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DISTRICT CENSUS HANDBOOK
District Census Handbook is being brought out in two vlumes--Part A and Part B for each district separately. The part 'A' volume consists of village and to'vn directories giving basic information relating to infra-structure and amenities and total population of each village and town as thrown up by 1981 census. The non-census information relates to the year 19791 80jl981, making it almost synchronous with the 1981 population census. Part '8' volume presents primary census data, known as in census Jargon as 'Primary Census Abstract' (PCA) for each village and ward of a town. The PCA gives total population with scheduled castes/scheduled tribes, literates, main workers by main categories, marginal workers and non-workers break up. Two special tables-one for scheduled caste population and another for scheduled tribe population are also presented in Part 'B' volume. These tables give tahsil-wise an town· wise and also for the district as a whole scheduled cast/scheduled tribed population. It is important for the readers to acquaint themselves with census concepts of general importance.
1 Rural and Urban Areas
The census data are presented by rural and urban areas. A rural area is non-urban consisting of revenue villages with well defined boundaries which is the smrrllest unit in the hierarchy of administrative units. It may comprise of several hamlets. Yet it is considered one unit for the persentation of data. Habitations in forest areas are also considered as villages and each forest range officer's beat is considered as one forest village.
Urban areas have been especially defined for the purpose of population census. The definition is treated with some flexibility with a view to accommodating minor variation for meeting the exigency of the situation. An urban unit has been defined as follows:
(a) All places with a municipal, corporation, municipal board, cantonment board, notified area and town area, (b) All other places which satisfy the following criteria: (i) A minimum population of 5,000;
Oi) At least 75 % of the male working popUlation engaged in non-agricultural acitivity j (iii) A popUlation of at least 400 per sq. km. (or one thousand per sq. mile).
Allied agricultural activities such as fishing, logging etc. have been considered agricultural in 1981 census for determining the proportion of engagement of male population in non-agricul tural activities for the purpose of declaring a place a town.
2 Urban Agglomeration 'The concept of Urban Agglomeration of the 1971 is also adopted for 1981 census. Very often the growth of towns over-lapped the statutory limits of the city or town. Large railway colonies, university camp uses, port areas, industrial areas etc. came up outside the limits of the town but they form continuous growth with the town. These outgrowths mayor may not by themselves qualify to be treated as separate towns but these outgrowths deserve to be treated as urban areas. Such a town with their outgrowth areas is treated as one urban unit and called 'Urban Agglomeration' and Urban Agglomeration may constitute. 0) A city with continuous outgrowths, (the part of outgrowth being outside the statutory limits but , falling within the boundaries of the adjoining village or villages). (xviii )
(ii) One town with similar outgrowth or two or more adjoining towns with their out-growths as in (i): or (iii) A city and one or more adjoining towns with their outgrowths all of which form a continuous spread.
3 Census House
A 'census house' is a building OT a part of a building having a separate main elltrance from the road or common courtyard or staircase etc., used recognised as a separate unit. It may be vacant or occupied. It may be used for residential or non-residential purpose or both.
4 Household A household is a group of persons who commonly Jive together and who take their meals from a common kitchen unless the exigency of work prevents them from doing so. There may be a household of persons related by blood or unrelated persons or having a mix of both. Examples of unrelated households are boarding houses, messes, hostels, residential hotels, rescue homes, jails, ashrams etc. These are called institutional households. There may be one-member houshold, two-member households or multi-member houseolds. For census purpose, each one of these types is regarded as a household.
5 Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes A person has been returned as belonging to a scheduled caste or scheduled tribe if caste or tribe to which be belongs is included in the schedule of the State. Scheduled caste can belong to Hindu or Sikh relgion. However, a persons belonging to scheduled tribe can profess any religion.
6 Literatfs A person who can both read and write with understanding in any language is to be taken as literate. A person who can merely read but cannot write, is not a literate. It is not necessary that a person who is literate should have passed any minimum educational standard.
7 Workers In 1981 census, the economic status of a person has been classified as : (i) Main Worker (ii) Marginal Worker (iii) Non-worker
The dichotomy of workers and non-workers or 1961 and 1971 census has been discarded in 1981 census and time disposition criterion in economic activity with one year reference period is adopted. A person who has engaged himself in economic activity for major part of the year (at least J 83 days) is considered as main worker while those who have worked in for sometimeduring the last year but not major part of the year have been treated marginal worker. Those who have not worked at all during the one year reference period as non-workers.
