Karur district
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karur District is located centerly [sicsic] along the Kaveri & Amaravathi rivers in Tamil Nadu India. The main town in Karur District is the city of Karur.
It had a population of 935,686 as of 2001. It is 33.27% urbanised as per Census 2001.
The district has a literacy of 81.74%.
A very historical place in the world. As per the vedas the lord bramha created the human's first in this Karur known as Karuvur.
Karur famous for its International Home-Textiles & Bus body buildings
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[edit] Taluks
Karur District consists of 4 Taluks:
- Karur
- Kulithalai
- Krishnarayapuram
- Aravakurichi
History
The Pasupatheesvarar temple sung by Thirugnana Sambhandar, in Karur was built by the Chola kings in the 7th centuryKarur is one of the oldest towns in Tamil Nadu and has played a very significant role in the history and culture of the Tamils. Its history dates back over 2000 years, and has been a flourishing trading centre even in the early Sangam days. It was ruled by the Cheras, Gangas, Cholas, the Vijayanagara Nayaks, Mysore and the British successively. Epigraphical, numismatic, archaeological and literary evidence have proved beyond doubt that Karur was the capital of early Chera kings of Sangam age. It was called Karuvoor or Vanji during Sangam days. There has been a plethora of rare findings during the archaeological excavations undertaken in Karur. These include mat-designed pottery, bricks, mud-toys, Roman coins, Chera Coins, Pallava Coins, Roman Amphorae, Rasset coated ware, rare rings, etc.[1]
Karur may have been the centre for old jewellery-making and gem setting (with the gold imported mainly from Rome), as seen from various excavations. According to the Hindu mythology, Brahma began the work of creation here, which is referred to as the "place of the sacred cow."
Karur was built on the banks of river Amaravathi which was called Aanporunai during the Sangam days. The names of the early Chera kings who ruled from Karur, have been found in the rock inscriptions in Aru Nattar Malai close to Karur. The Tamil epic Silapathikaram mentions that the famous Chera King Senguttuvan ruled from Karur. In 150 Greek scholar Ptolemy mentioned “Korevora” (Karur) as a very famous inland trading centre in Tamil Nadu. After the Sangam Cheras, Kongus (Gangas), a Chera related native clan ruled Karur. After them, the arch rivals Chozhas conquered karur and ruled it for forty years. The Kongus (Gangas) again conquered Karur as vassals of Hoysalas. The Muslim looter Malik Kafur ended the Hoysalas and Vijayanagara empire absorbed Karur. Thereafter, Karur was a part of the Mysore state. The hanging of Tipu and defeat of Dheeran Chinnamalai broke up Kongu Nadu and Karur was absorbed into the Tiruchirapalli district by the British.
Karuvoor Thevar born in Karur, is one among the nine devotees who sung the divine Music Thiruvichaippa, which is the ninth Thirumurai. He is the single largest composer among the nine authors of Thiruvichaippa. He lived during the reign of the great Raja Raja Chola-I. In addition to the famous Siva temple.,there is a Vishnu temple at Thiruvithuvakkodu suburb of Karur, sung by famous Kulasekara Alwar [7-8th century AD]. who was the ruler of Kongu nadu. The same temple is presumably mentioned in epic Silappadikaram as Adaha maadam Ranganathar whose blessings Cheran Senguttuvan sought before his north Indian expedition [See Mahavidwan R. Raghava Iyengar's Vanjimanagar.]
Later the Naickers followed by Tipu Sultan also ruled Karur. The British added Karur to their possessions after destroying the Karur Fort during their war against Tipu Sultan in 1783. There is a memorial at Rayanur near Karur for the warriors who lost their lives in the fight against the British in the Anglo-Mysore Wars. Thereafter Karur became part of British India and was first part of Coimbatore District and later Tiruchirappalli District.
Karur is also a part of Kongu Nadu. The history of Kongu nadu dates back to the 8th century. The name Kongunadu originated from the term "Kongu", meaning nectar or honey. Kongu came to be called as Kongu nadu with the growth of civilization. The ancient Kongunadu country was made up of various districts and taluks which are currently known as Palani, Dharapuram, Karur, Nammakkal, Thiruchengodu, Erode, Salem, Dharmapuri, Satyamangalam, Nilgiris, Avinashi, Coimbatore, Pollachi and Udumalpet.
