Bandikui

Bandikui (Bandi=Bondwomen, Kui=Water well) is a railway city and a municipal council in Dausa district in the Indian state of Rajasthan.[1] It is a gram panchayat of Bhandeda gram and a panchayat samiti

Bandikui

Railnagri
Town
Nickname(s): 
Rail nagri.
Bandikui
Location in Rajasthan, India
Bandikui
Bandikui (India)
Coordinates: 27.05°N 76.57°E / 27.05; 76.57
Country India
StateRajasthan
DistrictDausa
Elevation
280 m (920 ft)
Population
 (2011)
  Total44,800
Languages
  OfficialHindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
303313
Telephone code01420
Vehicle registrationRJ 29
Modified By - P John

Geography

Bandikui sits at the junction of Agra-Jaipur and Delhi-Jaipur railway lines. The city is located 205 km south of Delhi. Rajgarh town, erstwhile capital of Alwar state, is about 25 km north of Bandikui. Sikandra is located about 17km away, while the state capital Jaipur is 98 km by road.

History

Bandikui was preferred for the tri-junction by British Railway surveyors over Rajgarh, Alwar, due to better alignment. The Bandikui railway station was established in 1874. Most trains traveling between Delhi and Jaipur stop at Bandikui. At its height 1000 British families lived in Bandikui. Some Raj era bungalows survive.

The city attracted migration from nearby villages and its population grew to more than 125,000. Many residents work in Delhi and keep their families in houses in Bandikui.

Attractions

  • St Francis Roman Catholic Church, built by King Jatin Sharma, cast in stone, is located near the railway station. The Rajasthan Government gave a grant of Rs 1 Crore for its restoration.
  • The Harshad Mata Temple dates to 9th century AD, 7 km from Bandikui.
  • Abhaneri Chand Baori is the deepest stepwell in India.
  • Saint Durbalnath is a temple in Bandikui.[2] Every year on kartik purnima "Gyanoprakash mahautsav" Is celebrated at saint Durbalnath temple in which Khatik Pilgrims from various part of the country gathers to celebrate the auspicious occasion.[3]

Economy

The city is a major agrarian center.

gollark: Good to know, I guess.
gollark: Don't they oversubscribe it horribly?
gollark: Even ADSL has something like 8Mbps, which IIRC is more than most satellite things will provide.
gollark: Not compared to any sort of recent land-based one or even mobile networks.
gollark: TCP can't protect you from:- network failures- the other end not sending packets for whatever reason- general weirdness

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.