See Pilani Urban Agglomeration

7 Surajaarb 292 N.A. N.A.t N.A.t Jaipur(239) Jaipur (239) Jhunjhunun Jhunjhunun Surajgarh Surajgarh (55) (55)/ (0) (0) Cbirawa(18)

8 QUawa 314 539.17 N.A.t N.A.t Jaipur(200) Jaiput( 2(0) Jhunjhunun JhunjhuDun Chlrawa(3) Chirawa(O) (30) (30)/ Chirawa(O)

9 K.IIotri 457 559.98 N.A.t N.A.t Jaipur(176) Jaipur (176) JhunjhuDun Khetri(O)/ Neem-ka- Khetri(O) (67) Khetri(O) Thana(35)

10 Nawalgarh 390 'N.A. N.A.t 'N.A.t Jaipur(I44) Jaipur (144) Jhunjhunun Nawalgarh Nawalgarh 'Nawalgarh (38) (0)/ (2) (0) Nawalgarh(O)

* Temperature fisures (!970) based on 'Basic Statistics, Rajasthan', 1971. , The nearest pJace for which Temperature figures are available is Pilani. t Temperature fiprcs for Churu, the Dearest place, are 46 Max., 1 Min. 4

TOWN .DlRECTOIlY Statement 11 -Physical A.spem and Location

Physical aspects Name of and road distance (in km.) from

-;;- SI. NamcofTown Of Annual Temperature Nearest City State District Sub-divisi· Nearest No. 'C .. rainfall (in centigrade) (I.e. town with H.Q. H.Q. ooaIH.Q./ Railway Nearest .::::0 s (in mms.) population of Tebsil H.Q. Station Bus Stand Max. MID. onelakh or <:§. more)

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 11 Udaipur 457 500.25 N.A. N,A·t Jaipur (130) Jaipur (130) JhunjhuDun Nawalgarh Neem·ka- Udaipur- (67) (38)/ Thana(45) wati(O) Nawalgarh (38)

12 MukuDdgarh 362 N.A. N.A. N.A.: Jalpur(13S) Jaipur (I35) JhunjhuDuD Nawalgarh Mukand. Mukand- (26) (13)/ garb(2) garh(O) Nawalgarh (13) : Temperature figures for Sikar the nearest place are 43.6 Max. 0.8 MID. Statement III - Municipal Finance (1968-69) Receipt tRs. '00) Expenditure (Rs. '00)

'C ..!j c ~ 51. Name of Town -.- Cl 9 :I 10 .~~-g .. c: .. 0 >. to. 0 .;; oJ: .§ -0 .. t·Cl as ~.g ..c:: ~ .. :::c ... c:: 9fJ·c~Q.~ u ::I ... ~ ~o 0 .. os 0 ~.,. Co 0:1'_ ... ..c E fIl :~ c:: 2 -;; oJ:~ iI= 0( CoO E1Et~.g .... g ..i ...... -a uO .5 u .2 ;::1) .!:! I) e "u :J U'";;.c:: Cl ..u -; u- 11 ;; > ... c::8 :is ..o'C :0 ~~ ~§~~g 001 'tI'" oS U'C ::I :E oS ... ct._ ct..b Co gel:: v~ oS 0 0 ... £:; £ :I 0 {:. < ~ "" "" 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 IS 16

Basal 65 58 36 37 197 39 78 103 220

2 lhunjhunun 1,042 868 292 . 513 518 3,233 327 1,011 1,106 759 3,203

3 Mandawa 80 85 41 ISO 356 S6 27 96 24 12 215

4 Bisau 218 104 119 441 117 204 lJ8 81 520

Pilani Urban Agg.n. See Constituent VOlt

5 PJiam 371 158 )58 76 4~7 1,210 300 372 260 293 1,225

Vidya Vihar 480 45 17 250 65 121 978 liZ 121 175 2S6 112 836

6 Vidya Vibar See Pilan.l Urban AgglomeratIon

7 Surajgarh 490 88 52 630 67 208 23 387 685

8 Chirawa S55 4n 65 1S 55 1,127 358 103 371! 134 8~ 1.0S7

9 Khetri 183 6 75 178 442 84 142 215 411

10 Nawalgarh 966 H-l 75 43 222 1,375 398 72 524 284 97 1,375

11 Udaipurwati 159 96 49 31 27 437 149 78 122 3 58 410

12 Mukundprb 202 62 41 466 771 84 85 30 671 870 S

TOWN DIRECTORY Statement IV - Civic and other Amenities

Electri'IC8t10n No. of latrlDes Protected water supply (number of connections) u iii .§ 1:1) til :> 0c. .. 81. Name of TOWD '"c .?l ~ No. -2 0 -0:::: • 01) = .... 0 ...... 5• § -=c ... -0 !5 0'" ;:.,c oa;- .CI '" .2 :i ...... " .. :~.2 <;; 10 i~ OJ -i .. e: ... 8 0-;' u- i;: 0 -:I .. ;el u" .. .c.~ I e "Oc .. o• .lot !! .s: 0 ~ :g,gb :os .... _ u .c ~c ;;J e e .c c: c ;;~ .. Old 2 0 00 »0 u 0 ~"" IX-=- I'll .. ~ I'll 0 ~'S I'll tJ:::. ii: Q ... 8 Ili:'t:. 0

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ]0 11 12 13 14 IS ]6

Bagar 2 OSD 25 ISO SO HL/CL TK 1,50,000 161 10 450 57

2- Jbunjbunun 16 OSD 225 3,000 ]5 WB/HL TW 6,00,000 1,237 110 ISO 36

3 Mandawa N.A. OSD 10 80 ]0 HL/CL TK 2,00,000 75 8 40 28 13

4 Bisau KD N.A. N.A. N.A. HL 229 23 106 91

Pilani Urban Agg.n. See Constituent Unit

5 Pllaoi 3 OSD ISO SOO 5 HL/CL 850 40 250 46

Vidya Vlhar 2S OSD 288 84 2 HL/CL TW 7,96,650 N.A. N.A. N.A. 498 N.A.

6 Vldya Vihar See Pllaoi Urban Agglomeration

7 Surajgarh 10 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. W 3,00,000 339 44 60 54 • Chirawa 8 OSD SO 200 10 WB TW 3,00,000 711 57 80 76 9 Khetri 42 OSD 10 200 100 HL 343 29 29 40

10 Nawalgarb 11 KD SO 200 50 HL/CL W 5,00,000 637 58 320 504 96

JJ Udaipurwati N.A. N.A. N.A. 10 N.A. 62 7 3~ 20 63

12 Mukundgarb IS N.A. 40 400 50 HL/CL W 2,00,000 100 7 32 IS 17 toWN DDtICl'ORY Statement V - Medical, Educational, Recreational and Cultural Faci/ities (Figures denote units) Recreational & Medical Facilities Educational Facliities Cultural FacilitIes

III) Colleges Schools "':' .S"'O~ ·iHI -u ~ .S i "'00'" ~ ... "'0 ·c E;!. 1:;.= .. ",0 ::J 1lI.c: as ...... 5 :! .! If= j! ..J" III U 81. NameofToWD c.::-t'c.c "'0 t: OJ III) .~ o",CI.·"d~ -&I .._• 0 E .5 No. .c:0lll)0=·5 li: IS!!;- e 0-5 ._80 I: E ; .. ._ .- B "':'0 III Q SIII 'CI • 8 III) "cIII I: ~ O .;: e °i :;- ... ", ... C:o c l'l "'0 - 'c :a e 0 &I :.5 t' >. :J': ,; .c 0 "'.::·· .. tf~=0 ti e g . .2 ~ ·c 'a ..... lID 5 'GIl ';:= c ... 0 .rl.: e CIS:; ~ ·c .- .,;..,;~::C ~ .. 'fi Coo" 'CI'CI 0 t: .. < 1:11 .,.jill).. -:iZ .s u III .. . .,; E S u C 'E.~ ~ g:g~ rIJ.~ I 1 ~~;;; C S :a u~ :16 ';., "0 .c: .. ..l<: u =:; Sal I: I:'-.c '0-- .. 0 1 ~ ... § 8 u .S I: :a::I .c", u"O CI '0 .. :t:r-:~aol m.l: 0 <0 ! III CI. ,,~.::: ~~ ~ It o~ r:e 0 « ,fe 2 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10 11 ]2 13 14 IS 16 17

1 Bapr H (2) 120 3 6 1* 1 AYU.O(I)

2 Jhuujbunun H(I) SO AC(l) 3 2 12 1· 1 2 1 4 MCW(l) 6 TBC(l) D (3) 6 FC(I) AYU.H(l)

3 Mandawa H (1) 6 6 2 AYU.D(I) HOM.D (1)

4 Bisau HO) 12 3 2 3 MCW(I)

Pilant Urban Agg.n. See Constituent Unit

S Pilaoi H (1) 90 3 4 4 2t 0(1) MCW(I) AYU.D(I)

Vidya Vihar CCl) 1 3

6 Vidya Vihar See Pilani Urban Agglomeration

7 Surajgarh RC(l) }O 6 FC(I) AYU.D(l)

8 Cbirawa H (2) 38 ASC(I) 3 2 7 }It 2 MCW(l) 2S AYU.D (1) AYU.H(I) 9 Khetri H (1) ,,_ 48 I§ 7 1: 3 D (1) . AYU.D(I)

§ Industrial Trainiog Institute • • Sanskrit Coli. t Ayurved College. Sanskrit College. : iaDskrit Middle Scbool. .7

TOWN DIREcrORY Statement V - Medical, EducaJional. Recreational and Cultural Facilities (Figures denote Units) Recreatlond &. Meolcal racllitles Educational Facilities CuluirafJ!'acilities , 1:11 Colleges Schools ,.... 1:11 • I.)co'" IU .!e c: :I .5~ VJ" -0 ._ == IU 'go:; ;:0 ;; :a ; _C-IU..,,_ "'~;;: -b -- :::l -.E· -St ::c "0 Sl. Name of Town ~:E.! ~c! 't) £tUiii. os IU coll..·- G) ... .&:. .CO .:I _IU c ._ ,,_• G) I: 5 No. ~~ »1:U co- _go;' :r:: ._ -:: Q G).r: ._1.)0 c: >'0 E .;:IU'" '" III "'rlII c: .. co 0 e Ortie~;.:: "g .. ...; 8 l1li I.) 't) 2 0 :;U ;a- 0 "•. ~d:~= a1 ~u .s 'c »» ::J': .; ..i5'" 0 e 5 . ._,_~ ~Oi ...... l1li S Tn .;: c'_ 0 'u ~ .. .r: .... >. C'I.I .. =:§ rti rti~!J:: :;~ (Il'" ;; c.::: .... 't)'t) G) ... ::i 1:11 I.) g "'-( 0 ~U~8'Ou ._ .1: c'" 00"- c:c"'''' ...... I: u c cn,~ • '" o~ .. :a "". u S=: E !ll: :0 '60 ~ uuC:: 1.)1.)00 '0 '"e ~~ ~ c:: :0 =-6 i:!:a~ 13~o "0 .. C Col Co 0 ;: :::l .c co "IU ;f (Il(ll -( ::c~udu£ =:.5U