Karur District
1.K.Paramathy 2.Aravakurichi 3.Karur 4.Thanthoni 5.Kadavur 6.Krishnarayapuram 7.Kulithalai 8.ThogaimalaiKarur district, with headquarters at Karur, is the most centrally located district of Tamil Nadu. It is bounded by Namakkal district in the north, Dindigul district in the south, Tiruchirapalli district on the east and Erode district on the west.
Karur district has 4 Municipalities (Karur,Inama Karur,Thanthoni,Kulithalai) 10 Town Panchayats and 158 Village Panchayats and 203 Revenue Villages. Karur District has 4 Assembly constituencies of which one is a reserved namely Krishnarayapuram Constituency. Karur Parliamentary constitutes 6 Assembly constituencies, 2 are from Tiruchirappalli revenue district, namely Marungapuri and Thottiam and 4 Assembly Constituencies from Karur.
Geography
Karur is located at 10°57'° N 78°4'° E.[2] It has an average elevation of 122 metres (400 feet).
Its about 371 km south west of Chennai (Madras), the capital of Tamil Nadu.
Climate
The highest temperature is obtained in early May to early June usually about 34 °C, though it usually exceeds 38 °C for a few days most years. Average daily temperature in Karur during January is around 23 °C, though the temperature rarely falls below 17 °C.
The average annual rainfall is about 725 mm. It gets most of its seasonal rainfall from the north-east monsoon winds, from late September to mid November.
Economy
Agriculture
Utilisation of land area in Karur district is up to 44.59%. 4.76% of the land area remains as other uncultivated land. 2.74% is forest area in Karur district.
Black soil is the predominant soil type in this district accounting for 35.51% followed by lateritic soil for 23.85%. The remaining 20.31% is comprised of sandy, coastal and alluvium soil. The main crops are Paddy, Banana, Sugarcane, Battle leaf, Grams&Pulses, Topicco, Kora grass, Groundnuts, Oilseeds, Tropic-Vegetables, Garland Flowers, Medicinal Herbals etc.,.
Home textiles
Karur is famous for its home textiles. Karur has a niche in five major product groups — bed linens, kitchen linens, toilet linens, table linens and wall hangings. Overall Karur generates around Rs.6000 crores ($1200 million dollars a year) in foreign exchange through direct and indirect exports. Allied industries like ginning and spinning mills, dyeing factories, weaving etc employs around 300,000 people in and around Karur.
On the international textile map Karur has become synonymous with hand-loom “made-ups” first as Tirupur in the hosiery product. The weaving industry came to Karur from Kerala and has earned a reputation for its high quality hand-loom products today. Hand-loom Exports from Karur began on a modest scale with just 15 exporters in 1975 and today Karur has 1000s of exporters and the products are supplied to world leading chain stores like WalMart, Target, IKEA, Ahlens etc.
The hand-loom products being exported have been broadly classified under three heads viz., kitchen, bathroom and bedroom furnishing items. Some of the hand-loom made-ups exported from Karur are Bedspreads,Sheet sets, Towels, Floor rugs, Tea towels, Napkins, Aprons, Kitchen towels, Pot holders, Plate mats, Bathmats, Tea mats, Curtains, Pillow, Quilt covers, Shower curtains. Some of the leading exporters of karur are Sabari international, Atlas exports, Aravind A traders, Asian exports, VKS Fabrics and Sethman exports.
Paper
TNPL is promoted by the Government of Tamil Nadu with loan assistance from the World Bank. Today TNPL is the largest producer of bagasse (sugarcane waste from Sugar mills) based paper in the world and the 2nd largest paper producer in Asia. TNPL produces 230,000 tons of Printing & writing paper and consumes 1 million tones of bagasse every year.
Bus body building
Karur is a renowned centre for bus building industries. This is a unique feature of Karur and almost 90% of south Indian private bus bodies are being built here. The total business is estimated to be around Rs.750 crore per annum.
Cement
Karur is also home to Chettinad Cements. It has an installed production capacity of 600,000 tons per annum, with another 1.1 million tons expansion in the pipeline.
Sugar
EID Parry has a sugar factory in Pugalur, Karur. It has a capacity of 4000 TCD per year. It also has a 22 MW co-generation Power plant, with TNPL.
Banking
Karur is the home town of India's oldest private scheduled banks, The Karur Vysya Bank and The Lakshmi Vilas Bank.
NYLON NETS
HDPE filament and associated product manufacturing.Its mainly for the fruit fields of Himalayas. Above 50% of nylon net in India is made here only.
GEM STONES
The Karur belt also produces some very good Cats eyes, Feldspar, Moonstones, Aquamarines, Sapphires, Jasper and beryls.
