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Baghpat
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Baghpat, historically known as Vyaghraprastha, is a city in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. It is the administrative headquarters of Bagpat district, which was established in 1997. It is part of the National Capital Region, surrounding New Delhi.[3]
Key Information
Etymology
[edit]The original name of the city was Vyaghraprastha (Sanskrit: व्याघ्रप्रस्थ, meaning tiger city) because of the large number of tigers in that area.[4] It is also mentioned as Vyaghraprastha in the Indian epic Mahabharata, one of the five villages that Krishna demanded from Hastinapur on behalf of the Pandavas, so as to avert the war.[5]
During the Mughal Era, the city was named as Baghpat (Hindustani: बाग़पत) by emperors in Delhi, in reference to the city's gardens.[6]
History
[edit]Baghpat is listed in the Ain-i-Akbari as a pargana under Delhi sarkar, as producing a revenue of 3,532,368 dams for the imperial treasury and supplying a force of 200 infantry and 20 cavalry.[7]
Geography
[edit]Baghpat is located in western Uttar Pradesh, on the east bank of the Yamuna river. It is approximately 45 kilometres (28 mi) northeast of Delhi and 48 kilometres (30 mi) west of Meerut, on the main Delhi–Saharanpur highway. Baghpat is the headquarters of Baghpat district, which is in the shape of a north–south rectangle. To the north of Baghpat district are Shamli and Muzaffarnagar district, to the east Meerut district, to the south Ghaziabad district, and to the west, across the Yamuna, Delhi, and Sonipat district in Haryana state.[3]
Demographics
[edit]As of the 2011 Census of India[update], Baghpat's 7880 households included a population of 50,310 of which 26,435 were males and 23,875 were females. 8,781 children ranged in age from 0 to 6. The literacy rate in Baghpat was 50.7%, with male literacy of 56.9% and female literacy of 43.8%. The effective literacy rate of the 7+ population of Baghpat was 61.43%, of which the male literacy rate was 68.9% and the female literacy rate was 53.1%. The Scheduled Caste population was 2,337. In 2011.[1]
Administration
[edit]Bhagpat includes three towns—a municipal council (Baghpat itself), and two notified area, or city, councils (Baraut, Khekhda and Baghpat)—within the tehsil, as well as 103 villages.[8]
The chairman of Baghpat's Nagar Palika Parishad is Riazuddin (3rd term).[9] The district magistrate is Jitendra Pratap Singh.[10] and the superintendent of police is Arpit Vijayvargiya.[11]
List of villages
[edit]Education
[edit]Notable people
[edit]- Yogesh Dhama - politician
- Satya Pal Malik - politician
- Satya Pal Singh - politician
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Census of India: Baghpat". Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original on 24 January 2022. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ a b "52nd Report of the Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities in India" (PDF). nclm.nic.in. Ministry of Minority Affairs. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ a b "About District". bagpat.nic.in. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ "इतिहास". bagpat.nic.in (in Hindi). Retrieved 2 September 2020.
- ^ The cities of Delhi. Jain, Ashok Kumar. Management Pub. Co. 1994. ISBN 978-81-86034-00-2.
- ^ Cotton, James Sutherland; Burn, Sir Richard; Meyer, Sir William Stevenson (1908). The Imperial Gazetteer of India: Argaon to Bardwān. Clarendon Press. p. 190.
- ^ Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak; H. S. Jarrett (1891). The Ain-i-Akbari. Translated by Henry Sullivan. Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal. p. 286. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
- ^ "Baghpat Tehsil – Baghpat, Uttar Pradesh". Indian Census 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
- ^ "Welcome to Nagar Palika Parishad Baghpat". Baghpat Nagar Palika Parishad. 2017. Archived from the original on 30 November 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ "Bagpat District | Land of Sugarcane | India". Retrieved 1 February 2021.