Work has been defined as participation in any economically productive activity. Such participation may be physical or mental in nature. Work involves not only actual work but also effective supervision and direction of work.
8 Cultivator A person is considered a cultivator if he has engaged in cultivation as a single worker or family worker of land owned or held from Government or held from private persons or institutions for payment in money kind or share. Cultivation includes supervision or direction of cultivation.' ( xix )
Cultivation involves ploughing sowing and harvesting and production of cereals and millet crops and other crops such as sugar cane, ground nuts, tapioca etc. and pulses, raw jute and kinde red fibre crops, cotton etc. and does not include fruit and vegetable growing or keeping of orchards or groves or working on plantation like tea, coffee, rubber etc.
9 Agricultural Labourer
A person who works in another person's land for wages in money, kind or share should be regarded as an agricultural labourer. He does not have a risk in the cultivation but merely works in another persons land for wages.
10 Household Industry Household Industry is defined as an industry conducted by the head of the household himself/ herself and or by the members of the household at home or within the precinds of the house where the household lives in urban areas. The larger proportion of workers in a household industry should consist of members of the household including the head. The industry should not be run on the scale of a registered factory which would qualify or has to be registered under the Indian Factories Act.
Industry implies production, processing, servicing or repair of articles or goods such as handloom weaving, dyeing, carpentry, bidi rolling, pottery manufacture, bicycle repairing, blacksmithy, tailoring etc.,
11 Other Workers
All workers, who are not cultivators or agricultural labourers or engaged in Household Industry are treated as other workers. This category covers factory and plantation workers, Government servants, Municipal employees, teachers, priests, entertainment artists, workers engaged in trade, Commerce, business, Transport, mining, Construction etc.
ANALYTICAl, NOTE
The district of Rampur is one of the three di~tricts of newly created Moradabad division. It Jies between 28° 25' and 29° 10' north latitude and 78° 54' and 79° 28' east longitude. According to the Surveyor General of India the area of the district is 2,367 sq. klns. Rampur is bounded on the east by District Bareilly, on the west by Moradabad, on the north by Nainital and on the south by Budaun district. Geographically the district lies in the north west region of the state. Rivers Ramganga and Kosi pass through it.
lt sustains a population of 1,178,621 giving a population density of 498 persons per sq. km. The total population of the district constitutes a proportion of 1.06 per cent and the district stands 56th in arca and 44th in population amongst the 55 districts of the state. There arc 184,356 occupied residential houses in the district. It comprises of five tahsils viz. Suar, Bilaspur, Rampur, Shahabad and Mi1ak of which Rampur is the largest in population and Bilaspur is the smallest, while in area Suar is the largest and Milak the smallest.
Nearly 26.74 per cent of the population resides in the urban area and the remaining 73.26 per cent in the rural. Scheduled caste popUlation is nearly 13.06 per cent of the total while scheduled tribe popUlation is negligibJe (.004 percent) in the district. The literacy is as high as 16.34 per cent in the district, with about 22.63 per cent amongst males and 8.88 per cent amongst females. It is 11.59 per ceat in the rural anti 29.34 per cent in the urban.
As regards economic activity i.e. the proportion of main workers to total population is about 29.42 per cent Marginal workers additionally constitute 0.27 per cent of the total population.
DISTRt:BUnON OF POPULATION VILLAGES AND TOWNS The following table presents tahsilwise rural and urban population by sex separately as also number of total and inhabited villages and number of towns in the tahsil of the district.