18 Nawalgarh H (2) :180 ASC(I) 4 2 10 It D (1) MCW(l) 12 AYU.D(I)

11 Udaipur HC (I) 10 4 1 FC(l) l2 Mukundgarh H (I) 6 AC(I) 3 1 MCW (I) 8

-Concld. 8 . . TOWN DIRICl'ORY Statement 'YI - Trade, Commerce. Industry and Banking -;.. ·c l1li ...... -;-=3~ <- c u!! g~ SI. Name or TOWIl Names of the thrc:e most important commodities " 'i~ ;Z; .. No. = < .... eo!! Imported Exported Manufactured 'Ci o '0;9• u ::s.! ci 0 .. 0-... ! 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd lst 2nd 3rd ;Z; ;Z;U ;z;B

2 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Bagar Cloth Water Bricks Onions Dyed Leather Rcza(coarse 3 S pots cloth shoes cloth)

S JbunJhunun Cloth Food- Grocery Wool Sheep/ Food- Soap Scissors, Leather 3 20 grains goats grains razors shoes

3 Mandawa Wheat Edible Cloth Bajra Guar Biris Leather Edible oil 1 4 oil shoes

4 Bisau Wheat Rice Sugar Guar Moong Moth Gum Edible oil Leather 2 (Pulses) (Pulses) shoes

):'ilani Urban Agg.n. See Constituent Unit

S Pilani Rice Sugar Wheat Guar Gram Moong Reza Leather 8 (Pulses) (coarse shoes cloth)

Vidya Vlhar Stationery Ma- Cloth Food- Dairy Kairs &; Edible Wooden Leather 2 chIDe graiDs milk sangris oil furniture shoes parts (Local vegetables) 6 Vldya Vlhar See Pilani Urban Agglomeration

7 Surajgarh Sugar Cloth Cotton Pulses Wool Animals. Pulses Agricul- 7 seeds (cattle, tural tools goats)

8 Cbirawa Foodgraios Cloth Vele- Pulses Guar Wool Leather Cement Soap 2 7 tables shoes articles

9 Khetfl foodgrains Iron Cloth Stone Vele- Razors & Leather Dyed 2 4 tables SCISSOrs shoes cloth

10 Nawalgarh Foodlrains Cloth Toalet Goatsl Moth Pottery Blankets Gota(silver Condull 10 goods sheep thread pipes embr('- ldery)

Vege- Wheat FOQd- Sweet Onions Ren Dyed cloth Leather 2 6 II Udaipur Grocery tables gsaiDs potatoes (coarse shoes cloth)

12 Muk.undgarh FtJOdgrams Sugar Sugar Cloth Shoes Wine, Soap, Iron Agricul- 7 liquor agarbattis buckets tural (incense implem- stiks) eDts VILLAGE DIRECTORY

NOTE In some cases tbe Patwari bas erroneously treated tbe double­ cropped but once-irrigated area as double-cropped irrigated which has resulted in tbe net irrigated area being either zero or less than even balf the double-cropped irrigated area in col. 12. In such cases reference may be made only to tbe gross area (given within brackets) in cols. 12 & 13. 8 TEHSlL : I • JHUNJHUNUN oj ~~ Amemtles available wlthm the village "'OJ L 0:: .. _0 Educa- Medical Staple food G ",,,, Power Drmking Commu- Post Name of the Village -c tlonal supply water , mcatlons & 8 {:..:::- Telegraph

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

1 Khyah 9,229 P W(3) PO Bajra, Moth 2 Badet 2,718 M D W(2) KR PO Bajra, Moth 3 Chimanpura 1,130 W Bajra, Jowar 4 Bas Ramsingbpura 952 W BaJra, Jowar 5 Patoosar 1,376 P D W Bajra, Moth

6 Bas Sheo Dayalpura '979 W Bajra, Jowar 7 Jahmpura 1,454 W Bajra, Jowar 8 Kaliyasar 1,106 W(2) PO Bajra, Jowar 9 Bas Kahyasar 1,066 W Bajra, Jowar 10 Dbani Charan 1,934 W(3) Bajra, Moth

11 Bas Daulatkhan 528 0(4) KR BaJra 12 Hameerwas 678 W(2) KR Bajra 13 Jabasar 1,71" P,M D W(2) KR PO Bajra 14 Jawaharpura 1,083 W(2),TK KR Bajra 15 Kishangarh 3,681 P,H HC,D W(15),TK,0(20) KR PO Bajra

16 Khori 1,806 W(2) KR Bajra 17 Munda-ka-Was 1,187 P W(3),TK Bajra 18 Chak Ranasar 481 Bajra 19 DbamCharan 599 W(2) Bajra 20 Natbpura 568 W Bajra

21 Ranasar 1,913 P W(4) Bajra 22 Gokhri 1,608 W(2),TK KR Bajra 23 Shyopura 741 W Bajra 24 Manrooppura 1,251 W(2) KR Bajra 25 Maisisar 5,000 P(2),H'~ H,D(2) E W(13),TK(2),TW(5),T KR PT,TL Bajra

26 Peethoosar 3,100 P W(3) KR Bajra 27 Jhatawa Khurd 1,864 P W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 28 Bas Haripura 1,150 W(2) Bajra, Moth 29 Chak Nola 528 W(2) Bajra, Moth 30 lbatawa Kalan 1,592 P D W(2) Bajra, Moth

31 Niradhanu 7,120 M D W(6) KR PO Bajra, Jowar 32 Dheelsar 3,213 P W(3) Bajra, Moth 33 Gangyasar* 4,248 P,H H W(4) KR PO Bajra, Moth J4 Dheerasar 1,750 P KR Bajra, Moth 35 Chandwa 4,300 P W(4) PO Bajra

36 Kodesar 2,594 P W PO Bajra 37 Nathasar 1,086 P W KR Bajra, Wheat 38 Beedasar 3,594 P W(4) KR PO Bajra )9 Kant 3,035 P W(3) KR Bajra, Moth 40 Mahradas 936 W Bajra, Moth

41 Haripura 1,099 P W PO Bajra, Moth 42 Mawega 1,255 W Bajra, Moth 43 Nyola 1,196 W(2) Bajra, Moth 44 Govindpura 1,568 W(3) Bajra, Moth 45 Aisisar 4,042 P,H H,D E W(8),TK,TW(2) KR PT,TL Bajra, Moth • Temples and Mosque• 9 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under ddierent types of land use in acres) ci Irrtgated UDlrrJgated Tree uro- Fallow Cultl- Area nOI Nearest Town Z Forest 4) vesand land vable available (Distance In ";I Orchards waste for cultt- Kilometres) 0 vatton U 11 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16

1936(01936) 78 164 51 Bisau (22) 1 2169(02169) 86 414 49 Blsau (22) 2 1044(01044) 85 1 Bisau (21) 3 731(0731) 53 153 15 Bisau (22) 4 1101(01101) 56 206 13 Bisau (22) ,

778(0778) 102 79 20 Bisau (21) 6 1207(01207) 95 115 37 Bisau (21) 7 863(0863) 83 146 14 Bisau (21) 8 955(0955) 41 57 13 Blsau (21) 9 1721(01721) 54 130 29 Bisau (21) 10

49S{D495) 29 4 Bisau (25) 11 543(D543) 116 4 15 Bisau (25) 12 1300(01300) 193 165 59 Bisau (23) 13 780(0780) 147 137 19 Blsau (23) 14 3049(03049) 105 387 140 Bisau (29) 15

1540(01540) 42 208 16 Blsau (29) 16 732(0732) 185 258 12 Bisau (29) 17 435(0435) 6 36 4 Bisau (29) 18 S02(OS02) I 82 14 Bisau (29) 19 499(0499) 3 58 8 Bisau (29) 20

1535(01535) 16 328 34 Bisau (29) 21 700(0700) 653 236 19 Blsau (33) 22 612(0612) 122 7 Bisau (33) 23 1155(01155) 9 79 8 Blsau (33) 24 17+O(WI7) 3616+17(03633) 52 1,021 294 Blsau (32) 25

1905(01905) 284 847 64 Bisau (28) 26 1630+4(01634) 19 181 30 Bisau (26) 27 670(0670) 140 325 15 Bisau (26) 28 1+0(Wl) 422(0422) 88 15 3 Bisau (27) 29 1283(01283) 160 133 16 Bisau (26) 30

5824(05824) 569 614 tl3 Bisau (23) 31 2743(02743) 211 202 57 Bisau (10) 32 2O+0(W20) 3542+20(03562) 172 392 132 Blsau (8) 33 Ci+O(W6) 1386+3(01389) 159 166 33 Blsau (5) 34 3528(03528) 183 541 48 Bisau (10) 35

2022(02022) 276 268 28 Bisau (16) 36 871(0871) 160 32 23 Bisau (18) 37 I+O(Wl) 2888(02888) 357 292 56 Bisau (16) 38 O+S(WS) 2473(02473) 119 381 62 JhunjhuDun (22) 39 761(0761) 96 70 9 JhunJhunuD (24) 40

780(0780) 154 150 15 JhuDjhunuD (25) 41 0+4(W4) 9000(900) 243 103 9 Bisau (25) 42 922(0922) 181 73 20 Bisau (28) 43 1336(01336) 74 143 15 Bisau (28) 44 O+9(W9) 3275(03275) 158 438 171 JhUDJhuDun (36) 45 10 TEHSIL: 1 • JHVNJHUNUN

5~ Amenltles available wllhm the village ~f ~ -<.l Educa- Medical Power Drmkmg Commu- Post Staple food Name of the VIllage c:dc:d supply & -8 0= tlonal water mcatlons a 1:-0":::' Telegraph 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ]0

46 Pandasi 2,292 P W Bajra, Moth 47 Kakreu Kalan 2,314 P E W(3) PO Bajra, Moth 48 Dabri 5,522 M D E W(7) KR PO Bajca, Moth 49 Kakreu Khurd 2,426 P W(3) Bajca, Moth SO Marodba 1,797 '- W(3) Bajca, Moth

51 Khariya 1,992 oM W(2) KR Bajca, Moth 52 Rampura 2,231 W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 53 Bajla 3,600 P E W(5) KR Bajra, Moth 54 4,181 p D W(6) KR PO Bajra, Moth 55 Basrl 2,028 P W(4) KR Bajra, Moth

S6 Ladusar 4,587 P(2),M W(lO) KR PO Bajra, Moth 57 Lootoo 3,395 P D W(6) KR Bajra 58 Kahnda 4,203 P,~ W(5) KR Bajca, Moth S9 Hanumanpura@Tlloka-ka-Bas 748 P W(2) BaJCa 60 Dham Charan 601 W KR Bajra

61 Hameerwas 946 P W KR Bajra 62 Khijarsar 1,298 W KR BaJra 63 Buml 2,156 P W(2) PR,KR PO Bajra 64 Bas Puriyan 969 P W KR Bajra 65 Poorlya 1,126 W(2) KR Bajra

66 Kabeersar 1,289 P W(2) KR Bajra 67 Pllam Khurd 2,508 p(2) W(5) PR,KR PO Bajra, Moth 68 Dulchas 1,536 P W PR BaJra, Moth 69 Sesu 2,305 P W(2) PR BaJra, Moth 70 Paharsar 994 W PR,T Bajra, Moth

71 3,367 H HC,FC E W(10) PR,T PO Bajra, Moth 72 Bheekhansar 1,984 P W PR PO Bajra, Moth 73 Tuee 7,184 .Mo- W(3) K.R PO Bajra, Moth 74 Patoda 3,289 P W(4) KR PO BaJra 7S Todarwas 1,024 W(2) KR Bajra

