Dusi, Sevilimedu, Nemili, Seevaram, Vada Mavanthal, Suruttal,
Vadakalpakkam, Vazhavandal, Thiruvadirayapuram, Kizhnelli, Karanthi, Sumangali,
Perumanthangal, Thandappanthangal, Vadamanapakkam, Thalarapadi, Pulundai,
Pullavakkam, Booderi, Arathrivelur, Hasanampettai, Thenkazhani,
Kaganam………………….. wonder what these are ?
The 15th Indian census was conducted in two phases, house
listing and population enumeration. House listing phase began in April 2010 and
involved collection of information about all buildings. The second population
enumeration phase was conducted in February 2011. Census has been conducted in India since
1872 and 2011 marks the first time biometric information was collected.
According to the provisional reports released on 31 March 2011, the Indian
population increased to 1.21 billion with a decadal growth of 17.64%. Adult
literacy rate increased to 74.04% with a decadal growth of 9.21%. The motto of
census 2011 was 'Our Census, Our future'.
Spread across 28 states and 7 union territories, the
Census covered 640 districts, 5767 tehsils, 7742 towns and more than 6 lac
villages. There can be various usage
from the analysis of details made available based on the coding pattern
recommended by Metadata and Data Standards (MDDS). The Location Code Directory provides unique codes on All India basis which
can be used for various e-Governance purposes. The coding convention used is as
described below:
1. The State code of 2 digits within India has been
used similar to the one used in earlier census.
2. The District code of 3 digits continuous code within India has been
given.
3. The Sub-district code of 5 digits continuous code within
India
has been used.
4. The Village code of 6 digits has been used continuous
code within India .
Range of 000001 – 799999 has been kept for Villages.
How much do you know of your ancestral village and when
was your last visit to your village ? Does any of your relative live there ? Do
you have any agricultural land over there ? Do you know any of the persons
still living in your village ? Did you contribute at least a small amount to
the presiding deity in your village ? ~
most of these Qs would be answered in the negative by modern day office goers
living comfortably in modern cities with all amenities……
Here is an interesting newsarticle read in ‘The
Indian Express’ of date: “3,626 villages
named after Ram, 3,309 after Krishna ”
************************
What's in a name, or two, or 6,77,459? In the
case of India 's
villages, that list tells us they love Gods, Goddesses, nation builders and
mythologies above all else, and that, when they migrate, they often take the
name of their place of origin with them. The Indian Express went through the
names of all 6,77,459, inhabited and uninhabited, villages in India , as
listed in Census 2011 — data for which was released recently.
Lord Ram ranks way up there, with 3,626 villages
named after him, in almost all parts of the country except Kerala, while Lord
Krishna is a close second at 3,309.
There are 92 villages in the country whose names start
with Bengal/ Bangal and all of them are located outside West Bengal, including
Maharashtra, Punjab and Andhra Pradesh. There
are 33 villages named Kerala outside the state, mainly in the northern parts.
There are 17 villages in the name of Prayag (the old name of Allahabad )
and 41 named Kashi (the old name of Varanasi ).
There are 28 Agras outside Uttar Pradesh (most of them in Madhya Pradesh, West
Bengal and Assam ), while 189
village names start with Bihar, of which 171 are outside Bihar .
There are 28 villages named Dhaka (the capital of Bangladesh )
and 40 in the name of Nepal .
Besides, there are 47 villages whose names start with Badri and 75 which
feature Kedar — invoking the religious sites which were among the worst hit in
the Uttarakhand floods. Most of these villages are located in Uttar Pradesh,
Uttarakhand, Madhya Pradesh and Bihar .
Other Ramayana characters too figure among the
names, Bharat (187 villages) is marginally ahead of Lakshman (160). Hanuman has
367 villages in his name, while Sita has 75. While at least six villages in the
country exist in the name of Ravana, and three in the name of his father Ahiravan
(all in Bihar ), no village is named after
Ravana's brother Vibheeshana who crossed over to Ram's side. Some villages in
Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh are named Ayodhya.
When it comes to Mahabharata, Krishna
remains the popular choice by far. While there is no Kurukshetra (except
Haryana's original Kurukshetra) village in the country, only two villages are
named after Yudhisthira, the symbol of truth. There are 385 named after Bhim,
and 259 in the name of the other popular Pandava brother, archer Arjun. Only
one village bears the name of the patriarch Bhishma and that is in Orissa's
Ganjam district.
Not surprisingly, in a country where fealty comes easy,
'Raja' (king), 'Rani' (queen), emperors and sultans dot the list. Leaders of
modern India
too are a popular choice. Jawaharlal Nehru figures in 72 village names, and
there are 117 in the name of Mahatma Gandhi. While there is no village in the
name of former PM Lal Bahadur Shastri, 13 are in the name of B R Ambedkar, 36
are named after Indira Gandhi and 19 after Rajiv. Among the Mughal emperors,
Akbar tops the list at 234 villages. His grandfather Babur has 62 villages in
his name while father Humayun has only 30.
Interestingly, while 51 villages are named after
Shahjahan, only eight are in the name of Aurangzeb (all in Bijnore district of
UP). Moving on, if Sholay's infamous dacoit-affected village Ramgarh has 163
namesakes, there are as many as 27 villages named 'Pipli', same as the village
in the Aamir Khan production Pipli Live.
While the study of names in general and place names in
particular sheds some light on the history, culture and migration trends of any
country, there is a lack of expertise in India on the subject. The study of names is called Onomastics and the specific
study of place names is called Toponymy. An IAS officer of Orissa cadre,
R Balakrishnan, is involved in place name studies for 25 years and has
published many research papers and delivered lectures in different universities
on the subject. A systematic study of names can throw light on many obscure
pages of Indian prehistory and history, he says.
"Place names are the fossilised representation of an
immemorial past. They provide reliable markers for reconstructing the source
and trajectories of past migrations, as immigrants in the past have invariably
carried the place names of their origins and re-used those names in their
new-found homelands. Hence, a comparative study of identical name clusters can
offer valid clues to the movement of people from one region to another,"
Balakrishnan says.
$$$$$$$$$$
Those at the start are some of the villages
nearer my village Mamandur [Dusi Mamandur for reference] in Cheyyar,
Tiruvannamalai district and a photo of Sri Lakshmi Narayana Perumal kovil and Perumal at my native village - at a time when crowds gathered to witness the Samprokshanam on 5th Sept 2010. [photos taken by me]
With regards – S. Sampathkumar .
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