- ^ "Who's Who | Bagpat District | India". bagpat.nic.in. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Bagpat at Wikimedia Commons
Baghpat
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Name Origins and Historical Variants
The name Baghpat originates from ancient Sanskrit designations recorded in epic literature, particularly the Mahabharata, where the site is identified as Vyghraprastha (व्याघ्रप्रस्थ), literally translating to "tiger city" and attributed to the prevalence of tigers in the region during antiquity.[2] This name is linked to the Pandavas' establishment of one of their settlements, as per textual traditions, though archaeological evidence for such specific mythological nomenclature remains absent.[2] A variant spelling appears as Vyagprastha, emphasizing the "land of tigers" etymology based on faunal ecology inferred from historical accounts.[1] An alternative ancient variant, Vakyaprastha (वाक्यप्रस्थ), derives from Sanskrit roots meaning "city of delivering speeches," reflecting a lesser-attested linguistic tradition possibly tied to local oratory or assembly functions, though empirical corroboration is limited to folklore and secondary interpretations.[2] [1] The transition to the modern form Baghpat occurred during the Mughal era, when Persian-influenced Hindustani terminology reshaped place names; here, "bagh" (باغ) denotes "garden," referencing the area's orchards and cultivated landscapes, as documented in administrative records like the Ain-i-Akbari compiled under Akbar in the late 16th century.[2] [5] This evolution illustrates a causal shift from faunal descriptors in pre-Islamic texts to agrarian motifs under Indo-Persian governance, without direct inscriptional evidence bridging the variants.[1]History
Ancient and Mythological Foundations
Archaeological excavations at Sinauli in Baghpat district have revealed evidence of a sophisticated Bronze Age society dating to approximately 2000 BCE, including royal burials with intact war chariots, copper swords up to four feet long, axes, arrowheads, and pottery, indicating advanced metallurgy and warfare capabilities predating the Mauryan Empire.[6][7] These findings, confirmed through radiocarbon dating of associated organic remains, represent the earliest known chariot burials in the Indian subcontinent and suggest a hierarchical society with elite warrior classes in the Ganga-Yamuna Doab region.[6] The site's location in the fertile alluvial plains of the Yamuna-Hindon Doab provided causal advantages for early human settlement, as the Yamuna River's seasonal flooding deposited nutrient-rich silt suitable for agriculture, while its perennial flow ensured reliable irrigation and transportation routes, fostering proto-urban agrarian communities as evidenced by similar Chalcolithic sites across the doab.[8] Recent digs in nearby Tilwara village have uncovered additional Copper Age artifacts, including earthenware pots, baked bricks, beads, and copper tools dated to around 2500 BCE, reinforcing patterns of continuous pre-Mauryan occupation tied to riverine resources rather than unsubstantiated migration narratives.[9] Mythological traditions link Baghpat to the Mahabharata epic, particularly identifying the village of Barnava with Lakshagriha, the "house of lac" constructed by the Kauravas to trap the Pandavas, from which the latter escaped via a secret tunnel.[10] While the epic's historicity remains debated, lacking direct epigraphic confirmation, ASI excavations at Barnava's ancient mound in 2018 yielded pottery shards and structural remnants consistent with Iron Age settlements around 1000–500 BCE, aligning temporally with the Painted Grey Ware culture associated with Mahabharata-era sites but not verifying specific legendary events.[11] These findings indicate Barnava as a plausible early political or ritual center, potentially preserving oral memories of regional conflicts in a landscape conducive to fortified habitations near river confluences.[12]Medieval and Mughal Era
During the Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526), Baghpat emerged as a pargana in the Delhi sarkar, functioning as a frontier outpost in the fertile Ganga-Yamuna Doab region to support administrative control and defense against regional threats. Local rulers constructed defensive structures, including the Baghpat Fort, whose remnants preserve evidence of medieval fortifications amid the area's agrarian focus.[13] Sultan Firoz Shah Tughlaq (r. 1351–1388) advanced irrigation infrastructure by excavating the Western Yamuna Canal circa 1335 CE, drawing water from the Yamuna River to irrigate Doab farmlands, including those around Baghpat; this enhanced crop yields in wheat, sugarcane, and other staples, sustaining the feudal land system's revenue base through improved water management over natural river dependence.[14] Under Mughal rule (1526–1857), Baghpat retained its pargana status within Delhi Subah, as documented in the Ain-i-Akbari compiled by Abul Fazl during Akbar's reign (1556–1605), which detailed its integration into imperial revenue extraction from alluvial soils. Local chieftains and zamindars, increasingly including Jat landholders by the late 16th century, administered feudal estates, balancing alliances with Mughal officials for tax farming against sporadic regional resistances rooted in agrarian grievances.[15][16]Colonial Period and 1857 Revolt