16 Kolali 1,105 W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 77 Mukbwas 534 W KR BaJra 78 Chandrapura 681 W(2) KR Bajra 79 Kamalsar 1,879 P W(2) KR Bajra 80 Dlloi 3,204 P(2) W(4) KR BaJra

81 Shyamp\lra 577 W(2) KR Bajra 82 Siriyasar Khurd 914 P W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 83 BishaDpur. 880 W(2) PR Bajra, Moth 84 Churel. 2,143 P W(4) PR PO Bajra, Moth 85 Daulatpura 615 P W(2) Bajra, Moth

86 Haosasar 2,847 P W(4) PR PO Bajra, Moth 87 Hansasari 2,207 P W(2) Bajra, Moth 88 Charanwasi 480 W Bajra, Moth 89 Shree Krishoapura 584 P W Bajra, Moth 90 Kharkhari 620 W PO Bajra 11 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use In acres) 0 forest Imgated Umrngated Tree Gro- Fallow CUltl- Area not N

1843(01843) 145 283 21 Bisau (35) 46 233 1840(01840) 199 42 Jhunjhunun (25) 47 303 471 53+34(W87) 4619+20(D4639) 76 JhunJhunun (24) 48 1878(01878) 149 368 31 Jhunjhunun (25) 49 31 1568(01568) 178 20 Jhunjhunun (28) 50

130 1583(01583) 238 41 Jhunjhunun (25) 51 74 2+2(W4) 1948(01948) 172 35 JhUDjhunun (26) 52 3027(03027) 104 421 48 Jhunjhunun (20) 53 3875(03875) 85 162 59 JhUDjhunun (16) 54 10+O(WIO) 1672+10(01682) 116 195 35 Jhunjhunun (14) 55

5+O(W5) 3950+1(03951) 105 460 67 Jhunjhunun (18) 56 10+O(WIO) 2773(D2773) 347 202 63 Jhunjhunun (23) 57 15+O(WI5) 3399(03399) 206 552 46 Jhunjhunun (24) 58 591(0591) 29 107 21 Bisau (18) 59 542(0542) 13 36 10 Bisau (15) 60

791(0791) 21 121 13 Bisau (8) 61 1042(01042) 85 160 11 Bisau (9) 62 1731(01731) 214 172 39 Bisau (15) 63 792(0792) 22 143 12 81sau (12) 64 893(0793) 85 127 21 Blsau (12) 6S

1083(01383) 96 94 16 Blsau (9) 66 9+O(W9) 2001 +9(02010) 129 324 4S Blsau (10) 67 1248(01248) 84 113 21 Blsau (6) 68 1790(01790) 237 251 27 Bisau (5) 69 805(0805) 64 101 24 BlsaU (2) 70

17+O(W17) 2653+6(02659) 256 261 180 Blsau (8) 71 l+O(Wl) 1308+1(01309) 395 238 42 Blsau (6) 72 S+O(WS} 563O(05630} 843 49\ 212 Blsau {10} 73 2907(02907) 194 146 42 Blsau (8) 74 706(D706} 207 90 21 Mandawa (7) 7S

839(0839) 117 137 12 Mandawa (8) 76 456(0456) 59 14 5 Mandawa (9) 77 2+O(W2) 499+2(0501) 73 98 9 Mandawa (7) 78 1496(01496) 70 294 19 Mandawa (8) 79 3+O(W3) 2581 +3(02584) 194 385 41 Mandawa (12) 80

520(0520) 10 35 12 Blsau (14) 81 665(D665) 58 181 10 Jhunjhunun (18) 82 650(0650) 40 175 15 Jhunjhunun (22) 83 9+O(W9) 1471 +9(01480) 178 443 42 JhUDjhunun (19) 84 3+ 1(W4) 462+3(0465) 35 105 10 Jhunjhunun (18) 85

8+O(W8) 2305+8(02313) 165 327 42 Jhunjhunun (16) 86 13+O(W13) 1793+12(DI805) 142 218 41 Jhunjhunun (26) 87 425(0425) 47 4 4 Jhunjhunun (15) 88 4+O(W4) 510+4(0514) 15 44 11 Jhunjhunun (13) 89 520(0520) 49 46 5 JhunJhunun (12) 90 12 TEHSIL: 1 - JHUNJHUNUN

Amenities available wlthm the village ~ =u- ..-II) '" ~ -.. Educa· Medical Power Drmkmg Commu- Post Staple food II) -u 'Q Name of the VIllagc ,goo tlonal supply watcr n1catlQns & 0 oc: U E-<.::. Telegraph

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

91 Loona 1,840 P W(3) KR PO Bajra 92 Jaitpura 1,590 P W(3) KR Bajra 93 Gopalpura 598 W KR Bajra 94 Indrapura @ Jecsuk.h-ka-Bas 745 P W KR Bajra 95 5,333 \ P(2) W(lO) KR PO Bajra

96 Hanutpura 1,191 W(2) KR Bajra 97 Lalpura* 3,367 P W(2) KR PO Bajra 98 Hamccrwas Lamba 1,218 P W KR Balra 99 Kasimpura* 1,865 EM W(S) PO Balra, Wheat 100 Budana· 5,529 P(3) W(10) KR PO Bajra

101 Desusar 1,068 W(5) PR,KR Bajra 102 Soti 751 W(2) KR Bajra 103 Hameeri Kalan 1,522 P,M- D E W(S) KR PO Bajra 104 Hamceri Khurd 726 E W(2) KR Bajra, Motb 105 Bhurasar 3,254 P E W PR PO Bajra

106 Marigsar 1,422 P W KR Bajra 107 Hamcerwas Rilanl 737 W PR Balra 108 Rijani 1,650 p W(2) PR Bajra. Moth 109 Nand 1,823 W(3) PO Balra, Moth 110 Nand-ka-Bas 1,132 P W Bajra, Moth

111 Sbekhsar* 2,786 M W(4) KR PO Bajra 112 Motlsar 882 W KR Bajra 113 Toliyasar 1,072 P W(2) KR PO Bajra 114 Seegn 1,376 W(3) Bajra 115 Mahradasl 1,123 M 1) W(2) KR PO Bajra

116 Kuharoo 2,565 P(2) W(5) KR PO Bajra, Moth 117 Mojas 1,447 P W Bajra, Moth 118 Khalasi 2,249 P E W(10) KR Bajra, Moth 119 Bheemsar @ Peepal-ka-wast 696 W KR Bajra 120 Wajidsar 1,403 P W(3) KR Bajra

121 Seegra 3,269 P WeB) KR PO Bajra 12% Kumawas 2,185 P W KR Bajra 123 Zalimpura @ DhaDl Charan 239 W KR B8Jra 124 Bbeernsar 2,213 W(2) KR PO Bajra 125 Rasora 1,220 +" W KR Bajra

126 ADpsar 1,752 P W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 127 Nayasar 2,399 P E W PR PO Bajra 128 Seetsar 617 W(2) Bajra, Moth 129 Abusar 1,928 P W(2) KR PO Bajra, Moth 130 Durjanpura 1,201 W Bajra, Moth

131 Durana 1,886 P D W(9),TW KR PO Bajra 132 Madansar 744 W KR Bajra 133 Hetamsar 2,678 P D W(12) KR PO Bajra 134 Bharoo 1,739 M D W(7) PO Bajra 135 Chakwas 595 W(3) Bajra

* Temple. t Temple of Gopalji and Fair annually. 13 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use In acres) 0 Z Forest Imgated Ummgated Tree Gro- Fallow Cultl- Area not Nearest Town ves and land vable available (Olstance In ~ 0 Orchards waste for cultl- Kilometres) U vatJon 11 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16

1541(01541) 116 156 27 Jb.unjhunun (16) 91 9+O(W9) 1311+9(D1320) 82 175 13 Jhunjhunun (12) 92 6+0(W6) 478+2(0480) 46 55 13 Jhunjhunun (8) 93 4+O(W4) 633+4(0637) 45 53 10 Jhunjhunun (9) 94 29+O(W29) 4586+27(04613) 257 388 73 Jhunjhunun (12) 95

1036(01036) 45 97 13 Jhunjhunun (16) 96 37(W37) 2948+37(02985) 60 259 63 Jhunjhunun (9) 97 1050(01050) 7 152 9 Bagar (10) 98 jeWS) 1697+3(01700) 31 108 24 Bagar (6) 99 61(W61) 4844+61 (04905) 109 417 98 Jhunjhunun (8) 100

14(WI4) 1002+12(01014) 9 17 26 Jhunjhunun (9) 101 3(W3) 665+3(0668) 8 68 7 JhunjhunUD (6) 102 12(WI2) 1237+ 7(Dl244) 16 231 26 Jhunjhunun (7) 103 9(W9) 540+9(0549) 22 137 18 Jhunjhunun (7) 104 2615(02615) 106 475 58 JhunjhunUD (5) 105

1114(01114) 97 174 37 JhunjhuDUD (8) 106 603(D603) 110 l4 Jhunjhunun (9) 107 5(WS) 1323+5(Dl328) 66 228 28 Jhunjhunun (12) lOS 1580(01580) 75 137 31 Jhunjhunun (17) 109 2(W2) 884+2(0886) 109 121 16 Jhuojhunun (17) 110

O+l(Wl) 2138+ 1(02139) 165 450 33 Mandawa {12) 11l 657(0657) 105 110 10 Mandawa (to) 112 844(0844) 72 141 15 Mandawa (8) 113 1055(01055) 94 197 30 Mandawa (10) 114 l(Wl) 888+1(0889) 125 89 20 Mandawa (5) 115

2104(02104) 288 173 Mandawa (5) 116 2(W2) 1044(01044) 187 183 33 Mandawa (9) 117 18(WI8) 1805(Dl80S) 264 162 Mandawa (5) 118 571(0571) 56 63 6 Mandawa (5) 119 1125(01125) 122 124 32 Mandawa (4) 120

S(W5) 2597+5(02602) 325 259 83 Mandawa (10) 121 1774(01774) 141 249 21 Jhunjhunun (17) 122 203(D203) 27 9 Jhunjhunuo (14) 123 1609(01609) 115 440 49 lhunjhunun (11) 124 982(0982) 74 139 25 JhnnJhunun (11) 125

l1(Wll) 1339+8(01347) 148 233 21 Jhuojhunun (9) 126 . 1988(01988) 108 273 30 Jhunjhunun (5) 127 481(0481) 52 70 14 JhuDjhuDun (3) 128 12(WI2) 1390+ 12(01402) 121 369 36 Jhunjnunun (9) 129 3(W3) 940+3(0943) 104 135 19 lhunjhunun (9) 130

SeWS) 1473+S(DI4?J) 85 289 34 Jhunjhunun (II) 131 S42(OSt~ 38 158 6 Jhunjhunun (12) 132 2O(W20) 2153+2O(D2173) 347 122 36 Jhunjhunun (19) 133 13(W13) 1411 + 13(01424) 116 161 38 Jhunjhunun (13) 134 S(W5) 447+5(0452) 81 55 7 Jhunjhunun (18) 135 14 TEHSIL: 1. JHUNJHUNUN

1 2 3 4 5 () 7 8 9 10

136 Wahldpura 2,846 oM- W(3) KR PO BaJra, Moth 137 Loomas 1,209 P W(2) Bajra, Moth 138 Ladsar 825 P W(4) KR Bajra, Moth 139 Ranjeetpura 946 P W(3) PR Bajra. Moth 140 Hanumanpura 944 \ -M-tt W(2) PR PO Bajra. Moth