Table 1: Population, Number of village and Town 1981
------~------Population Name of r-o------..A------, Tahsi~ Total Rural Urban No of villages ,..-__-"- __----., ,..-__..A. __ ~ ,.---_..A.---., No. of P M F P M F Total Inhabited Towns
------~------"------2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
------~------1. Suar 264,913 143,005 121,908 220,768 119,459 101,309 44,145 23,546 20,599 284 269 3 2. Bilaspur 140,131 76,279 63,852 106,562 58,182 48,380 33,569 18,097 15,472 213 201 2 3 Rampur 421,436 226,546 194,890 216,826 118,522 98,304 204,610 108,024 96,586 246 240 4. Shahabad 172,782 94,623 78,159 154,469 84,778 69,691 18,313 9,845 8,468 208 186 5. Milak 179,359 98,911 80,448 164,889 91,056 73,833 14,470 7,855 6,615 202 196
,----~---~-~------Total 1,178,621 639,364 539,257 863,514 471,997 391,517 315,107 167,367 147,740 1,153 1,092 8 2
Tahsil Rampur has a population of 421,436 followed by Suar, Milak, Shahabad, and Bilaspur. The same order stands III respect of rural population. Rampur has an urban population of 204,610 followed by Suar, Bilaspur, Shahabad, and Mihk. Snar tah~il has the highest number of total villages i.e. 2~4 of which 269 are inhabited, Rampur 246 (240 inhabited), Bilaspur 213 (201 inhabited), Shahabad 208 (186 inhabited), Milak 202 (196 inhabited). There arc 3 towns in Suar tahsil, and Bilaspur Tahsil has 2 towns. Remaining 3 Tahsils have are town each. Rampur M.B., the district headquarter, has a population of204,610 and that ofSuar M. B. is 14,935. Remaining towns are Tanda T. A., Bilaspur T. A., Shahabad T. A, Milak T.A., Kemri T. A., and Maswasi T. A. GROWTH OF POPULATION There has been an over all growth rate 30.8 per cent in the district as a whole, 19.1 per cent in the rural and 79 per cent in the urban. The following table indicates the position in each tahsil separately :- Table 2 : Decadal Change in Distribution of Population
~------__'------___'------___'------Population Percentage Decadal
~ _____- __A ______(1971-81) Variation Name of Tahsil 1971 1981 ,-____ ...A-___--, r-----.....l__----., ,.---_..A...-~ Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
------.-__,------___..------~-----~- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 -----~------__.------____.--~---______.~~----~---~-,------~~------~-~------_ ...... -- 1. Suar 195,425 180,797 14,628 264,913 220,768 44.145 35.56 22.11 201.78 2. Bilaspur 100.181 100,181 140,131 106,562 33,569 39.88 6.37 3. Rampur 327,637 166,220 161.417 421,436 216,826 204,610 28.63 30.45 26.76 4. Shahabad 135,307 135,307 172,782 154,469 18,313 27.10 14.16 5. Milak 142,659 142,659 179,359 164,889 14,470 25.73 15.58
------~----~-~~-~--~--~---~------~~----.-~--~------~ Total 901,209 725,164 176,045 1,178,62] 863,514 3]5,107 30.78 19.08 78.99
Amongst Tahsils, Bilaspur has registered the highest growth rate 39.9 per cent. Tahsil Suar has registered highest growth in Urban population (201.78 per cent). VILLAGES BY POPULATION RANGES If the villages excluding the un-inhabited once are arranged by population (less than 200, 200-499, 500-1999,2000-4999, 5000-9999 and 10,000+), the position is as follows :-- Table 3: Distribution of Villages by Population Range ------,---- Range of No. of Villages Percentage of Population in each Range Village in each range --~-.------2 3
------...... --___,---___.~------Less than-200 141 12.91 200-499 314 28.75 500-1999 576 52.75 2000-4999 56 5.13 5000-9999 :; 0.46 10000 & above ------"'---- Total 1,092 100.00
------~------~-,------3
More than half (52.75 per cent) of the villages are of size 500-1999. Of the remaining, 41.7 per cent are smaller villages with population less than 500. Villages with population 10,000 plus do not exist. VILLAGES BY DENSITY If the villages are arranged by their density i. e. the popUlation per sq. km.. the distributio!l is as under :-
Table 4: Distributiun of Villages by Density ------_._----- Range of Density Total No. of Percentage of per (sq. km.) Villages in each Villages in each density runge
