Barmer district

Barmer district district
बाडमेर जिला
District of Rajasthan
Country India
State Rajasthan
Administrative division Jodhpur Division
Headquarters Barmer, Rajasthan
Area
  Total 28,387 km2 (10,960 sq mi)
Population (2011)
  Total 2,603,751
  Density 92/km2 (240/sq mi)
  Urban 6.98 percent
Demographics
  Literacy 56.53
  Sex ratio 902
Major highways NH 15, NH 112
Coordinates 70°50′N 72°52′E / 70.83°N 72.87°E / 70.83; 72.87-24°58′N 26°32′E / 24.97°N 26.53°E / 24.97; 26.53
Website Official website
Location In Rajasthan

Barmer is a district of western Rajasthan state, India.[1] Barmer is the second largest district of Rajasthan. District headquarters is in the town of Barmer. The other major towns in the district are: Balotra, Guda Malani, Baytoo, Siwana, Jasol and Chohatan. Recently, a large onshore oil field has been discovered and made functional in Barmer district.

The name Barmer is derived from the ruler Bahada Rao Parmar (Panwar) or Bar Rao Parmar (Panwar) who is said to have founded the town in the 13th century, when it was named Bahadamer ("The Hill Fort of Bahada").

Geography

Barmer is located in the western part of the state forming a part of the Thar Desert. The district borders Jaisalmer district in the north, Jalore district in the south, Pali district and Jodhpur district in the east, and Pakistan in the west.

The total area of the district is 28,387 square kilometres (10,960 sq mi).[1] The district is located between 24,58' to 26, 32'N Latitudes and 70, 05' to 72, 52' E Longitudes.[1]

The longest river in the district is the Luni. It is 480 km in length and drain into the Gulf of Kutch passing through Jalore. The variation in temperature in various seasons is quite high. In summers the temperature soars to 46 °C to 51 °C. In winters it drops to 0 °C (41 °F). Primarily Barmer district is a desert where average rainfall in a year is 277 mm. However, extreme rainfall of 549 mm rain between 16 and 25 August 2006 left many dead and huge losses due to flood in a nearby town Kawas and whole town submerged. As many as twenty new lakes formed, with six covering an area of over 10 km².

Poorly planned and rapid urbanisation has increased Barmer’s vulnerability to flash flooding. The local ecology and soil type is not equipped to deal with sudden or excessive water accumulation, which causes short- and long-term damage. Other areas suffer the gradual effects of ‘invisible disasters’, which also threaten the lives and livelihoods of the locals.[2]

Economy

In 2006 the Ministry of Panchayati Raj named Barmer one of the country's 250 most backward districts (out of a total of 640).[3] It is one of the twelve districts in Rajasthan currently receiving funds from the Backward Regions Grant Fund Programme (BRGF).[3]

People and culture

Sand dunes near barmer

Barmer district is part of the Great Indian Desert or Thar Desert. Like all other districts in the desert region, Barmer is known for its folk music and dance. The Bhopas (priest singers) are found in Barmer, who compose music in honour of the deities of the region and its war heroes. The other folk musicians come from a community called the Muslim Dholis (drummers) for most of whom this is the only means of livelihood. Langas and Manganiars are the some of these communities.

Barmer is known for its carved wooden furniture and hand block printing industry. The village folk have developed their desert life and their own decorative skills. The villagers have some of the most beautiful mud huts that are decorated with delicate folk motifs.

Jasol, Juna Burmer, Khed, Kiradu, Mallonath Fair (cattle fair), Meva Nagar (Nakoda), Bheemgoda,

People speak mostly the Rajasthani Language, while Hindi is the official language here. English is a second or third language for many in the district, both for education and in developing tourism.

Points of interest

Siwana fort, in Siwana Tehsil, is a very old fort, estimated at over a thousand years old. In local language its name is Gadh Siwana.. Jogmaya Gadh Mandir, in Barmer is a very old temple of Devi Jogmaya and is popular temple specially for Navratri. Sujeshwar Hanuman Tekri, Shiv Mandir, Jasedar Dham, Indroi Temple, Safed Aakda, Nakodaji, Juna Keeradu, Barmer Desert, Nimbdi are some other attractions in Barmer City.

Viratra mata temple near Chohtan is a good place to go. Asotra (Lord Bhramha Temple), Bheemgoda, Aashapura Mata Mandir, Hinglaj Maata Mandir near Siwana, Khed Temple, temples in Chohtan are good places to visit.

Administration

In the 2001 census, there were two subdivisions, Barmer and Balotra.[1] Now there are eleven subdivisions in the district, 1.Barmer 2.Balotra 3.Gudamalani 4.Sheo 5.Siwana 6.Chohtan 7.Baytoo 8.Ramsar 9.Sindhari 10.Sedwa 11.Dhorimana with fourteen tehsils: Barmer, Baytoo, Chohtan, Gudha Malani, Pachpadra, Ramsar, Sheo, Siwana, Samdari, Majal City, Dhorimanna, Gida, Sindhari, Sedwa, Gadra Road. The total of 1,941 villages in Barmer District come under Seventeen Panchayat Samitis.

Oil in Thar

In 2009, the Barmer district came in news due to its large Oil basin. The British exploration company Cairn Energy is going to start the production soon in the year 2009 on the large scale. Mangala, Bhagyam and Aishwariya are the major oil fields in the district. This is India's biggest oil discovery in 22 years. Cairn works in partnership with state owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC).[4] Cairn holds 70% in the field, while state-run ONGC holds the remaining 30%. In March 2010, Cairn increased oil potential from this field to 6.5 billion barrels of oil – from an earlier estimate of 4 billion barrels.[5]

Underground airbase

Uttarlai military airbase is situated in Barmer district, Uttarlai is India's first under ground airbase. India can counter any insurgency into India by Pakistan. The Battle of Longewala (4 December 1971 – 5 December 1971) was one of the first major engagements in the Western Sector during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, fought between assaulting Pakistani forces and Indian defenders at the Indian border post of Longewala, in the Thar Desert of the Rajasthan state in India.

The Indian infantry company (reinforced) was left with the choices of either attempting to hold out until reinforced, or fleeing on foot from a mechanised infantry Pakistani force, choosing the former. The company officer commanding ensured that all his assets were correctly employed, and made the most use of his strong defensive position, and weaknesses created by errors in enemy tactics. He was also fortunate in that an Indian Air Force forward air controller was able to secure and direct aircraft in support of the post's defence until reinforcements arrived six hours later.

The Pakistani commanders made several bad decisions, including failure of strategic intelligence to foresee availability of Indian strike aircraft in the Longewala area from Uttarlai air-force base as Barmer is a border town.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "District Profile: Barmer". Government of Rajasthan. Archived from the original on 8 November 2009.
  2. Local approaches to harmonising climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction: Lessons from India, Anshu Sharma, Sahba Chauhan and Sunny Kumar, SEEDS India, 2014
  3. 1 2 Ministry of Panchayati Raj (8 September 2009). "A Note on the Backward Regions Grant Fund Programme" (PDF). National Institute of Rural Development. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
  4. "PM to unveil Cairn India's Barmer oilfield soon". Economic Times. 13 Aug 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  5. "Cairn revises Barmer oil field upwards to 6.5 bn barrels". 23 March 2010. Archived from the original on 8 October 2012.

External links

copy editors

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.