141 Jeetas 633 W PR Bajra. Moth 142 Shyopura 1,025 W(2) Bajra. Moth 143 Dham Joshlyan 378 W KR BaJra, Moth 144 1,601 P W(3) PR PO Bajra. Moth 145 Meethwas 1,466 P W(2) Bajra. Moth

146 Deenwa 917 W(2) KR PO Bajra, Moth 147 Kisan 676 W Bajra, Moth 148 Bhadarwas 1,446 P HC,FC W(2) KR PO Bajra, Moth 149 Phooskham 1,740 P W(S) KR PO Bajra, Moth ISO Ajeetgarh 1,839 P E W(4) PR Bajra, Moth

151 Churi Chatarpura 2,117 M(2) H T.W(10) PR PT Bajra. Moth 152 Seswas 954 P W(3) Bajra, Moth 153 Bhojasar* 3,180 -Moo D W(6) T PO Bajra, Moth 154 Shyampura 1,169 W(2) Bajra ISS Harnathpura 1,184 W(2) KR Bajra

156 Jalsmghpura 561 P W(3),TK PR Bajra 157 Juharpura 784 P W(6) PR Bajra 158 Nooan 2,018 P,H D(2) W(10),TW PR,KR,T PT.TL Bajra 159 Hameerwas Nooan 1,083 W(4) Bajra 160 Chandrapura 1,095 P W(6) PR.KR Bajra

161 Siriyasar Kalan 2,586 P D W(13) KR PO Bajra 162 Kheerdsar 1,936 P E W(2) PR Bajra, Moth 163 Warispura 1,117 W KR Bajra, Moth 164 Derwala 2,985 P(2) W(S) KR PO Bajra, Moth 165 Badalwas 2,008 P W(6) KR Bajra, Moth

166 Udawas 2,121 P D W(17) PR PO Bajra, Moth 167 Deepalwas 523 W(6) PR Bajra, Moth 168 Bhuriwas 433 W(4) Bajra, Moth 169 Tarapura @ Chandrapura 666 W(4) Bajra, Moth 170 Ajan Khurd 1,182 P W Bajra

171 Kulod Kalan 1,276 P.H D W(6) PR Bajra 172 Kulod Khurd 979 W(7) Bajra 173 Khajpur Purana 1,487 P W KR Bajra 174 Khajpur Naya* 919 P D E W(S) KR PO Bajra 175 Samaspur'" 1,398 P E W(3) KR PO Bajra

176 Charanwas @ Sultansur* 424 W(2) KR Bajra 177 PrataPPura 856 W(3) KR Bajra 178 Jei Pabarit 1,596 P W(8) PO Bajra 179 Mahakhar 1,870 P(2) E W(10) PR.KR,T Bajra 180 Islampur 3,468 P(3),M.H D E W(IS) PR,KR,T PT Bajra, Wheat

* Temple.

tI Temple and Mosque. IS VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under dIfferent types of land use In acres) :z:0 Forest Irrigated UDirrigated Tree Gro- Fallow Culti- Area not Nearest Town ves and land vable avaIlable (Olstance In ~ Orchards waste for culu- KIlometres) 8 vation 11 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16

3(W3) 2318+5(02321 ) 346 144 35 Mandawa (6) 136 965(0965) 84 131 29 Mandawa (9) 137 659(0659) 39 113 14 Mandawa (9) 138 4(W4) 741+4(D745) 74 111 16 Mandawa (6) 139 725(0725) 132 63 24 Mandawa (6) 140

515(0515) 69 27 22 Mandawa (5) 141 822(0822) 83 107 13 Mandawa (3) 142 345(0345) 28 S Mandawa (1) 143 1251(01251) 235 74 41 Mandawa (3) 144 2+1(W3) 1050+2(01052) 221 158 3S Mandawa (2) 145

753(0753) 93 40 31 Mandawa (4) 146 S07(D507) 73 84 12 Mandawa (6) 147 1110(01110) 136 173 27 Mukundgarh (8) 148 1033(01033) 497 168 42 Mukundgarh (6) 149 26(W26) 1150+26(01176) 68 575 80 Mukundgarh (6) 150

30(W30) 1729+30(D17S9) 126 68 164 Mukundgarh (5) 151 754(D754) 107 70 23 Mukundgarh (3) 152 ll(Wll) 2540+11(02551) 196 363 70 Mandawa (10) 153 958(0958) 80 72 59 Mandawa (12) 154 I(WI) 838+1(0839) 150 172 23 Jhunjhunun (20) 155

5(W5) 446+5(0451) 39 61 10 Jhunjhunun (22) 156 694(0694) 29 30 31 Jhunjhunun (20) 157 3(W3) 1655+3(01658) 196 74 90 Jhunjhunun (20) 158 9(W9) 893+9(0902) 74 95 12 Jhunjhunun (16) 159 948(0948) 115 87 45 Jhunjhunun (16) 160

12(WI2) 2116+12(02128) 210 189 59 Jhunjhunun (14) 161 7(W7) 1582+7(01589) 39 210 98 Jhunjhunun (6) 162 4(W4) 997+6(01003) 44 58 14 Jhunjhunun (3) 163 13(WI3) 2506+ 14(02520) 54 343 69 Jhunjhunun (9) 164 3(W3) 1720+3(01723) 69 189 27 Jhunjhunun (5) 165

46(W46) 1884+46(01930) 22 136 33 Jhunjhunun (5) 166 8(W8) 474+8(0482) 11 13 17 Jhunjhunun (S) 167 5(W5} 348+5(0353) 3 72 5 Jhunjhunun (4) 168 619(0619) 1 33 13 Jhunjhunun (8) 169 27(W27) 1041+27(01068) 4 75 3S Jhunjhunun (20) 170

7(W7) 1060+7(01067) 7 107 95 Jhunjhunun (8) 171 ll(Wll) 9OOfll(D9l1) 12 40 16 Jhunjhunun (9) 172 36+1(W37) 1242+34{DI276) 66 125 18 Jhunjhunun (6) 173 8(W8) 824+ 7(0831} 14 53 20 Jhunjhunun (6) 174 28(W28) 1196+28(DI224) 21 96 57 Jhunjhunun (6) 175

S(W5) 394+5(0399) 8 4 13 Jhunjhunun (9) 176 780(0780) 12 30 34 Jhunjhunun (9) 177 48+3(W51) 1231+44(01275) 64 161 92 Bagar (4) 178 l00(Wl00) 1328+102(01430) 10 105 327 Bagar (6) 179 1S7(WI 57) 2461+118(02579) 13 48 789 Jhunjhunun (15) 180 16 TEHSlL: 1- JHUNJHUNUN • 2 - eHIRAWA

..: Amenities available wIthin the VIllage 0 :;z. ~i.... -<>.- Educa- Medical Power Dnnkmg Commu- Post Staple food Name of the Village 5'" tl(mai supply water mcatlODs & "I 0= U ~.::. Telegraph

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

181 Chinchroli 1,126 P E W(3) KR BaJra 182 Morol 1,523 P E W(l) Bajra 183 KaU Pahan 2,223 P D E W(4) PO Bajra 184 Hejampura* 1,065 P W(5) KR PO Bajra 185 Indali 2,461 P W(10) KR PO BaJra

186 Khatehpura 1,284 W(5) KR PO Bajra 187 Dorasar 2,186 P E W(23) PR PO Bajra 188 Shyampura @ Charanwas 64S W(4) Bajra 189 Malsar 1,957 P W(14) KR PO Bajra 190 1,875 M D W(20) PR PO Bajra

191 Bakra 4,031 M Well) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 192 Fatehsara 693 P W(2) Bajra Wheat 193 Beebasar 2,432 P He W(8) PO Bajra Wheat 194 Slslyan 1,689 P W(7) Bajra Wheat 195 Utrasar 2,392 P(3) W(8) BaJra, Wheat

196 Doradass 1,995 P W(17) KR Bajra 197 Bhompura 677 W(3) KR Bajra 198 Togra Khurd 1,054 W(13) KR BaJra 199 Togra Swaroopsmgh 739 P W(2) KR Bajra 200 Ajari Kalan 1,736 M W(10) KR PO Bajra

201 Bas Nanag 2,186 W(13) KR Bejra 202 Bmjusar 1,246 p 0 W(6) KR PO BaJra 203 Ihshanpura 5J.9 P W(l) KR PO Bajra 204 Hameerwas Bajawa 956 P W(5) Bajra TEHSIL : 2 • CHIRA WA

1 Rayla 1,949 P B W Bajra, Moth 2 Kaji 1,550 P W(3) Bajra Wheat 3 Ban Gothri Khurd 2,976 H W(6) KR BaJra, Wheat 4 Ban Gothri Kalan 3,441 P D W(4) KR PO Bajra, Wheat S Berit 3,630 P HC,D T.W(2) PR PO Bajra. Wheat

6 Cbbaprat 2,558 P D W(l) PO Bajra, Sardarpura iGramJ 7 1,326 W(2) Bajra, l.Gram 8 Sujdola 2,384 P W(4) PO Bajra, Gram Doodwa i 9 2,474 P W(3) PO Bajra, tGram II) Ladunda** 2,939 p W(5) Bajra, Gram Doodi 11 1,289 P W Bajra, Gram 12 Peeplitt 4,313 M D E W(3),TW(2) PR PO Bajra, • Wheat 13 Shyosinghpura 994 p W(2),TW(2) Bajra Wheat 14 Leekhwatt 4,494 P W(S) PO Bajra, Wheat 15 Dulaniyatt 3,587 P D E W(2),TW PR PO Bajra, Wheat tr.~' 16 GaroH 1,821 E W(3) Bajra, .... Wheat 17 Hameenpur 2.934 P W(4) Bajra, "; Wheat 18 Kerpura @ Chat Garoli 1,356 P(2) W(4) KR Bajra, Wheat 19 Bishanpura 468 E W PR,KR Bajra, Wheat 20 Panthariya 1,291 P W(2) PR Bajra, Wheat * Fair on Janmasthmi. ** Temple of Rani Sati. t Samadhi of Pesa Singh. tt Temple. t Jain Temple. 17 VILLAGE DI:.tECTORY

In Land use (area under different types of land use acres) ~ Z Forest Irrtgated Unirngated Tree Gro- Fallow Cultl- Area not Nearest Town (Distance In '0 vesand land vable available 0" Orchards waste for cultl- Kilometres) U vatlOn 11 ]2 ]3 13A 13B 14 ]5 16

26(W26) 898+27(0925) 21 40 14] Bagar (9) 181 59(W59) 124O+33(DI273) 27 138 59 Bagar (7) 182 2(W2) 2000+2(02002) 33 99 89 Bagar (6) 183 955(0955) 85 25 JhunjhuDun (12) 184 134(WI34) 2011 + 144(02155) 19 246 51 JhunjhuDUn (13) 185

7(W7) 1150+7(01157) 5 62 60 Jhunjhunun (12) 186 52(W52) 1801+52(1853) 1 306 26 lhunjhunun (88) 187 15tW1S) 5S1+1S(D566) 70 9 lhunjhunun (16) 188 25(W25) 1668+ 15(01693) 14 2]8 32 Jhunjhunun (15) 189 49(W49) IS87+49(0l63b) 17 177 45 lhunjhunun (12) 190