PLACE OF INTEREST
Karur dt. have lot of big & oldest temples.
Shree Kalyana Pasupatheeswarar temple(Thiru Aanilai),Karur Shree Abayapradhana Ranganathar temple,Karur Shree Karuvur Mariyamman temple,Karur Thanthondrimalai Shree Kalyana Venkataramanaswamy temple Vennaimalai Shree Balathandayuthapani temple Pugazhimalai Shree ArupadaiMurugan temple Attur Sholiyamman temple Vangal Shree Vangalamman temple Nerur Shree Sadhasiva Bhrameendhraal temple Madhukkarai Sellandiyamman temple Mahadhanapuram Mahalaksmiamman temple Krishnarayapuram Tirukkanmalleswarar temple Kadavur Vasantha perumal temple Kulithalai Kadambar temple Kulithalai Neelameegha perumal temple Iyermalai siva temple Shivayam siva temple Lalapet Iyyapan temple(1st Iyyapa temple in tamilnadu) Togamalai Murugan temple Rangamalai Malleeshwarar temple etc.,.
Picnic spots are:
Mayanur - Kaveri bed regulator, River side park Chettipalayam - Amaravathi bed regulator, park Tirumukkudal - Kaveri-Amaravathi rivers coinside here Noyyal - Kaveri-Noyyal rivers coinside here Nerur - Sacred madham, Meditation, River side park Kadavur - Ponniyar dam, park
Educational Institutions
COLLEGES IN KARUR dt.
Government Arts College (Thanthondri malai) Shri Sarada Niketan college of science for Women(Sarathapuri) The Karur Polytechnic College(Kongu Nagar) Kongu College of Arts & Science(Karur) M.Kumaraswamy College of Engineering (Thalavapalayam) VSB College Of engineering And Technology(Karundayampalayam) Chettinad College Of engineering And Technology(Puliyur) Valluvar College of Management(Karur) Arungaraiamman College of Arts & Science(Chinnadarapuram) Valluvar College of Arts & Science (Puthampur) Dist.College of education(Mayanur) Dist.College of education for Women(Chinnadarapuram) Arabindho College of Arts & Science for Women(Karur) Shri Meenakshi college of Arts & Management(Aachimangalam) Government Arts College (Kulithalai)
Health
Karur district has 29 Primary Health Care centres, 168 health subcentres and Government General Hospital in the city. In recent years, it has gained notoriety as one of the districts with the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the country. In response to the epidemic, a massive district-level communication campaign (DLCC) was launched in 2006 by the USAID-funded APAC-VHS project in the district. In 2007, the district received its own ART (antiretroviral therapy) Centre, located at the Government General Hospital. Also in 2007, Karur was selected as an IMAI pilot district by the World Health Organization and Solidarity and Action Against the HIV Infection in India, with support from the District Collectorate and Tamil Nadu AIDS Control Society. The IMAI initiative aims to facilitate decentralization of HIV care to the district and sub-district levels.
[edit] Transportation
ROAD
Karur is well connected with rest of India through all modern means of transportation. There are 2 National highways NH-7 (North South Corridor(Kashmir to Kanyakumari)) Varanasi - Kanyakumari) and NH-67 (Nagapattinam - Trichy - Karur - Coimbatore - Ooty) that ply through Karur. And directly connect with other major town like Erode, Tiruppur, Pollachi, Namakkal, Dindigul, Theni, Palani, Karaikudi, Kumbakonam, Pondicherry etc.,.
TRAIN
Karur (Station Code - KRR) is connected to the Indian Railways network. Trains from Mysore to Tuticorin, Mangalore to Chennai, Coimbatore to Kumbakonam Janshatabdi Express and Mysore to Mayiladuthurai travel via Karur. Karur is connected to major towns like Coimbatore, Madurai, Chennai, Trichy, Salem, Erode, Bangalore and almost north India via rail network.
AIR PORT
The nearest airport is in Trichy (78 km), Coimbatore (122 km) and Madurai (135).
SEA PORT
The nearest major sea port is at Cochin (280 km), Thoothukudi (344 km) and Chennai (332 km).
[edit] Communication
Reliance, Airtel, Aircel, Tataindicom and Vodafone and also the major part covered by BSNL. Other private telecoms are here. Internet is well connected by the above companies.
[edit] External links
- Karur Satellite View
- Karur District
- Karur Textile Manufacturers and Exporters Association
- AllLocale.com Website for every neighbourhood in Tamil Nadu and Karur