------'----~~-~---~--.------2 3 -----..------.------.------.._------Less than -10 8 0.73 0-20 8 0.73 21-50 9 0.82 51-100 48 4.40 101--200 105 9.62 201-300 ]66 15.20 301-500 454 41.58 500 & above 293 26.83 Not Known 1 0.09 ------Total 1,092 100.00
Thus the maximum number of villages have a density of 301-500. Next come villages with a density of 50 I + above. Small come villages upto a density of 50 per sq. km. are only 2.3 per cent of the total inhabited villages. VILLAGES BY SCHEDULED CASTE POPULATION Table 5 below presents the distribution of inhabited villages by proportion of scheduled caste. Table 5: Proportion of Scheduled Castes PopUlation to total Population in the villages
--_----._ .... ------... -----___,------.~------.~-~.------Percentage range of scheduled cast No. of villages in Percentage of villages population to total pJpulation each range in each range ------2 3 ------_---_.,_---- NIL 180 16.51 A-5 278 25.46 6-10 136 12.45 11-15 108 9.88 16-20 71 6.50 21-30 115 ]0.52 31 and above 204 ------18.68 Total 1,092 100.00 ------'------4
There are 180 out of 1,092 inhabited villages which have no scheduled caste population. In 204 villages scheduled caste population is found over 31 pcr cent of the total population. III 278 villages scheduled cas1e population is found upto 5 per cent of tile total population. VILLAGES BY SCHEDULED TRIBE POPULATION
There are only 3 villages inhabited by scheduled tribe. Their percentage IS between 0-5 only. 1 able 6 below presents the position in this respect. Table 6; Proportion of Scheduled Tribe Population to Total Population in the villages
Percentage range of No. of villages Percentage of Scheduled Tribe in each range village~ in each Population to total range Population
--_.:;.--~_...:..,--~------__...------.------,._,.-.-.-~--~--- 2 3
NIL 1,089 99.73 dclow-5 3 0.27 6-15 16-25 26-35 36-50 51 and above
Total 1,092 100.00
Scheduled Caste/Scheduled tribe in Towns of the District About 4 per cent of urban population of the district consists of scheduled caste and a negligible 0.01 per cent by scheduled tribe. Table 7 below gives the Scheduled Caste/Schedule tribe population in the different tOWIlS of the district. Table 7; Population of Scheduled castes/Scheduled Tribes Population in Towns
Name of the Total Total SC Total ST Percentage of SC Percentage of ST Towns Population Popubtion Population Population to total Population to population total Population
1 2 3 4 5 6
1. Kemri T.A 13,537 291 2.15 2. Tanda T.A 20,424 331 -1.62 3. Bilaspur 20,032 1,112 5.55 4. Maswasi T.A 8,786 1,307 14.88 5. MiIak T.A 14,470 752 5.20 6. Rarnpur M.B. 204,610 6,092 19 2.98 0.01 7. Shahabad 18,313 2,488 9 13.59 8. Stiar M.B. 14,935 361 2.42
All Towns 315,107 12,734 2fI 4.04 0.01 5
Highest proportion of Scheduled Caste is in Maswasi T.A. and smallest III Tanda T.A. Rampur M. B. alone has a small figure belonging to Scheduled Trihe VILLAGES BY LITERACY RATE Correlation of literacy with the sizes of the villages in the district has been indicated in table 8 below :- Table 8: Literacy Rates by Population range in Villages
Range of No. of villages Literacy Population in each range rate
2 3
Le~s than-200 141 21.06 . 200-499 314 13.55 500-1999 576 11.07 2000-4999 56 11.50 .5000-9999 .5 9.49 10,000 & above
Total 1,092 11.59 ----_ The above figures indicate that maximum literacy obtains in villages with population less than 200 (21.1 per cent). Next come the villages with population between 200-499 (13.5 per cent). The villages with population between 500-1999 and 2000-4999 have literacy rate of 11 per cent, and that of village with popuhitlon 5000+ abovc is 9.5 per cent. TOWNS BY LITERACY RATE In the total urban area of Rampur comprising of 8 towns, the literacy rate comes to about 29.3 per cent Table 9 below indicates the literacy rate for each form of the district.
