Chelari

Thenhipalam (also spelt Tenhipalam and Thenjipalam) is a census town and a panchayat in Tirurangadi taluk in Malappuram district of Kerala, India, with a population of 27,273 as per 2001 census, consisting of 13,293 males and 13,980 females.[1] University of Calicut, the first university in the Malabar region, is located north-west part of the panchayat. 'Chelari' is the main commercial place in Tenhipalam panchayat while 'Panambra' is considered the headquarters of the panchayat. Hindus form the majority. The small town between Chelari and the university is called Kohinoor.

Thenhipalam

Thenjipalam, Tenhipalam
Census town
Thenhipalam
The Calicut University Institute of Engineering and Technlogy, Tenhipalam
Coordinates: 11°7′34″N 75°53′25″E
Country India
StateKerala
DistrictMalappuram
Government
  BodyGram panchayat
Population
 (2001)[1]
  Total27,273
Languages
  OfficialMalayalam, English
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
673 636
Lok Sabha constituencyMalappuram
Vidhan Sabha constituencyVallikkunnu
Bus Station at Kolathode, Tenhipalam
Madrassah at Kadakottpara, Tenhipalam

Geography

Tenhipalam panchayat is situated in the north-west region of Malappuram district, about 35 km away from district headquarters Malappuram and 11 km north of Taluk headquarters Tirurangadi. It shares its borders with Chelembra panchayat in north, Pallikkal and Peruvalloor panchayats in east, Kadalundi River separates Vallikkunnu panchayat in west. In Southern side it shares border with Mooniyoor panchayat. It is located 24 km south of Kozhikode on the MangaloreEdapally national highway 17.

Transport

Tenhipalam is well connected with all parts of Kerala by road. National Highway 17 passes through Tenhipalam. All rural localities in the panchayat are well connected to the arterial national highway by good quality roads. Minibuses operate from rural areas to nearest small towns such as Chemmad, Feroke, Kondotty and Kottakadavu. Private buses operate between Thrissur and Kozhikode call at the University of Calicut. Kerala State Road Transport Corporation buses, which operate between Kozhikode and various southern towns and cities in Kerala also have stop at the university on route to Tenhipalam. There are seven towns and one corporation in the 30 km circle around Thenhipalam.

The nearest railway stations are Parappanangadi and Feroke, which are located 12 km south-west and 14 km north-west respectively from the centre of Tenhipalam. The major railway station of Kozhikode is located 24 km away.

Calicut International Airport at Karipur is located 12 km east of Tenhipalam.

Education

The main campus of the University of Calicut is located in Thenjipalam.[2]

Chelari is also known for head office of the Samantha Kerala Islamatha Vidhybhysaa Board, who is sometimes known as Chelari Samastha. It has more than 10,000 madrassas throughout the world.

Suburbs of Tenhipalam

  • Idimuzhikkal and Kakkanchery
  • Chelembra, Kinfra and Chettiar Madu
  • Kohinoor, Parambil Bazar and Devathiyal
  • Saddham Nagar and Nirolpalam
  • Nirolpalam, Ambalappadi and Saddam Nagar

Proposed Vallikunnu Municipality

The proposed Vallikunnu Municipality comprises:

Area: 77.18 km2

Population (1991 Census): 108,792

Kadakkattupara

Kadakkattu Para is a small village included in Tenhippalam panchayath. It is three kilometers west of the Upper Chelari bus stop. The main villages on this route are Shanthi Corner, Alungal, Mukkood and Pichanadathilpady. The important places of worship are Thrakkannoor Shiva Temple, Pichanadathil Masjidh and Kadakkattoor Masjidh. Other important landmarks are AEMS Public School, VEM Public School and Shamsul Hudha Madrassah

Chenakkalangadi

Chenakkalangadi is a small town near branching out from Mele Chelari. The road from Mele Chelari goes through Alungal, Chenakkalangadi, Pallippuraya, Nechinathil, Kolathode and terminates at Irumbothingal Kadavu. The important landmarks in this area are Kunnummal Bhagavathi Kavu, Thrikkannur Siva Skhethra, Cheenikkanari Bagavathi Kshethra, Muhiyadheen Masjid (kizhakke Palli), Padinjare Palli, Thomb of Nossan Thangal Uppappa, Subulul Huda Madrassa Chenakkalangadi, Irumbothingal Madrassa, Areepara Madrassa, Alungal Madrassa, GUP school, AEMS Public School, Chenakkalangadi Masjidh (Srambya), Mathapuzha Srambya, Masjidhul Mujahidheen and Alungal Shariath College for Women. The Y-junction at Chenakkalangadi forks to Kolathode on the right and Mathappuzha river on the left side. The ancient Thrikkannur Shiva temple and Muhyudheen masjid is two km from Mele Chelari on this route.

Culture

Chelari village is a predominantly Muslim area. Hindus exist in comparatively smaller numbers. So the culture of the locality is based upon Muslim traditions. Duff Muttu, Kolkali and Aravanamuttu are common folk arts of this locality. There are many libraries attached to mosques giving a rich source of Islamic studies. Most of the books are written in Arabi-Malayalam which is a version of the Malayalam language written in Arabic script. People gather in mosques for the evening prayer and continue to sit there after the prayers discussing social and cultural issues. Business and family issues are also sorted out during these evening meetings. The Hindu minority of this area keeps their rich traditions by celebrating various festivals in their temples. Hindu rituals are done here with a regular devotion like other parts of Kerala.[3]

Notable people

gollark: Well, then you can have a script interface the build systems together.
gollark: You can actually create, manage and build Rust projects with simple tooling which works easily and without horrible issues, and (almost?) every library uses the same stuff so you can interoperate trivially.
gollark: While strictly speaking you can use Rust and even `rustc` without `cargo`, having it as a first-class thing is EXTREMELY NICE.
gollark: "hmm yes I will have a program generate a shell script which generates a makefile or something" - INSANE PEOPLE
gollark: I honestly *do not understand* why people thought they were better ways to do things than *nice* tools like, say, `cargo`.

See also

References

  1. Thenhippalam. OurVillageIndia.org. Retrieved on 2008-08-02.
  2. About the University Archived 5 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine. University of Calicut. Retrieved on 2008-08-02.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 1 April 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  1. "dchb malappuram" (PDF). censusindia.gov.in.
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