Gondaur

Gondaur is a village located in ‘Karail Kshetra’ of Mohammadabad tehsil of Ghazipur district, Uttar Pradesh. It had 590 families and a population of 3712 in the 2011 census.[3]

Gondaur
Village
Gondaur
Location in Uttar Pradesh, India
Gondaur
Gondaur (India)
Coordinates: 25.6168558°N 83.7531057°E / 25.6168558; 83.7531057[1]
Country India
StateUttar Pradesh
DistrictGhazipur
TehsilMohammadabadl
Government
  TypePanchayati raj (India)
  BodyGram panchayat
Languages
  OfficialHIndi
  Other spokenBhojpuri
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Pin code
223225[2]
Telephone code05493
Vehicle registrationUP-61
Websiteup.gov.in

History

According to historical records, Gondaur was established around 1420 A.D. It was Kunwar Bhairo Shah who moved from 'Saharmadih' to this place and built a Kot (fort). He was the last person of Raja Mulhan Dikshit's family who left the old habitat of Kinwars near Ooki river. It was a period when sultan Khizr Khan was sitting on the throne of Delhi. Kunwar Bhairav Shah had four sons, Satan Shah, Bisen Shah, Karmsen Shah and Narayan Shah. Elder son Satan Shah established Pidroi, second son Bisen Shah established Amarupur, third son Karmsen Shah established Kanuan and youngest of them Narayan Shah stayed at Gondaur. Kunwar Narayan Shah also had four sons, Madhav Rai, Mahesh Rai, Sarangdhar Rai and Purushottam Rai. Eldest of them Taluqdar Madhav Rai established village Kundesar on the bank of river Ganges, second son Mahesh Rai established Narayanpur on the name of his father Narayan Shah, third son Sarangdhar Rai styed at Gondaur while youngest Purushottam Rai moved to Musurdeva.[4] Its narrated in 'Shri Pothi Bansauri' in these verses:

Narayen sut chari pratham Madho kahi gayo,

Sur sarita tat gram Kundesari nam kahayo,

Dujo bhaye Mahesh nam jehi param ujagar,

Narayanpur gram base subh gun ke agar,

Teejo Gondaur me base Sarangdhar jo naav,

Chautho Purusotim kahi basev Mushurdev gaav.[5]

(English translation: Narayan Shah had four sons, eldest of them Madhav Rai established village Kundesar on the bank of river Ganges. Second son Mahesh Rai established Narayanpur. Third son Sarangdhar Rai stayed at Gondaur, while fourth and youngest of them Purushottam Rai shifted to chhawani Musurdeva.)

Administration

Gondaur village is administrated by Gram Panchayat through its Pradhan who is elected representative of village.

ParticularsTotalMaleFemale
Total No. of Houses590
Population3,7121,9931,719

Agriculture

Agriculture is the main source of income and livelihood for the majority of the residents though a number of people from this village have been in government and private sector jobs. Nearly all type of food grains which are cultivated in eastern UP are also produced here, popular crops include wheat, paddy, and potatoes, though other crops such as mustard, lentils, grams are also produced in large quantities, the village has privately owned rice mills and oil mills.[6]

Transport

Gondaur is connected to other parts of Ghazipur through public and private transport. Nearest railway station to this village is Karimuddinpur. Buxar railway station on Delhi-Howrah route is at 12 km distance from this village.

Hospital and schools

There is one Intermediate college in this village along with several primary schools. Allahabad Bank has one of its branch here, which caters the needs of local farmers and other entrepreneurs. Gondaur has got one of Ghazipur district's Block Primary Health Center (BPHC) with 20 beds.[7][8]

Language and culture

Culturally this village has influence of Kashi Kshetra as this region is part of Varnasi division. The language spoken in this village is Bhojpuri, though a number of people can read, write and speak Hindi and English languages.

Notable people

References

  1. "India Mapia, Gondaur".
  2. "PIN Code, Gondaur".
  3. "Census 2011, Gondaur".
  4. Evolution and Spatial Organization of Clan Settlements: A Case Study of Middle Ganga Valley, pp. 113–114,Concept Publishing Company, 1986, New Delhi
  5. Shri Pothi Bansauri,p.12, Kashi Nagri Pracharini Sabha, Varanasi
  6. Flood Plains and Agricultural Occupance by Mohan Pathak, pp. 38–39, Deep & Deep publications,1991, Delhi
  7. "BPHC in the District". uphealth.up.nic.in. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  8. "Allahabad Bank, Gondaur". banksifsccode.com. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.