Table 9: Literacy Rate for Towns
Name of the towns Literacy Rate
2
1. Kemri T. A. 12.26 2. Tanda T. A. 22.18 3. Bilaspur T A. 34.83 4. Maswasi T. A. 17.73 .5. Milak T. A . 29.74 6. Rampur M. B. 33.17 7. Shahabad T. A. 15.22 8. Suar M. B. 18.45
All Towns 29.34 ------.__ Thus Bilaspur T.A. has the highest literacy rate of 34.8 per cent. It is followed by Rampur M.B. (33.2 per cent), Milak T.A. (29.7 per cent), Tanda T.A. (22.2 per cent), Suar M.B. (18.4 per cent), Maswasi T.A. (17.7 per cent), and Shahabad T.A. (15.2 per cent). Literacy rate of Kemri T.A. is the lowest (12.3 per cent). 6
LITERATES WORKERS, AND SCHEDULED CASTEjSCHEDULFD TRIBE Literacy is as high as 16.3 per cent in the district as a whole with 11.6 per cent in rural and 29.3 per cent in urban. Bilaspur tahsil leads in total literacy (204 per cent), it also leads in rural literacy. Maximum literacy obtains in the urban area of Rampur tahsil followed by Milak. Male literacy is 35.8 per cent in urban and 18 per cent in rural area against which female literacy is 22 percent in urban and3.9 per cent in rural area. The district has about 13.1 per cent of its population belonging to S:.:he.:luled caste with about 16.3 per cent in rural and 4 per cent in urban area. Scheduled tribe population is in Shahabad tahsil only and is negligible. Main workers constitute 29.4 per cent of the total population of the district with about 30 percent in rural and 27.8 per cent in the urban. The highest participation is in the rural area of Rampur tahsit The main male workers who constitute 53 4 per cent of total male population are 54.5 per cent in the rural and 50.S per cent in the urban area. It is slightly high in rural area than in urban area. This is noticeable in all the tahsils also. Marginal workers constitute 0.3 per cent of total population, out of which 0.2 per cent are male and 0.4 per cent are female. Female marginal participation is higher in rural area of the district which it is reverse in the urban. After deducting the total workers i.e. main plus marginal from total population, the remaining are non-workers. About 70.3 per cent of total population consists of non-workers. Due to higher participation, the proportion of male non-workers is less than half of the female non-workers in the district. A condenced table 10 indicates full details on which this brief analysis has been based.
Table 10. Literates, Workers, Non workers, Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes Population of the District
Name of Total/ Total Population SC Popu- ST Popu- Literates to total Main workers to Tahsil Ruralj lation to lation to Population Tolal population Urban r---~------'" total po- lotal po- r------A.----.. r---...A..---.. p M F pulati I)n pulation P M F P M F
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
