Vanthali

Vanthali is a city and a municipality in Junagadh district in the Indian state of Gujarat.

Vanthali
city
Vanthali
Location in Gujarat, India
Vanthali
Vanthali (India)
Coordinates: 21°28′40″N 70°19′50″E
Country India
StateGujarat
DistrictJunagadh
Population
 (2015)
  Total21,891
Languages
  OfficialGujarati, Hindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Vehicle registrationGJ11
Websitegujaratindia.com

Demographics

As of 2001 India census,[1] Vanthali had a population of 21,891. Males constitute 53% of the population and females 47%. Vanthali has an average literacy rate of 70%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 77%, and female literacy is 61%.

History

Vanthali is a small town in Junagadh district in the Indian State of Gujarat. There are traces that this place was inhabited many many centuries back. It was called ‘Vamanasthali’ or "wamansthali" in ancient days.

After the destruction of Maitraka dynasty of Saurashtra, Sorath area became independent. During this time the Vanthali area was ruled by Walaram, a Chavda Rajput king. Raja Wala Ram had no sons, and the question arose as to who should succeed him after his death. It happened that among the Hindu tribes which had migrated Southward before the encroachments of the Mahomedans was that of the Samas, who settled at Saminagar (now Nagar Thatha), in Sindh. Wala Ram's sister had been married to the chief of the Samma tribe, and her son, Ra Chuda, was selected to follow his uncle at Wamansthali.

Accordingly, at Wala Ram's death, in about A.D. 875, Ra Chuda founded the Chudasama dynasty, adding the name of his father's tribe to his own name. The Chudasama quickly became very powerful, and from an inscription at Dhandhusar we learn that the rulers of all neighbouring countries regarded them as paramount. The dynasty continued to hold sway from 875 A.D. to 1473 A.D. nearly six hundred years. Having capital Vanthali and Junagadh alternatively.

Places of interest

Coconut trees near Vanthali, Gujarat

Ra Khengar stepwell is a 13th-century stepwell located near Koyliphatak village near Vanthali. It is constructed in the Ghatapallava style. It had pillars surrounding it and possibly had three cupolas near it.[2]

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gollark: > a file =/= a socketYes, indeed, but apparently they both share read/write interfaces.
gollark: I have it *open*, it's quite long.
gollark: I don't think, in many cases, you could just swap out a file for a TCP stream or datagram not-stream and expect all the code dealing with it in an application to work fine.
gollark: Applications have to handle them differently, and the kernel does too.

References


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