14(WI4) 3566+ 14(D358O) 98 270 83 lhunjhunun (13) 191 556(0566) 21 104 12 JhunjhunuD (12) 192 2070(02010) 53 261 48 lhunjhunun (16) 193 19(WI9) 1434+ 19(01453) 37 160 39 JhunjhunuD (16) 194 SO(W50) 2031(02031) 71 189 51 JhUDjhuDUn (16) ]95

27(W21) 1763+27(01790) 60 118 27 Jhunjhunun (12) 196 I(Wl) 599+ 1(0600) 24 39 14 Jhunjhunun (16) 197 17(WI7) 941 + 17(0958) 24 57 15 Jhunjhunun (16) 198 5(W5) 673+5(0678) 5 43 13 Jhunjhunun (16) 199 100WIO) 1534+ 10(01544) 28 108 56 Jhunjhunun (26) 200

IO(WI0) 2016+ 10(02026) 41 79 40 JhunjhuDun (26) 201 11(WU) 1059+ 11 (01070) 10 143 23 JhunjhunuD (14) 202 13(WI3) 440+ 13(0453) 22 29 15 Jhunjhunun (13) 203 6(W6) 893+6(0899) 46 11 JhunJhunun (18) 204

32+85(W1l7) 1698(01698) 192 27 Pilani (3) 1 1240(01240) 150 146 14 Pilam (11) 2 2+7(W9) 2326(02326) 365 261 22 Pilam (10) 3 2511+2(02513) 226 277 27 Pliant (10) 4 2871(02871) 341 378 40 Pllani (15) 5

I(Wl) 1957(01957) 291 270 39 Pilani (15) 6 1135(01135) 19 156 16 Luharu (HanyanaX9) 7 2013+44(02057) 246 98 ' 27 Luharu (HariyanaX7) 8 IO(WI0) 1714+6(01720) 491 235 24 Luharu (HariyanaX5) 9 1844(01844) 802 263 30 Luharu (Hariyana)(3) 10

800(0800) 433 47 9 Luharu (HanyanaX5) 11 77(W77) 3465+ 77(03542) 315 371 85 Luharu (Hanyana)(8) 12 ll(Wll) 694+11(0705) 76 204 9 Pilam (8) 13 3(W3) 3614+4(03618) 568 256 53 Pdam (16) 14 41(W41) 2788+41(02829) 316 364 78 Pilam (8) 15

1386(01386) 255 154 26 Pllam (6) 16 2203(02203) 453 245 33 Pilam (6) 17 4(W4) 1135~01l35) 136 60 21 Pilam (6) 18 22+45(W67) 345+2(0347) 59 32 10 Pilani (3) 19 1082(01082) 140 49 20 Pdani (3) 20 18 TEHSIL: 2. CHIRAWA

e'ii> AmenIties available wlthm the village .,~ £ -u Educa- Medical Power Drlnkmg Commu- Post Stape food SOl supply Name of the Village os;: tlonal water mcatlons & ~ 1-.'::' Telegraph 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

21 Morwa 2,117 P E W(3) PR PO Bajra, Wheat 22 Bhagina 1,286 P E W(4),TW(4) Bajra 23 Dbeendbwa Aguna 1,695 P E W(4),TW(8) PO Bajra, Barley 24 Dheendhwa Nichla 1,431 P E W(7) Bajra 25 Dheendhwa Athoona 1,997 E W(2) Bajra

26 Kherla 1,871 P E W(4) Bajra 27 Hanutpura 1,340 P W(2) Bajra 28 Ghumansar Kalan 2,649 P E W(3),TW PO Bajra, Moth 29 Jberli 2,222 P E W(6),TK KR PO Bajra, Moth 30 Garinda 393 P W Bajra, Moth

31 Dhandhar 2,026 -M- H W(4) PO Bajra, Moth 32 Dhandhariya 1,586 P W(2) Bajra, Moth 33 Bajawa 2,843 P W(3),R KR Bajra 34 Tiglyas 1,954 P W Bajra 35 Raghuveerpura 1,676 P W,TK Bajra

36 Mandrela 8,316 P,M(2),H H,D,FC E W(12),TK KR PT,TL Bajra 31 Dilawarpura 1,164 P E W(2) KR Bajra 38 Nalwa 1,522 P E W(6) KR Bajra 39 Lamba 2,716 P W(5) KR PO Bajra 40 Govindpura 898 P W(3) Bajra

41 Jakhra 838 W(3) Bajra 42 Dhatarwala 1,960 P FC E W(4) KR Bajra 43 Jakhora 2,089 M W(5),R KR PO Bajra 44 Manpura 725 P W(2) Bajra 45 Jawaharpura 631 W(2) KR Bajra, Moth

46 Chak Alampura 104 W Bajra, Moth 47 Kutubpura 1,210 W(5) KR Bajra 48 Kbudaniya 2,235 P,P7 D E W(6),TW PO Bajra, Moth 49 Chenpura 450 W(2) Bajra, Barley SO Gowli 840 P W(5) Bajra, Barley

51 Alampura 416 P W(3) KR Bajra, Barley 52 1,360 P D W(7) KR PO Bajra, Barley 53 Ismailpur 742 W(2) PR Bajra, Moth 54 Khuriya 2,401 P W(10) KR Bajra, Barley 55 Haripura 430 W(2) Bajra, Barley

56 Budaniya 2,767 P D E W(15) PO Bajra, Barley 57 Gbumansar Khurd 1,662 P W(6) Bajra 58 Maligaon 1,385 W(7) Bajra, Gram 59 Nalnod 1,694 P FC W(2) Bajra, Gram 60 Alipur 1,750 H E W(20) PO Bajra, Gram

61 Kbudana 2,010 P E W(4) PR PO Bajra, Moth 62 1,112 P E W(2) Bajra, Wheat 63 Bakhtawarpura 1,544 P;M;H D,FC E W,TW(5) PR PO Bajra, Wheat 64 Gothra Nooniya 1,122 P TW(3) PR PT Bajra, Wheat 65 Gothri 808 W(2) Bajra, Moth ]9 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use 1D acres) -5 Z forest Irngated Unirrigated Tree Gro- fallow Culti- Area not Nearest Town u yes and land vable available (Distance 10 "Q 0 Orchards waste far CUltl- Kilometres) U vatlon 11 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16

10+28(W38) 1635(0163S) 215 216 41 PIlani (6) 21 S6(W56) 1002+54(1056) S3 lS4 21 pJlani (9) 22 77(W71) 1210+31(01241) 223 165 20 Pllani (7) 23 61(W61) 1092+129(01221) 36 222 20 Pilam (4) 24 33(W33) 1733+22(01755) 70 126 35 Pilam (3) 2S

87+2O(W107) 1246+9(01255) 7 89 273 169 Pdani (2) 26 105+8(WIl3) 782+26(0808) 123 166 164 PdaDl (2) 27 50+39(W89) 2313(02313) 239 47 PiIaDl (7) 28 2O+38(W58) 1980(01980) 192 30 Pilam (5) 29 17(Wl7) 325(0325) 2 42 7 Pilam (9) 30

9+12(W21) 1805(01805) 181 31 Pilani (9) 31 2S+I1(W36) 1239(01239) 48 256 18 Pilam (12) 32 ll(Wll) 2521 + 15(02536) 196 82 33 Pilani (15) 33 4(W4) 1711+7(07718) 140 71 28 PIlani (18) 34 1459(01459) 98 109 10 PlIani (14) 35

144(WI44) 7297+104(07401) 128 484 263 Pllani (17) 36 16(WI6) 1042+17(01059) 29 62 15 Bagar (15) 37 43(W43) 1239+27(01266) 120 101 19 Bagar (15) 38 2304+47(02351) 73 296 43 Bagar (9) 39 I(Wl) 678(0678) 19 193 7 Bagar (43) 40

711(0711) 27 86 14 Bagar l13) 41 7(W7) 1742(01742) 56 104 51 Chlrawa (20) 42 18(WI8) 1777+18(01795) 9 250 35 Chirawa (22) 43 9(W9) 584+9(0593) 123 9 Chlrawa (22) 44 556(D556) 20 32 23 PlIam (11) 45

101+1(0102) 3 Chirawa (12) 46 1085+83(01168) 6 89 30 Pilani (13) 47 30+15(W45) 1994(01994) 177 34 Pllam (8) 48 6(W6) 329+6(0335) 87 24 4 Pilani (6) 49 10(WI0) 686+10(0696) 62 73 9 Pilam (7) SO

339(0339) 9 57 11 Chirawa (16) 51 2O(W20) 1153+2O(R251,0922) 9 91 87 Chirawa (14) 52 611(0611) 31 73 27 Pllani (8) 53 14(WI4) 2004+ 14(R280,01738) 86 212 85 Chirawa (10) 54 13(WI3) 359+ 13(0372) 16 35 7 Chirawa (18) 55

45(W45) 2346+45(03291 ) 22 268 86 Bagar (10) 56 3(W3) 1427.+3(01430) 54 160 18 Bagar (12) 57 6(W6) 1231 +6(01237) 126 22 Bagar (7) 58 1496(01496) 22 154 22 Bagar (7) 59 26(W26} 1486+26(R98,01414) 10 ISO 78 Bagar (7) 60

20(W20) 1574+42(R46,0 1570) 16 400 Bagar (4) 61 31(W31) 1004+26(01030) 4 52 21 ChlIawa (9) 62 269(W269) 966+ 167(RI2,01121) 30 83 196 Chirawa (8) 63 162(WI62) 749+ 108(0857) 7 137 67 Chlrawa (8) 64- 8(W8) 688+12(0700) 14 85 13 Chlrawa (10) 65 20 TEHSlIsl:"2'- CHIRAWA

Amemtles available within the Village !~ ~ -c,)=e Educa- Medical Power DrInkmg Commu- Post Staple food Name of the Village !0:1 tlonal supply mcatlons & 0= water ~ 1-0'::- Telegraph

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

66 Ajeetpura 903 P E W(2) Bajra 67 Gothra Lamba 2,340 P W(S) Bajra, Moth 68 11,150 P,M D E W(1S) PR,KR PO Bajra 69 Dhani ShyoraDi 944 P W(2) PR Bajra, Wheat 70 Deorod 3,515 P E W(S),TW PR PO Bajra, Barley

71 Bigodna 1,797 P E W(S) PR PO Bajra, Barley 72 Gbandawa 1,760 P E W(4) KR Bajra, Wheat 73 Bhoblya 1,539 P E W(9),TW(3) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 74 Dhakkarwal 869 E W(2),TW(2) PR Bajra, ,Moth 75 Jeeni'" 2,011 P D E W(3),TW PR PO Bajra

76 Haripura 722 E W(2),TK(4) PR Bajra 77 Bhapar 2,287 P E W(S) PR,KR Bajra, Wheat 78 Kajrat 1,421 P,H,I"? D E W(5) KR PT Bajra, Barley 79 Bastokha 1,748 E W(3),TW(2) Bajra, Wheat 80 Bas Gokal 1,122 P W(2) Bajra, Gram

81 Faratt 2,244 P W(S) KR Bajra, Barley 82 Kasmt 3,865 P W(8) KR PO Bajra, Gram 83 Bas Bljoli 761 P W KR Wheat, Barley 84 Bijoli 997 W(2) KR Bajra, Gram 85 Dobrat 2,200 P E W(4) Bajra, Wheat

86 AmarslDghpura 589 W KR Bajra, Gram 87 Pllod 2.007 P W(4) PO Bajra 88 Bhaothan 4,909 P W(12) T PO Bajra 89 Rooppura 855 P W(4) Bajra, Wheat 90 Kuloth Khurd 2,986 P W(9) PO Bajta, Wheat