1. SUllr Total 264,913 143,005 121,908 11.69 N 12.76 18.95 5.49 29.24 53.53 0.81 Rural 220,768 119,459 101,309 13.12 N 11.30 17.35 4.19 29.89 54.65 0.69 Urban 44,145 23,546 20,599 4.53 20.03 27.16 11.89 25.97 47.44 1.43 2. Bilaspur Total 140,131 76,279 63,852 13.40 N 20.38 26.77 12.74 29.71 53.85 0.87 Rural 106,562 58,182 48,380 16.31 N 18.69 25.39 10.63 30.27 54.89 0.66 Urban 33,569 18,097 15,472 4.18 25.73 31.22 19.31 27.93 50.52 1.47 3. Rampur Total 421,436 226,546 194,890 6.86 N 20.03 25.63 13.53 29.30 53.25 1.48 Rural 216,826 118,522 98,30-1 10.53 N 7.63 12.86 1.93 30.38 55.12 0.54 Urban 204,610 108,024 96,586 2.98 N 33.17 33.59 25.95 28.15 51.20 2.38 4. Shahabad Total 172,781. 94,623 78,159 22.79 N 10.63 16.19 3.16 29.35 53.10 0.59 Rural 154,469 84,178 69,691 23.88 N 10.08 16.39 2.41 29.28 53.30 0.55 Urban 18,313 9,845 8,468 13.59 0.05 15.22 20.23 9.39 28.32 5142 1,48 5. Milak Total 179,359 98,911 80,448 19.99 15.28 23.44 5.25 29.85 53.74 0.46 Rural 164,889 91,056 73,833 21.29 14.01 22.14 3.99 30.09 54.20 0.37 Urb:m 14.470 7,855 6,615 5.20 29.74 38.54 19.29 26.96 48.43 1.50
Total Total 1,178,621 639,364 539,257 13.06 N 16.34 22.63 8.88 29.42 53.42 0.97 Rural 863,514 471,997 391,517 16.35 N 11.59 17.97 3.91 30.02 54.47 0.55 Urban 315,107 167,367 147,740 4.04 0.01 29.34 35.77 22.05 27.78 50.48 2.06 7
Name of Total! Marginal workers to Total workers to Non workers to total tahsil Rural! total Population total population Population Urban ,-__ ~J..__ ---.. ,- _ __~_J..______~"' ,--~ ------"------.._ P M F P M F P M F
2 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
1. Suar Total 0.50 0.30 0.73 78,173 16,885 1,888 186,140 66,120 120,020 Rural 0.54 0.33 0.78 61,111 65,678 1,493 153,597 53,181 99,816 Urban 0.31 0.15 0.49 11.602 11,207 395 32,543 12,339 20,204
2. Bilaspur Total 0.22 0.17 0.26 41,940 41.219 121 98,191 35,060 63.131 Rural 0.25 0.22 0.28 32,518 32,063 455 74,04 26,119 47,925 Urban 0.13 0.Q7 0.21 9,422 9,156 266 2,4147 8,941 15,20a
3. Rampur Total 0.28 0.13 0.46 124,652 120,933 3,719 296,784 105,613 191.171 Rural 0.41 0.10 0.79 66,756 65,448 1,308 150,070 53,074 96,996 Urban 0.14 0.16 0.12 57,896 55,485 2,411 146,714 52,539 94,175
4. Shahabad Total 0.03 0.00 0.D7 50,767 50,256 511 122,015 44,367 77,648 Rural 0.03 0.01 0.07 45,577 45,196 381 108,892 39,582 69,310 Urban 0.02 0.06 5,190 5,060 130 13,123 4,785 8,338
5. Milak Total 0.15 0.13 0.19 53,807 53,282 525 125,552 45,629 19,923 Rural 0.17 0.14 0.20 49,904 49,478 426 114,985 41,578 73,407 Urban 3,903 3,80-t 99 10,567 4,051 6,516
Total Total 0.27 0.16 0.40 349,939 342,575 7 ,3S~ 828,6U 2)6,7.19 531,893 Rurll 0.31 0.16 0.49 261,926 257,863 4,063 601,588 214,134 387,454 Urban 0.15 0.14 0.17 88,013 84,712 3,301 n7,0:4 82,655 144.439
~T~1l=rCf) Gl;:r~~'ff m-~ -q-~ Primary Census Abstract f~ CfiT 5n~f'{f(i DISTRICT PRIMARY
>:l t..e ~~ crrorr~ qfv.rr<::r ~ ::;r;;ij-lS1:fT (m21TifCf arT~ cr~W"fCf ::;rrfilt(T ~ /(f~~I;:r;n: lJ~/ ... 2. qif f~T- 3lTcrTllr2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
16. "{i~~ "I";:rqq: If]Tr 2,367.0 184,356 196,732 1,178,621 639,364 539,257 153,888 84,318 69,570
~;n;rT~ 2,304.0 138.222 146,672 863,51-1 471,997 391,517 141,154 77,270 63,884
.,~ 63.0 -16)33 50,069 315,107 167,367 147,740 12,73-1 7,0-18 5,686
1 ~qT<:: a~lJffi llTt1T11f 580.1 36,155 37.001 2:0,768 119,459 101,309 28,958 15,639 13,319
;:rif~1 c:m~~ ;:rttU~m ;:riT<:qrf~T ;:rtt<:Ttr 0.5..j. 2.-+29 2,-+30 14,935 7,960 6,975 361 199 162
t1lJqmr ii1T~~;;:r iiif<:'T2. for~T~~ 5~~:ff<;r 1:flif 483.4 22,168 23,421 1-1-0,131 76,279 63,852 18,783 10,363 8,420
~Tmur 469.5 16.827 17,931 106,562 58,182 48,380 17,380 9,582 7,798
;;~ 13.9 5,341 5,490 33,569 18,097 15,472 1,403 781 622