Following the British annexation of the Rohilkhand and Doab regions after the Second Anglo-Maratha War in 1803, Baghpat came under direct East India Company administration as part of the North-Western Provinces, within the Meerut district.[17] The British implemented the Mahalwari revenue system, which assessed land taxes on village communities collectively, leading to increased revenue demands that strained local Jat and Gujar cultivators; assessments in the Upper Doab rose by up to 50% in initial settlements between 1822 and 1833 compared to Mughal-era rates, fostering resentment over cash crop impositions like indigo and cotton.[18] To bolster agricultural output and revenue stability, the British repaired the Eastern Yamuna Canal in the 1820s and completed the Upper Ganges Canal in 1854, irrigating over 1.5 million acres in the Upper Doab by 1860 and shifting cultivation toward water-intensive crops such as sugarcane, which comprised 20-30% of local acreage by the late 19th century.[19] These infrastructure developments enhanced productivity but prioritized export-oriented farming, exacerbating indebtedness among smallholders amid fluctuating global prices.[20] The 1857 revolt in Baghpat erupted amid broader sepoy mutinies in Meerut on May 10, drawing local participation from disaffected peasants and zamindars opposed to revenue exactions and cultural intrusions.[21] Shah Mal, a Jat farmer from Bijrol village, emerged as a key leader, mobilizing around 8,000 peasants by June through seizures of cattle and recruitment of escaped convicts, aiming to disrupt British supply lines to Delhi.[21] Between July 6 and 16, his forces attacked Baghpat town, looting the bazaar and destroying the boat bridge over the Yamuna River to sever communications and reinforcements between Meerut and Delhi, a tactical move reported in contemporary British dispatches as crippling logistics for weeks.[22] [23] British reprisals intensified after Shah Mal's defeat; on July 18, a force of 150 soldiers with artillery under Captain Dunlop engaged his 3,500-strong peasant army near Baraut, killing approximately 200 rebels including Shah Mal, whose head was severed and displayed as a deterrent.[22] [24] Earlier clashes on May 30-31 near Meerut inflicted notable British casualties, with graves of slain officers still visible locally.[25] Post-revolt, the British confiscated lands from participants, redistributing holdings to loyalists and auctioning rebel properties, which altered ownership patterns in Baghpat by favoring urban moneylenders and reducing Jat communal control; by 1870, over 10% of village lands in the tehsil had changed hands due to such penalties, entrenching economic disparities.[26] [27]Post-Independence Development
Baghpat district was carved out of Meerut district on September 28, 1997, as part of Uttar Pradesh's administrative reorganization to enhance localized governance and development.[1] The new district initially encompassed the tehsils of Baghpat, Baraut, and Khekra, with subsequent expansions in administrative blocks to address growing rural and semi-urban needs.[28] This separation facilitated targeted state interventions, including improved irrigation infrastructure and road connectivity, contributing to accelerated local growth metrics post-formation. Agricultural reforms post-independence, spearheaded by Chaudhary Charan Singh—who represented Baghpat as a Member of Parliament and served as Uttar Pradesh's Revenue Minister—played a pivotal role in productivity gains. The Uttar Pradesh Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act of 1950, enacted under his influence, redistributed tenancy rights to cultivators, fostering a middle peasantry class that invested in high-yield practices like tube-well irrigation and hybrid seeds during the Green Revolution of the 1960s.[29] In Baghpat, these changes correlated with sugarcane emerging as the dominant crop, supported by canal networks and groundwater extraction, leading to the district's recognition as a high-productivity area in western Uttar Pradesh by the 1980s. Inclusion in the National Capital Region (NCR) framework, as part of Uttar Pradesh's sub-regional plan, has driven urban spillover effects since the 1990s, with enhanced transport links to Delhi spurring non-farm employment and infrastructure upgrades.[30] Census data reflects this momentum: the district's population rose from 1,163,991 in 2001 to 1,303,048 in 2011, yielding a decadal growth rate of 11.87%, below the state average but indicative of stabilized agrarian expansion amid NCR proximity.[31] State-driven initiatives, such as block-level development programs, further causalized this trajectory by prioritizing flood control along the Yamuna River and rural electrification, mitigating environmental constraints on output.[1]Geography