91 Kuloth Kalan** 3,508 M D W(8) PO Bajra. Wheat 92 Ureeka 1,929 P W(8) PO Bajra, Wheat 93 Ureeki 1,229 W(2) Bajra, Wheat 94 BaJonda 3,335 P,H HC,FC W(9) KR PO Bajta, Wheat 95 Sardarpura 475 W Bajra, Wheat

96 Mahpalwas 2,503 P W(S) PO Bajea, Wheat 97 Asalwas 3,543 p W(7) KR Balea, Wheat 98 Bcrla 4,093 P(2) D W(ll),TK PO Bajea, Gram 99 Bhudanpura 1,803 P W(7) Bajea 100 Jakhod 6,481 M W(14) PO Bajea, Barley

101 Gopalpura 930 W(4) Bajra, Gram 102 Lotiya 2,103 p W(3) PO Bajra, Wheat 103 Fatehpura 1,201 W(2) Bajra, Wheat 104 Jaisinghwas 1,336 P W KR Bajra, Barley lOS Dheegariya 2,368 p W KR PO Bajra, Barley

106 Choradi Aguni 1,417 P W(4) KR Bajra, Barley 107 Pichanwasi 861 p W(2) KR Balta, Barley 108 Raghuveerpura 628 p W(2) KR Balra, Moth 100 Khejra-ki-Dhani 617 p W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 110 Agwana Kburd 1,886 P W(S) KR Bajra, Moth '" AnDual Fair of Ramdeojl. .* Samadbl. t Temple. ~ Temple of Shlvji. 21 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use in acres) Z Forest Irrigated UmrTIgated Tree Oro- Fallow Culti- Area not Nearest Town u vesand land vable avadable (Distance In "t:I 0 Orchards waste for cultl- Kilometres) U vatlon 11 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16 1

54(W54) 802+40(0842) 6 30 11 Chlrawa (10) 66 19(WI9) 1774+89(R75, D1788) 100 288 159 Chirawa (8) 67 232 204(W204) 8056+ 188(08694) 1,048 962 198 Pilani (8) 68 12(W12) 795+ 12(0807) 49 66 22 PllaDl (7) 69 26(W26) 2796+36(02832) 253 340 100 Pilam (8) 70

81(W81) 1525+5(DI53O) 26 143 22 Chirawa (4) 71 2O(W20) 1443+6(01449) 2 267 28 Chirawa (8) 72 67(W67) 1214+9(01223) 61 167 30 Chlrawa (8) 73 6(W6) 580+6(0S86) 68 83 132 Surajgarh (8) 74 81(W81) 1470+49(01519) 207 139 114 Surajgarh (6) 7S

33(W33) 558+10(0568) 3S 87 9 Surajgarh (6) 7S 3O(W30) 1913+30(01943) 150 164 30 Surajgarh (5) 77 1068(01068) 95 205 53 Surajgarh (5) 78 33(W33) 1464+33(01497) 63 175 13 Surajgarh (8) 79 17(WI7) 917+17(0934) 43 130 15 Surajgarh (10) 80

4(W4) 1786(01786) 236 192 26 Surajgath (5) 81 52(W52) 3372+55(03427) 127 247 67 Surajgarh (5) 82 IO(WI0) 638+10(0648) 51 45 17 Surajgarh (8) 83 I1(Wll) 861+11(0872) 42 70 13 Surajgarh (8) 84 1833(01833) 262 78 27 Luharu(Hariyana) (5) 85

4(W4) 502+4(0506) 23 52 8 Surajgarh (9) 86 12(WI2) 1630+13(DI643) 267 57 37 Surajg.uh (11) 87 14(W14) 4023+11(04034) 541 218 113 Surajgarh (11) 88 9(W9) 779+2(0781) 42 16 9 Luharu(Harlyana) (7) 89 30(W30) 2554+ 16(02570) 46 329 27 Luharu(Hariyana) (9) 90

27+ 1(W28) 2966+6(02972) 190 278 47 Luharu(Hariyana)(10) 91 41(W41) 1640+12(01652) 28 185 35 Surajgarh (25) 92 6(W6) 955+4(0959) 11 250 7 Surajgarh (25) 93 IS(WI5) 2868+4(02872) 138 270 44 Surajgarh (25) 94 7(W7) 379+7(0386) 12 68 9 Surajgarh (25) 95

62+2(W64) 2205+60(02265) 14 200 22 Surajgarh (16) 96 8(W8) 3173+14(03187) 114 219 29 Surajgarh (14) 97 7+60(067) 3491(03491) 189 340 66 Surajgarh (12) 98 22(W22) 1570+16(01586) 85 104 22 Surajgarh (14) 99 94(W94) 5429+83(05512) 305 569 84 Surajgarh (8) 100

860+3(0863) 11 49 10 Surajgarh (3) 101 3(W3) 1964+18(01982) 15 97 24 Surajgarh (6) 102 8(W8) 1025+8(01033) 44 109 15 Surajgarh (8) 103 4(W4) 1152(01152) 29 135 16 Surajgarh (10) 104 I(Wl) 2049+8(020S7) 131 143 44 Surajgarh (12) 105

I(Wl) 1200+1(01201) 53 132 31 Surajgarh (12) 106 2(W2) 685+1(0686) S9 105 10 Khetri (9) 107 I(Wl) 528+O(D532) 49 34 16 Chlrawa (9) 108 9(W9) 547+9(0556) 14 35 12 Chirawa (9) 109 19(W19) 1577+27(DI604) 68 186 36 Surajgarh (9) 110 22 TEHSIL: 2· clIRAWA

Amemtles available wlthm the village d Olef~ Z -0 Educa- Medical Power Drmkmg Commu- Post ~taple food Name of the Village 0101 tlona1 supply water mcatlons & 0': Telegraph 8 ~..::. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

111 Kakora 4,781 M W(15) KR PO Bajra, Moth 112 Rasbunatbpura 1,420 P E W(3) KR Bajra, Moth 113 Ghardu 962 W(2) PR Bajra 114 Syaloo Khurd 676 W(3) KR Balra, Wheat 115 Syal00 Kalan 766' P W(4) Bajra, Wheat

116 Sehi Kalan 2,948 P E W(4),TW(3) KR PO Balra, Barley 111 Swami Sehi 2,386 P W(8) PO Bajra, Wheat 118 Tala Sehi 1,839 P W(S) KR Balra, Wheat 119 Adooka 4,653 P(3) E W(13),TW(5) PR PO Balra, Wheat 120 Dangar 1,072 W(3) Bajra

121 Ardawata 2,245 oM- H, r._ H,D E W(lO),TW,T PR PT,TL Bajra 122 OjtOo 4,542 P E W(7) PR,KR PO Bajra 123 Nari 2,015 P(2) W(6) T PT Bajra, Barley 124 Brijlalpura 889 P W Bajra, Moth 125 Akhtiyarpura 772 P W Bajra, Moth

126 Bhamarwasi 1,019 P D,FC W(7) PO Bajra, Moth 127 Keharpura PooDlya 987 P W(S) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 128 Malpura 1,220 P E W(4},TW(4} Bajra, Wheat 129 Keharpura 1,569 P W(3},R Bajra, Barley 130 Chak Keharpura 95 W Bajra, Wheat

131 Shyampura 1,361 W(3} KR Bajra, Wheat 132 Bhadoonda Khurd 2,948 P D E W(7} KR PO Bajra, Wheat 133 Bhadoonda Kalan* 4,927 M E W(4} KR PO Balra, Wheat 134 Kisborpura 1,312 M D W(4} KR PO Balra, Wheat 135 Kayamsar 1,267 P W(6) KR PO Bajra, Wheat

136 Mahrampura 1,361 P E W(4} KR Bajra, Wheat 137 Shyolana 2,189 M E W(4} KR PO Balra, Wheat 138 Gowla 2,178 p W,TW(3) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 139 NJjampura 1,386 P W(6),TW Balra, Wheat 140 Cbandana 2,660 P(2),M D W(1I),TW(4} KR PO Bajra, Wheat

141 Bhukana 1,833 P FC W(7) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 142 Cbirasan 1,069 P W(6) BaJra, Wheat 143 Shree Amarpura 782 P W(2),TW Balra, Wheat 144 Lodipura 930 P W(3) KR Bajra, Wheat 145 Padampura 1,021 P W(6) KR PO Bajra, Wheat

146 Kithana 5,028 P E W(8) PO Balra, Wheat 147 Sultana 4,601 P(4),H HC,FC,D E W(IS) KR PT,TL Bajra, Wheat 148 Sari 1,243 P E W(6) PO Balra, Wheat 149 Bari 1,020 P HC E W(4),TW(4) Bajra, Wheat 150 Jhanjhot 1,806 P E W(5) KR Bajra, Wheat

151 Khudot 1,270 P W(4) PO Bajra, Wheat 152 Garaniya 1,666 P,H W(9) PO Balra, Wheat 153 Bamanwas 1,346 P W(S} PO Bajra 154 Lakhoo 723 P E W(6) PR Bajra 155 Ismailpur 843 P E W(5) Bajra

... Fair of Behariji and Hanumanji. 23 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use in acres) ~ Forest Irrigated UDlrrlgated Tree Gro- Fallow CuIti- Area not Nearest Town u ves and land vable available (Distance in ~ 0 Orchards waste for cultl- Kilometres) U vatlon II 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16

8S(W85) 4195+109(04304) 138 277 86 Surajgarh (3) 111 65+1(W66) 1104+53(D1157) 86 125 40 Surajgarh (9) 112 4(W4) 814+4(0818) 20 108 16 Surajgarh (3) 113 7(W7) 554(D5S4) 27 74 14 Chlrawa (8) 114 14(WI4) 630+3(0633) 72 28 22 Chirawa (9) 115

11S(W1l5) 24.50+47(02497) 13 320 50 Chirawa (5) 116 32(W32) 2034+8(02042) 38 234 48 Chlrawa (7) 117 1653+3(01656) 15 141 30 Chirawa (8) 118

172(W172) 1752+ 132(01884) 45 217 59 Chirawa (4) 121 140+ 100WI SO) 3875+139(D4014) 1 407 119 Chirawa (3) 122 16(WI6) 1637+17tDI6S4) 85 183 94 Chirawa (9) 123 4(W4) 789+6(D795) 5 73 18 Chirawa (11) 124 2(W2) 653+6(0659) 2 90 25 Chirawa (12) 125

76+1(W77) 796+83(0879) 29 88 30 Chirawa (12) 126 67(W67) 806+56(0862) 80 34 Chirawa (19) 127 16(WI6) 995+16(DIOll) 10 166 33 Chirawa (10) 128 2(W2) 947+2(0949) 4 266 350 Chirawa (11) 129 2(W2) 88+2(090) 4 1 Chlrawa (22) 130

SO(W5O) 1117+37(01154) 163 31 Chirawa (19) 131 163+12(WI75) 1827+107(01934) 4 58 896 Chirawa (19) 132 94(W94) 3741 + 145(R33O,03556) 47 478 567 Jllunjhunun (19) 133 61(062) 1022+54(01076) 202 26 Chirawa (19) 134 78(W78) 1059+73(01132) 100 30 Chirawa (19) 135