for~~~ ;:rif<:'T ili~T~ ififUlJ 2.40 2,071 2,071 13,537 7,253 6,284 291 169 122
3. ~~~ 1I11T 444.8 62,587 68,856 421,436 226,546 194,890 28,922 15,922 13,000 IDt1'Tvr 424.6 34,338 37,184 216,826 ]18,522 98,304 22,830 12,465 10,365
Yftl1:1zr 20.2 28,249 31,672 204,610 108,024 96,586 6,092 3,457 2,635
~ ;;·I(qlf""ifil orifUtr 20.20 28,249 31,671 204,610 108,024 96,586 6,092 3,457 2,635 II
G{;:rr(Q'(rn m~ CENSUS ABSTRACT
~~f'OfCf ;;r;:r;rrfcrliT ~T~~ f'lf13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 3 2
48 39 ') 192,553 lU,G69 47,891 346,788 341,577 5,211 Total RAMPLJR DISTRICT. 16 l\} 16 4 101l,1l4 84,795 15,319 259,254 257,091 2,163 Rural
28 23 5 92,446 59,874 32,572 87,534 '14,486 3,048 Urban
11 7 4 33,809 27,[17 6,692 77,451 76,458 993 Total Suar Tahsil 1
11 7 4 2-1-,965 20,723 4,242 65,985 65,287 698 Rural
8,8H 6,394 2,450 11,466 11,171 295 Urban
4,531 3,182 1,349 5,liS5 5,129 156 Urban Tanda T. A.
2,755 2.006 749 3,911 3,802 109 Urban Suar M. B.
1,558 1,206 352 2,270 2,240 30 Urb3 3 28,555 20,423 8,132 41,632 41,078 554 Total Bilaspur Tahsil 2-
3 3 19,918 14,773 5,145 32,255 31,935 320 Hural
8,637 5,650 2,987 9,377 9,143 234 Urban
6,917 4,340 2,637 5,577 5,461 116 Urban Bilaspur T. A.
1,,660 1,310 350 3,800 3,682 118 Urban Kemri T. A.
21 20 84,422 58,055 26,367 123,469 120,639 2,830 Total Rampur Tahsil 3,
2 2 16,547 15,244 1,303 65,866 65,331 535 Rural
19 18 61,875 42,811 25,064 57,603 55,308 2,295 Urban
19 18 1 61,875 42,811 25,064 57,603 55,308 2,275 Urban Rampur M.B. 12
f~~ 'fiT ~1t!t) DISTRiCT PRIMARY
~~lT 'fiT11 'fi"':i=r CfT~ ~!8.in wJrkcrs r------~ ci I::r ~ Cfi 1Qcl'fll '( Glf'OOfw '3£11;y \5 ~q~." Z .m~ ~<: 0 q;;-B Cultivators Agricultural labourers .It" ~ ,.!;":J -- ~~T'Cl" mCffu<51:1"0 ~o ~r <51:1"0 ~o ~T QlTo ~o ~T p M F P M F P M F
2 J " 23 24- 25 26 27 28 29 30
22J,896 221,OJ4 882 36,573 35,940 633 9,]22 8,238 16. '{1~"l: ~~ 'l:lfrr 884 gn:f\'Uf 209,612 208,867 745 30,733 30,204 529 2,771 2,567 204
TftT"O.!:f 12,284 12,147 137 5,840 5,736 104 6,351 5,671 680
286 11,151 10,868 283 1. tcrT<: cnl:~l~ lTTIT 55,633 55,347 1,583 1,474 109 lATl1Tur 51,779 51,524 255 9,493 9,247 246 908 864 44
i'fITU1:I" 3,854 3,823 31 1,658 1,621 37 675 610 65
G'T iT ;:r;r<:ela' r]'ITU-qlq 24,813 24,711 102 8,642 8,436 206 2. f.Im~~~m }.204 1,176 28 47 m+fTur 22.566 22,519 6,871 6,712 159 288 266 22 2,247 2,192 55 1,771 1,724 47 i'fIT'UlI' 916 910 6 f3.<:~~ lIrIT 56,449 56,216 233 7,381 7,301 80 5,006 4,407 .599 ;;rT1fM 53,893 53,689 204 6,690 6,622 68 546 493 53'
r]'~ 2,556 2,527 29 691 679 12 4,460 3,914 54 r
~ T ~ 2,556 2,527 29 691 679 12 4,460 3,914 546 13
~;;tTUI"T «R CENSUS ABSTRACT ------... Of.' Q til;) ~~!~~/'Ii~iifT <:: il DistrictjTahsil/U.A./ ~ .g City/Town tfli'. 13 ,--___..A- ___--. ,..-____..A- r------A----... l& ~.3 Q
31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 3 2
79,197 76,385 2,812 3,151 998 2,153 828,682 296,789 531,893 Total RAMPUR DISTRICT. 40 1,900 601,588 214,134 387,454 16,138 15,453 685 2,672 772 Rural 253 227,094 82,655 144,439 63,059 60,932 2,J27 479 226 Urban
9,084 8,769 315 1,322 427 895 186,140 66,120 120,Q20 Total Suar Tahsil
.1,805 3,652 153 1,186 391 795 153,597 53,781 99,816 Rural
5,279 5,\17 162 136 36 100 32,543 12,339 20,204 Urban
3,320 3,241 79 101 26 75 15,038 5,758 9,280 Urban Tanda T. A.
