Kataraki, Bagalkot

Kataraki is a panchayat village in the southern state of Karnataka, India.[1][2] Administratively, kataraki under Bilagi Taluka of Bagalkot District in Karnataka.[2] The village of Kataraki was a mandal panchayat including 7 villages. The village is 5 km from to Kaladgi which was a district place in British reign and known for its fruit gardens, 24 km by road east of Mudhol and 29 km by road southwest of the town of Bilagi, and 35 km from Bagalkot. Katarki is on the north shore of the Ghataprabha River. There is famous temple called Ramalingeshwara on the banks of the Ghataprabha River and Patri Basaveshwara temple is there.

Kataraki

Katarki
Village
Kataraki
Kataraki
Coordinates: 16°14′41″N 075°29′20″E
Country India
StateKarnataka
DistrictBagalkot district
TalukaBilagi
Languages
  OfficialKannada
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)

Divisions

The Kataraki gram panchayat oversees three villages: Katarki, Lingapur (S.K.) and Shiraguppi.[2]

Notes

  1. 2001 Census Village code = 138100, "2001 Census of India: List of Villages by Tehsil: Karnataka" (PDF). Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. p. 53. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 November 2012.
  2. 2011 Census Village code = 598511, "Reports of National Panchayat Directory: List of Census Villages mapped for: Kataraki Gram Panchayat, Bilagi, Bagalkot, Karnataka". Ministry of Panchayati Raj, Government of India. Archived from the original on 13 February 2013. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
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gollark: We could use Lua. Lua is very easy to sandbox.
gollark: Why did states happen in the *first* place if they aren't good and there's a stable alternative?
gollark: > Collectivization will take place naturally as soon as state coercion is over, the workers themselveswill own their workplaces as the capitalists will no longer have any control over them. This iswhat happened during the Spanish Revolution of 1936, during which workers and farmers seized andmanaged the means of production collectively. For those capitalists who had a good attitude towardsworkers before the revolution, there was also a place - they joined the horizontal labor collectivesUm. This seems optimistic.
gollark: > "Legally anyone can start their own business. Just launch a company!”. These words oftenmentioned by the fans of capitalism are very easy to counter, because they have a huge flaw. Namely,if everyone started a company, who would work for all these companiesThis is a bizarre objection. At the somewhat extreme end, stuff *could* probably still work fine if the majority of people were contracted out for work instead of acting as employees directly.


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