Lovariya

Lovariya is a village near the town Anjar, the taluka of Kutch district in the Indian state of Gujarat.

Lovariya

Loharia, Lovaria
village
Lovariya
Location in Gujarat, India
Coordinates: 23.092246°N 69.884162°E / 23.092246; 69.884162
Country India
StateGujarat
DistrictKachchh
PanchayatGram Panchayat
Elevation
27 m (89 ft)
Languages
  OfficialGujarati, Hindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
370110
Telephone code02836
Vehicle registrationGJ-12
Sex ratio0.894 /
Distance from Bhuj60 kilometres (37 mi)
Distance from Ahmedabad350 kilometres (220 mi)

History

Lovariya is one of the 18 villages founded by Kutch Gurjar Kshatriyas or Mistris, as they are known in Kutch. These Mistris first moved into Saurashtra in early 7th century and later a major group entered Kutch in 12th Century & established themselves at Dhaneti. Later from 12th century onwards they moved to settle themselves between Anjar and Bhuj and founded the villages of Anjar, Sinugra, Khambhra, Nagalpar, Khedoi, Madhapar, Hajapar, Kukma, Galpadar, Reha, Vidi, Ratnal, Jambudi, Devaliya, Lovaria, Nagor, Chandiya, Meghpar and Kumbharia.[1] [2][3] [4][5]

About Village

Kuldevi Temples of many clans of these Kutch Gurjar Kshatriyas community are also there in this village.

Village is located 14 km from nearest town Anjar. Villagers enjoy very good drinking water supply, and very Electricity supply with very less power shortages. Village has good amount Telephone penetration, and nearly most of the houses has televisions and Cable supply. Village Entrance greets with Welcome gate.

Culture

Most of the people in Lovaria are of Parmar & Chawda clan belonging to Mistri or Kutch Gurjar Kshatriyas community.

Preceded by
Unknown
Village Sarpanch
1991 2003
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Unknown
Village Talati
2003 Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Unknown
Village Aanganvadiben
2003 Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Unknown
Village Nurseben
2003 Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
gollark: Then it should be fast, clearly.
gollark: A Raspberry Pi can run Alpine very fast. Phones generally outperform it.
gollark: Maybe it's web-based.
gollark: Why not just be sensible and entirely black it out then?
gollark: The one *I* recall looking at just let you pick the font and effectively brute forced each part.

References

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