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Arambag subdivision

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Arambag subdivision

Arambag subdivision is an administrative subdivision of the Hooghly district in the Indian state of West Bengal.

Arambag subdivision is a rural dominated area. All the blocks in the subdivision have their entire population living in the rural areas. Arambagh municipality is the only urban area in the entire subdivision. A major portion of the subdivision is part of the Dwarakeswar-Damodar inter-riverine plain with alluvial soil. Only a small portion in the western fringe of the subdivision is upland. The entire area is a part of the Gangetic Delta.

Arambagh subdivision was formed in 1819. It was earlier known as Jahanabad. On 19 April 1900 the name of Jahanabad was changed to Arambagh, which means "the garden of ease and comfort". Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay was in-charge of the subdivision in its earlier days. The ruins of a fort at Gar Mandaran provided the setting for Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay's novel Durgeshnandini, published in 1865.

The Hooghly district is divided into the following administrative subdivisions:

Arambag subdivision has four police stations, six community development blocks, six panchayat samitis, 63 gram panchayats, 567 mouzas, 554 inhabited villages, and one municipality (at Arambag). The subdivision has its headquarters at Arambag.

The subdivision contains 63 gram panchayats under 6 community development blocks:

Police stations in Arambag subdivision have the following jurisdiction:

Community development blocks in Arambag subdivision are:

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subdivision in West Bengal, India
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