Jhalrapatan

Jhalrapatan is a town in Jhalawar district in the south of Rajasthan state in India. Its population is approximately 37,506. The former Chief Minister of Rajasthan, Vasundhara Raje, has been three times elected as MLA from this town. The name may be derived from "city of [temple] bells", or from the Jhala tribe of regent Jalim Singh. The first municipality was established in Jhalrapatan. India's last fort was built here.

Jhalrapatan

city of bells
city
Nickname(s): 
patan
Jhalrapatan
Location in Rajasthan, India
Jhalrapatan
Jhalrapatan (India)
Coordinates: 24.55°N 76.17°E / 24.55; 76.17
Country India
StateRajasthan
DistrictJhalawar
Founded byjhala jalim singh
Named forbells(jhalar) sound
Government
  Typemunicipality
Elevation
317 m (1,040 ft)
Population
 (2011)
  Total37,506
Languages
  Officialhadoti
  NativeHadoti dialect
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
<PIN -->
326023(common)

History

The ruins of the city cover an area of more than a mile from east to west and about a mile from north to south. Several specimens of punch marked and other old coins have been discovered, confirming the antiquity of the place.

Jhalrapatan is specially famous for its early medieval to later medieval temples. While the area was once famous for its many ancient temples, after the large-scale destruction during the Islamic invasions, now only four or five temples from the early medieval period still survive. The most famous of them is the temple of Sitalesvara Mahadeva. This temple is situated on the banks of river Chandrabhaga. Fergusson, the noted historian, considered this temple the oldest and most beautiful that he had ever seen and rated this to be one of the most elegant specimens of architecture in India. Other important, beautiful temples include Sun-Temple (Surya Mandir), Dwarikadheesh Temple, the temple of Kalikadevi, the temple of Varaha Avatar, and the Jain temple of Shantinatha.

Temples

Shantinath Jain Temple
Sun Temple

The 10th-century Sun Temple (Padma Nabh Temple) is famous for its marvelous architecture and sculptures. The idol of Lord Vishnu inside the temple is famous.[1]

Shantinath Jain Temple

Shantinath Jain Temple was built in the 11th century. The temple is beautiful with fine carvings and magnificent sculptures.[2][3] It is decorated with two white elephants at the entrance of the main temple.

Education

Schools in Jhalrapatan include

Government Engineering College, Jhalawar •Government Higher Secondary School •Government Girls Higher Secondary School •Vasudha Sr. Secondary School •Dr Radhakrishanan Sr Sec School •Gyan Ganga Public School

Geography

Jhalrapatan is located at 24.55°N 76.17°E / 24.55; 76.17. It has an average elevation of 317 metres (1040 feet).

Demographics

As of the 2001 India census,[4] Jhalrapatan had a population of 30,103. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Jhalrapatan has an average literacy rate of 69%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 77%, and female literacy is 60%. 16% of the population is under 6 years of age.

Religion

The largest religious groups are Hindus and Muslims, followed by, Sikhs and Jains.

Ethnicity

Festivals of all ethnic groups are enjoyed. Deepawali, EID, Milad-Un-Nabi, Holi, Muharram, and Rakshabandhan are the most celebrated festivals of Jhalrapatan. The annual town fair attracts tourists and is held in winter.

gollark: It's postfix unary plus, silly.
gollark: Don't you KNOW about the regex feature where it adds the codepoints of all characters in a substring together and matches based on that?
gollark: Suuuuuuuure.
gollark: Cool idea if I do this: make one simple, fairly easy to guess regex, and then tack 58 random special cases on the end.
gollark: It's not a DFA, it uses a GTech™ regex turing machine to implement Macron to do this.

References

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