1,581 1,515 66 12 11 11,012 4,157 6,855 Urban Suar M. B.
318 361 17 23 9 14 6,493 2,424 4,069 Urban Maswasi T. A.
308 141 167 98,191 n,973 6,755 218 35,060 63,131 10tal Bilaspur Tahsil 2
2,530 2,438 91 263 128 135 74,044 26,119 47,925 Rural
4,443 4,317 126 45 13 32 24,147 8,941 15,206 Urban
3,546 3,459 87 35 11 24 14,420 5,372 9,048 Urban Bilaspur T. A.
897 858 39 10 2 8 9,727 3,569 6,158 Urban Kemri T. A.
54,633 52,715 1,918 1,183 294 889 296,784 105,613 191,111 Total Rampur Tahsil 3
4,737 4,527 210 890 117 113 150,010 53,074 96,996 Rural
4<),896 48,188 1,108 293 177 116 146,714 52,539 94,175 Urban
49,896 48,188 1,708 293 177 116 146,714 52,539 94,115 Urban RampurM.B. 14
f(jf~ ~l Sfl~fq~ DISTRICT PRIMAR Y
t;r ~ er<;fCfi"l 3fTOfTcr qfHT'l:r '!i\1' 'Jf'Hf,'4 5 7 10 11 I:!
tfTtT 432.5 20,..J.~1 29,ti24 172,n2 94,623 78,159 39,376 21,565 17,811 lJPrror 425.5 25,329 2(,.578 15.IA69 84,1'18 69.(91 39,888 20,249 16,639 ;:rtn:l<:f 7.0 :,15:: 3,246 18,313 9,845 0,468 2,488 1,316 1,172
"fln:.Tll 7.00 3.152 3,24
;:rrtT ..tOU 28,0:'9 3(l,4~6 179,359 9,845 35,850 19,748 16,102
'.lTlftuT 390.3 25,574 27,898 164,889 91,056 :"5,0'J8 19,335 15,763 ;:IifU<:r 11.0 2,465 2,528 14,470 7,S55 6.615 752 413 339
.,T2": I. z';;:lflf~l ff; OTilf.:a-1f "mmfuCfi ern-" ~) 'fiT arr'!fu mm if; lT~iJcfe1'fi [l<'T 'fiT tT~ ~ am rm<.m ~r~) ~ ij'.=qfi:eTo 3ft'ii~) ~ 3TT'tfu ~~n*l:!' f.,'fi[;:fT &:t'U 'fiT tT{ ~ I Wl1TllT ~e!' Ef; f~Q; eTI:rTl:!' art'fi~ ~~ ~ ~ it ~ .,.,-u'{ f"l'JiT~ ~t!; ~ I D;1fi f:;r~ it ~Hf a-~~Tffi ~ e~Ttr 3fi"'fi~) "liT rrltT f'Jf~ ;p art'li~1 ~ ~q rr~T QTtTT, 'fll)f:s{o:{f\1JAT m~ CENSUS ABSTRACT
il1~~f:qo f-if~T; i5Q:~r~, ;:r'T~1 tl~Q:i ;;rrr;Jfmr