Dindayalpur

Dindayalpur is a village situated in siwan district of Bihar state, India.

Geography

The global location of Dindayalpur is between 26°22'3"N and 84°49'11"E longitudes. It is situated 14 km to the district headquarters and 12 km to another historical place called Hathwa. Dindayalpur is bounded by the villages Fakharuddinpur, Hakma, Sallahpur, and Dihiyan from north, south, east, and west respectively.

Population

It has a population of 11234 as per census 2011. It has a population of 20201 as per census 2013

History

It is a historical place and has produced number of freedom fighters, I.A.S. officers, doctors, engineers and software developers. More the thousand people are living in Gulf countries (UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Oman) and metro cities like Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, Pune etc.

Education

A government high school, inter college, a middle school, 6 primary schools, 4 coaching institutes and a library are in the village. The library is situated in the main market. It was in good condition during 20th century but now it is totally stopped.

Financial and public institutions

Punjab National Bank has a branch situated in Dindayalpur. State Bank Of India is also situated near Ram Janki Mandir. [1]

Tourism

Ram Janki Mandir in Dindayalpur is one of the biggest temple in the area which attracts crowd from surrounding villages during Mela seasons. there is a market in this village that attract huge number of people in the time of evening.

gollark: What sort of evilness criteria should the next version use? I'd quite like receivers to be able to filter by type of evilness.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/5YmBuQwN is the WIP client.
gollark: Then that would be WRONG!
gollark: Coming soon: encryption via chervil's thing, more fine-grained evilness data.
gollark: I've developed a new protocol, RCEoR (Remote Code Execution over Rednet) for secure remote code execution. To send a piece of code:`rednet.broadcast({code = "print 'hi'", evil = [evilness of packet]}, "rceor")`. If you are sending an exploit, set evil to true, so that secure systems won't execute it.

References

  1. "PNB". Banks IFSC Code. Retrieved 26 September 2011.

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