80("80) 1175+74(01249) 37 35 34 JhunjhunuD (26) 136 144(W144) 1446+117(01563) 20 87 492 JhuDjhunun (26) 137 112(W112) 1189+38(DI227) 35 191 651 Chirawa (25) 138 41(W41} 1208+36(01244) 13 89 35 Chirawa (27) 139 113(W113) 2264+121(D2385) 38 99 146 Chirawa (25) 140

9O(W9O} 1433+68(01501) 33 241 36 Chirawa (25) 141 29(W29) 904+34(0938) 14 100 22 Chirawa (25) 142 16(WI6) 57S(0575) 129 51 11 Chirawa (22) 143 18(WI8) 822+21(0843) 8 57 25 Chirawa (22) 144 94(W94) 814+89(0903) 87 26 Chirawa (12) 145

I 8O(WI 80) 4032+ 156(04188) 57 618 141 Chllawa (20) 146 94(W94) 3984+91(04075) 106 238 179 Chirawa (16) 147 57(W57) l008+56(DI064) 1 148 29 Chirawa (9) 148 38(W38) 881+37(0918) 12 52 37 Chirawa (8) 149 42(W42) 1511 +34(DI545) 14 181 58 Chirawa (12) 1.50

14(WI4) l007+9(DI016) 27 193 29 Chllawa (15) 151 32(W32) 1393+31(DI424) 13 188 40 Chirawa (10) 152 21(W21) llSO+5(D1155) 119 56 Chirawa (8) 153 48+1(W49) 625+17(0642) 27 23 Chirawa (5) IS4 6O+2(TK62) 709+50(D759) 53 21 Chirawa (8) IS5 24 lEHSIL: :z • CHIRAWA, 3 • KHETRI

=~ AmeDities available wlthm the village 2!~ i _0=... Educa- Medical Power Dnnkmg =C

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

1S6 Picbanwa 823 P E W(3) PO Bajca 157 Kirwana 3,304 P HC E W(7) PO Bajra 158 Hameerwas 669 W KR. Bajra, Moth 159 Bishanpura 516 W(2) KR Bajra, Moth 160 Agwana Kalan 602 W(4) Bajra

161 Barsari-ka-Was 871 P,tn W(3) PO Bajra 162 Bajdoli 1,629 W(4) BaJra 163 Amarpura Kalan 744 P W(2) KR Bajra 1,839 164 Sirsaia P W(4) KR Bajra, Moth TEHSIL : 3 - KHETRI I Heerwa 3,774 P E W PO Bajra 2 Kalgaon 1,151 M E W(7) PR BaJra 3 Gada Khera 1,628 P D E W(7) PR PO Bajra 4 Vishanpura 641 P W(3) Bajra 5 Shahpur 955 P W(2) BaJra

6 Jaisinghsar 585 W(4) Bajra 7 Sahadpur 762 W(S) Bajra Shyampura 739 8 D E W(3) Bajra, Barley Mainana 1,649 9 P,H D E W(3) PO Bajra, Barley Sultana Ahiran 2,239 10 P W(S) PO Bajra, Barley 11 Amarsar 533 P W Bajra, Wheat Jaisinghpura 701 12 W(2) KR Bajra, Barley 13 Badbar* 14 Dbani Lachhman 312 P W Bajra, Barley 15 Madansar 5,768 P(2) W(18) KR PO Barley, Wheat 16 Gadli 1,129 P W(2) Bajra, Wheat 17 Thonthi 1,181 P W Bajra, Wheat 18 Manoharpura 661 W Bajra, Wheat 19 Dhoolwa 1,256 P W(3) PO Bajra, Wheat 20 Narat 1,300 P W(3) Barley, Wheat 21 Kalwa 591 P W(3) Bajra, Wheat 22 Ismailpur 1,364 P W(4) Barley, Wheat 23 Jbaroda 1,696 P W(4) PO Barley, Wheat 24 Bhooriwas 1,411 P W(5) KR· PO Barley, Wheat Klijlan 2S 623 P W(6) PO Barley, Wheat 26 Dhani Sampatsingh 763 W Barley, Wheat 27 Rambas 62S W(4) Barley, Wheat 28 Bani Badh Kajlan 518 W Barley, Wheat 29 Noobniyan 1,286 P W(4) Barley, Wheat 30 Jaitpur 2,321 W PO Barley, Wheat 31 Kuharwas 3,813 H D W(2) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 32 Rayli 588 W(2) KR Bajra, Barley 33 Nanwas 2,411 P(2) W(3) KR Bajra, Barley 34 Nimas 919 W Bajra, Barley Udamandi 1,694 3S H H W(4) PO Bajra, Barley * Information included in village Madansar at Code No. 15. 25 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use ID acres) 0 Z Forest Imgated Umrrigated Tree Oro- Fallow Cultt- Area not Nearest Town «) available (Olstance In ":l vesand land vable 0 Orchards waste for cultl- Kl1ometre~) u vatlOD 11 12 13 13A 138 14 15 16

3O(W30) 726+5(0731) 49 18 Chirawa (8) ]56 39(W39) 2799(02799) 43 374 49 CIJlrawa (11) 157 8(W8) 525+7(0532) 67 58 11 Surajgarh (11) 158 l(Wl) 421+1(0422) 23 59 12 Surajgarh (13) 159 2(W2) 51l(OSll) 4 77 8 Surajgarh (11) 160

7(W7) 766+4(0770) 19 56 23 Surajgarh (12) 161 4(W4) 1392+4(01396) 6 199 28 Surajgarh (14) 162 2(Wl) 601 + 1(0602) 43 79 ]9 Khetri (9) ]63 -J(W!) 1457+5(DI462) 28 331 22 Khetri (9) 164

28(W28) 3,320+28(03348) 24 328 74 Chirawa (10) 1 13O(WI30) 912+124(01036) 12 65 31 Chirawa (9) 2 86(W86) 1241 +63(01304) 15 244 42 Chirawa (11) 3 14(WI4) 530+ 17(0547) 6 63 28 Chlrawa (14) 4 9(W9) 821+22(0843) 1 104 20 Chirawa (14) 5

7(W7) 503+7(0510) 60 15 Chirawa (13) 6 4(W4) 668+4(0672) 3 75 ]2 Chirawa (15) 7 677(0677) 9 38 15 Surajgarh (24) 8 0+2(W2) 1398(01398) 9 208 34 SuraJgarh (24) 9 0+2(W2) 1855(01855) 33 313 38 Surajgarh (20) 10

495+2(049 T) 8 24 6 Surajgarh (18) 11 629+5(0634) 15 46 11 Surajgarh (18) 12 Surajgarh (16) 13 210+72(0282) 10 84 8 Surajgarh (14) 14 5150+16(D5166) 104 414 100 Surajgarh (18) 15

1028(01028) 15 65 21 Surajgarh (20) 16 3O(W30) 1042+41(01083) 99 10 Surajgarh (20) 17 628+21(0649) 25 8 Surajgarh (21) 18 30(W30) 1108+27(01135) 20 86 12 Surajgarh (20) 19 IO(WI0) 1112+901121) 66 97 15 Surajgarh (20) 20

I(Wl) 512+1(W513) 28 39 11 Surajgarh (21) 21 2(W2) 1070+18(01088) 33 118 141 Surajgarh (22) 22 5(W5) 1599-+25(01624) 68 24 Surajgarh (23) 23 21(W21) 1239+87(WI326) 24 104 23 Surajgarh (25) 24 29(W29) 516+29(0545) 24 35 19 Surajgarh (26) 25

720(0720) 16 15 12 Surajgarh (26) 26 IO(WI0) 566(0566) 1 39 9 Surajgarh (27) 27 242(0242) 4 270 2 Surajgarh (28) 28 1102(01102) 12 152 20 Surajgarh (28) 29 1903(01903) 8 225 185 Surajgarh (28) 30

2(W2) 3049+243(D3292) 195 231 336 Surajgarh (30) 31 517+6(0523) 24 37 10 Surajgarh (30) 32 15(W15) 1861 +361(02222) 91 298 146 Surajgarh (29) 33 4(W4) 747+359(01106) 2 141 25 Surajgarb (30) 34 2(W2) 1222+461(01683) 12 333 125 Surajgarh (30) 35 26 TEHSIL: 3 • KHETRI

Amenities available wlthm the village I) i!-;, Z o:d~ Educa- Medical Power Drmkmg Cammu- Post Staple food Name of the Village -".,01 tlonal supply water mcatlons & '6c Telegraph ~ ~.=- ., 2 3 4 5 6 I 8 9 )0

36 Lala Mandi 1,326 P W(2) Bajra Wheat 37 Basri 663 W(2) KR Barley, Wheat 38 Dhakamandi 1,095 P W(5) PO Barley, Gram 39 Hansas 391J W(3) Bajra, Gram 40 Jhanjha 1,259 \ P W(5) PO Bajra, Wheat

41 · 9,887 H FC,HC W(IS) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 42 Manpura 363 P W(4) KR BaJra 43 Lambijat 726 W(4) BaJra 44 Saga 1,185 P 0 W(8) KR PO Bajra 4S Kalakhri 874 M W(S) KR PO Bajra

46 Thonthwal 704 W Bajra, Wheat 47 Palota 825 M 0 W(3) Po Bajra, Wheat 48 Sanwlod 1,932 M FC,HC W(4) KR PO BaJra, Wheat 49 Puhaniya 1,726 P E W(4) KR Barley, Wheat SO Chitausa 1,414 P E W(3) PO Bajra, Wheat

SI Jaimal-ka-Was 279 E W(2) KR Barley, Wheat 52 Bhainsawata Khurd 1,062 P E W(4) PR,KR PO Bajra, Wheat 53 Bhainsawata Kalan 1,250 E W(3) PR,KR Barley, Wheat 54 Goth 1,274 M W(2) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 55 Dhadhot Kalan 1,357 P W(3) PO Bajra, Wheat

56 Dhadhot Khurd 1,037 W(2) Bajra, Wheat 57 Jeewan Nlwas 396 W Bajra, Wheat 58 Raipur latan 1,458 P W(6) KR Bajra, Wheat 59 Silarpuri 972 P W(5) Bajra, Wheat 60 Ghardana Kalan 2,091 0 W(6) KR PO Bajra, Wheat

61 Rajpura 634 W(3) Bajra, Wheat 62 Ghardana Khurd 3,622 P FC,D W(7) PO Bajra, Wheat 63 Theencholi 1,606 P W(S) PO Bajra, Wheat 64 Bhanota Jatan 2,537 P,M 0 W(12) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 65 Deotat 3,037 p W(16) Bajra, Wheat

66 Gordhanpura 320 P W(2) Bajra, Wheat 67 Tateejat 3,739 P 0 W(18) PO Bajra, Wheat 68 Kuthaniya 1,665 P W(2) Bajra, Wheat 69 Amarpura Khurd 1,030 W Bajra, Wheat 70 Moibhas 1,005 p W(3) PO Bajra, Wheat

71 Moisadda 1,209 P D E W(3) PR Bajra, Wheat 72 Santriya 820 P W(2) Bajra, Wheat 73 Khanpur 1,356 P W(3) PO Bajra, Wheat 74 Mahrana 1,557 W(3) Bajra, Wheat 75 Siwni 378 W(2) KR Bajra, Wheat

76 Hameerwas 575 W(2) KR Bajra 77 Thall 1,246 P W(3) PO Bajra, Gram 78 Lambi Aheer 1,056 M W(3) KR PO BaJra 79 Sahar 1,349 W(5) Bajra 80 Bhopalpura 413 W Bajra • Temple and Tank. t Temple of Raghunathji. 27 VILLAGE DIRECfORY

Land use larea under different types of land use In acres) 0 Z Forest Imgaled Unirngated Tree Gro- Fallow CUlti- Area not Nearest Town Q) vesand land vable available (Olstance In "0 Orchards waste for culu- Kllometres) vatlon 8 11 12 13 13A 13B 14 15 16 1

7(W7) 1138+389(01527) 24 131 26 Surajgarh (30) 36 595+224(0819) 18 35 IS Surajgarh (28) 37 l(Wl) 989+1(0990) 34 47 24 Surajgarh (25) 38 2(W2) 312+2(0314) 26 51 7 Surajgarh (24) 39 1116(01116) 120 22 SuraJgarh (24) 40

22(W22) 7128+21(07149) 69 2,473 195 Surajgarh (20) 41 350(0350) 3 10 Khetn (24) 42 645(0645) 21 33 27 Khetn (24) 43 1039(01039) 15 102 29 Khetn (25) 44 784(0784) 12 48 30 Khetn (22) 45

585(0585) 20 92 7 Khetri (25) 46 628(0628) lOS 73 19 Khetri (25) 47 1588(01588) 33 148 163 Khetri (24) 48 1181(01181) 179 246 120 Chirawa (20) 49 50(W50) 1011+131(01142) 184 147 22 Chlrawa (20) 50

15(015) 202+15(0217) 14 33 15 Chirawa (20) 51 13(W13) 864+ 13(0877) 17 138 30 Chlrawa (18) 52 6(W6» 1009+6(01015) 14 155 66 Chlrawa (18) 53 8(W8) 1063+8(01071) 22 145 36 Chlrawa (18) 54 17(W17) 1081+17(01098) 66 145 48 Chirawa (16) 55

ll(Wll) 873+ 11 (0884) 9 125 19 Chlrawa (16) 56 364(0364) 23 9 Chirawa (16) S7 35(W35) 1182+35(01217) 210 31 Chirawa (15) S8 38(W38) 789+38(0827) 2 121 22 Chirawa (15) 59 43(W43) 1718+43(01761) 9 280 41 Chlrawa (17) 60

31(W31) 527+31(0558) 12 51 13 Chlrawa (17) 61 84(W84) 2913+84(02997) 12 581 32 Chirawa (22) 62 4O(W4O) 1302+4O(D1342) 231 33 Chtrawa (22) 63 2222+67(02289) 2 273 40 Khetri (19) 64 34(W34) 2149+20(02169) 61 232 561 KhetrI (18) 65

302(0302) 3 8 7 Khetri (20) 66 53(W53) 2522+69(02591) 265 599 Khetri (20) 67 6(W6) 1082+6(01088) 84 228 265 Khetri (22) 68 9(W9) 908+9(0917) 23 79 Il Khetri (22) 69 6(W6) 793+6(0799) 22 161 23 Khetri (24) 70

36(W36) 886+36(0922) 10 242 35 Khetri (23) 71 16(WI6) 694+ 16(0710) 2 90 18 Khetri (20) 72 4S(W45) t170+8(01178) 2 50 89 Khetri (20) 73 27(W27) 816+27(0843) 609 19 86 Khetri (20) 74 348(0348) 18 2 10 Khetri (20) 75

440(0440) 23 97 15 Khetri (19) 76 926(0926) 105 198 17 Khetri (21) 77 816(0816) 42 145 53 Khetri (22) 78 1117(01117) 16 181 35 Khetri (22) 79 366+24(0390) 16 78 13 Khetri (22) 80 28 TEHSIL: 3· KHETRI

c= Amemtles avaliable wlthm the village 0 ,,~ ~e :z -0 Educa· MedIcal Power Drlnkmg Commu- Post Staple food "0 Name of the Village c='" tlonal supply water Dlcatlons & "(I 01: Telegraph 1.1 1-"::'

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

81 Bhirr 2,098 M D W(IO) PO Bajra 82 Deolawas 1,233 P W(7) PO Bajra 83 Khandwa 2,024 M D W(9) PO Bajra 84 Sapa 1,231 P W(7) PO Bajra 85 Ghasera 1,661 \ P W(9) PO Bajra

86 Bamanwas 810 W(4) Bajra, Moth 87 Santor 1,487 M W(9) PO Bajra 88 Rasoolpur Ahlran 1,082 P W(4) Bajra, Wheat 89 Raipur Ahiran 1,114 P W(15) KR PO Bajra, Gram 90 Meghpur 848 W(7) KR Bajra, Gram

91 Panthdoh 1,181 P W(6) KR PO Bajra, Gram 92 Bhaloth 2,469 M HC W(7) PO Bajra, Gram 93 Bnjpura 528 P W(3) Bajra, Gram 94 Nlhalpura 734 W Bajra, Gram 95 Kalothra 662 P W(2) Bajra, Gram

96 Sohh 1,431 P W PO Bajra, Gram 97 Kushalpura 747 W(2) Bajra, Gram 98 Dhani Bhaloth 1,285 P W(6) KR Bajra, Gram 99 Kakra 1,534 P W PO Bajra, Gram 100 Shyopura 514 P W(2) Bajra, Gram

101 Churina 1,443 P W(4) Bajra, Gram 102 Nihaloth* 685 P W(8) KR PO BaJra, Gram 103 Pathana 947 P W(9) BaJra, Gram 104 Guntl 1,013 P W(14) Bajra, Gram lOS Kalan 5,413 P,H D W(lO) KR PO Bajra, Wheat

106 Nawta* 715 P W(4) KR Bajra, Wheat 107 t Pacheri Khurd ..;- 1,793 P W(10) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 108 Manjri 991 P W(3) Bajra, Barley 109 Doomoli Khurd 2,176 M D W(8) KR PO Bajra, I Gram 110 Muradpur 1,524 P HC W(3) KR PO Bajra, Gram

111 Bhodan 1,569 W(5) KR PO Bajra, Gram 112 Teekoopura 407 W Bajra, Gram 113 Lodi·ka·Bas 409 W(3) Bajra, Gram 114 Gujarwas 1,904 P W(5) KR PO Bajra l1S Peethola 958 P E W(3) PO Bajra, Gram

116 Dhani Hukrnat 1,467 P E W(3) PR Bajra, Gram 117 Mankdo"· 2,096 D W(S) PO Bajra, Barley 118 Banwas .. t 2,115 P W(8),TW(5) PR PT,TL Bajra, Darley 119 Gothra 2,300 P,H H W(12),TW(3) PR PT,TL Bajra, Wheat 120 Kharkhara*t 4,767 P(2) W(S) PR Bajra, Wheat

121 Jasrapurtt 7,323 P(3),M HC,FC W(2S) KR PO Bajra, Wheat 122 Shree Sardarpura 1,368 W(3) Bajra, Moth 123 Loyal 2,105 P.H D E TK(9) Bajra 124 Charawas 3,864 D E W(ID) PO Bajra 12S Nangli Saledisingh 2,171 P(2) W(8) KR PO Bajra, Wheat

* Temple. .... Fair on Bhadra Sudi 5. t Temples and Chabutra of Daba Soordas. ..t Fair of Haridasjl in Chaitra Badi & Temples of Govinddeoji & Haridasji. t Temple of Mahadeoji and Fair of Gogaji on Bhadra Badi 9. *t Annual Fair of Bherunji. ..;- With Alipur Ramsar. tt Temple of Dadupanth . 29 VILLAGE DIRECTORY

Land use (area under different types of land use In acres) 0 Z Forest Irrigated Unimgated Tree Gro- Fallow Cultl- Area not Nearest Town 4) vesand land vable available (Distance In "tl 0 Orchards waste for cultl- Kilometres) U vatlon 11 12 J3 13A 13B 14 15 16

2(W2) 1688+3(01691) 44 334 30 Khetri (24) 81 J1(Wll) 1048+30(01078) 5 153 16 Khetri (27) 82 4(W4) 1816+4(01820) 155 49 Khetri (28) 83 1160+90(01250) 50 21 Khetri (28) 84 4(W4) 1376+318(01694) 132 113 36 Mahendragarh (29) 85

l1(Wll) 733+32(0765) 39 17 10 Mahendragarh (25) 86 49(W49) 1131+249(01380) 26 233 48 Mahendragarh (25) 87 22(W22) 923+24(0947) 7 99 31 Mahendragarh (24) 88 27{W27) 973+31(01004) 11 68 35 Mahendragarh (24) 89 33(W33) 637+33(0670) 26 130 22 Mahendragarh (25) 90

7O(W70) 987+49(01 036) 4 79 41 Mahendragarh (24) 91 84(W84) 1984+ 100(02084) 77 279 45 Mahendragarh (20) 92 5(W5) 407+252(0659) 1 103 12 Mahendragarh (8) 93 572+3(0575) 1 127 34 Mahendragarh (19) 94 635+6(0641) 2 11 14 Mahendragarh (20) 95

33(W33) 1171 +39(01210) 166 61 Mahendragarh (19) 96 52(W52) 631->-54(0685) 8 45 11 Mahendragarh (17) 97 41(W41) 1119+41(01160) 27 67 31 Mahendragarh (L8) 98 46(W46) 1325+19(01344) 23 104 36 Mahendragarh (15) 99 56(W56) 409+ 13(0422) 40 9 Mahendragarh (18) 100

55(W55) 903+39(0942) 7 450 28 Mahendragarh (16) 101 78(W78) 544+78(0622) 11 27 25 Mahendragarh (10) 102 26(W26) 811 +28(0839) 4 86 20 Mahendragarh (24) 103 45(W45) 806+54(0860) 8 123 31 Mahendragarh (24) 104 17(WI7) 4722+ 168(04890) 103 302 269 Khetri (30) 105

I(Wl) 496+316(0812) 17 125 76 Khetri (28) 106 1592+ 740(02332) 8 133 60 KhetrI (25) 107 734+ 174(0908) 92 137 28 Khetri (24) 108 76 48(W48) 1750+90(01840) 37 170 95 Khetri (22) 109 IO(WI0) 1202+25(01227) 25 53 234 Khetri (22) 110

1+44(W45) 1188(01188) 83 77 220 Kbetn (20) 111 364(0364) 11 26 6 KhetrI (21) 112 381(0381) 5 17 6 KhetrI (20) 113 0+9(W9) 589+ 16(0605) 836 71 408 Khetri (20) 114 0+13(WI3) 826+26(0852) 17 56 59 Khetn (18) 115

137 22+3(W25) 1188+ 151(01339) 5 34 81 Khetri (15) 116 720 l1S4-i'139(01293) 21 145 56 Khetri (16) 117 l,1S7 81+6(WS7} 400+ 7S{D4'18) 25 11 44\ Kbetn (16) 11& 925 248+6(W254) 538+216(0754) 315 SO 224 Khetri (8) 119 2,287 95(W95) 1680+82(01762) 65 118 522 Khetri (8) 120

565 68(W68) 4773+26(04799) 10 150 1,757 Khetri (9) 121 15(WI5) 1274+34(01308) 6 35 38 Khetri (19) 122 48(W48) 1787+60(01847) 13 179 78 Khet~i (19) 123 1S(WI5) 3154+18(03172) 367 247 81 Khetn (19) 124 SO(WSO) 2010(02010) 8 S3 50 Khetri (19) 125 30 T EHSIL ~ 3 • KHETRI