Location and Topography
Baghpat district is situated in the western part of Uttar Pradesh state in northern India, with its headquarters at the town of Baghpat located at approximately 28°57′N 77°13′E.[32] The district covers an area of 1,321 square kilometers and lies within the National Capital Region surrounding New Delhi.[32] It shares borders with Muzaffarnagar district to the north, Meerut district to the east, Ghaziabad district to the southeast, and Sonipat and Panipat districts of Haryana to the west.[33] The topography of Baghpat consists of flat alluvial plains characteristic of the Indo-Gangetic region, featuring a gentle slope and even land surface with elevations ranging from 218 to 233 meters above mean sea level.[34] The Yamuna River forms the western boundary, exerting influence on local irrigation systems and historical settlement patterns through its floodplain deposits.[13] Predominant soil types are fertile loamy soils, containing 7 to 27% clay along with comparable proportions of silt and sand, which support intensive agriculture in the district.[35]Climate and Natural Features
Baghpat district features a humid subtropical climate (Köppen classification Cwa), marked by distinct seasonal variations. Summers from April to June are intensely hot and dry, with maximum temperatures frequently exceeding 40°C and occasionally reaching 45°C in May, driven by continental heating and low humidity prior to the monsoon. Winters from December to February bring cooler conditions, with minimum temperatures dropping to around 5–8°C at night, though daytime highs remain mild at 20–25°C; frost is rare but possible in January. The monsoon season dominates from July to September, accounting for the bulk of annual precipitation, which averages approximately 700–800 mm, primarily from southwest winds influenced by the Bay of Bengal branch of the Indian monsoon. This period sees frequent heavy downpours, with relative humidity rising above 70%, though distribution can vary, leading to occasional deficits or excesses as recorded in regional meteorological data. Post-monsoon October and pre-monsoon March–May transition periods exhibit moderate temperatures around 25–35°C with sporadic thunderstorms (locally known as loo winds in summer). Long-term trends indicate rising average temperatures aligned with broader regional warming, exacerbating heat stress.[36][37] Natural features of the district are dominated by the Indo-Gangetic alluvial plain, with the Yamuna River forming its western boundary and influencing hydrology through periodic flooding. The river's active floodplains, along with tributaries such as the Hindon and Krishni, create low-lying areas prone to inundation during high discharges exceeding 1 lakh cusecs, often due to upstream releases or excessive monsoon runoff; historical floods have breached embankments, affecting riparian agriculture. Irrigation relies on canal networks, including distributaries from the Upper Ganga Canal system and Eastern Yamuna Canal branches, which divert Yamuna waters for agricultural use but contribute to waterlogging in over-irrigated zones. Soil development in these floodplains yields fertile alluvial deposits, though erosion and siltation alter channel morphology over time.[34][38] Biodiversity remains limited, confined largely to degraded riparian zones along the Yamuna and Hindon, where sparse native vegetation such as Prosopis juliflora and riverine grasses persists amid pollution and encroachment. These areas support minimal aquatic life, with reports of low fish diversity due to contamination from industrial effluents and agricultural runoff in the interfluve region. No dedicated conservation reserves exist within the district, though state-level initiatives include tree planting along the Yamuna to stabilize banks and enhance green cover, yielding incremental improvements in localized habitats as of 2025. Broader efforts focus on pollution abatement rather than species protection, reflecting the area's intensive agrarian transformation.[39][40]Demographics
Population and Growth Trends
According to the 2011 Census of India, Baghpat district had a total population of 1,303,048, comprising 700,070 males and 602,978 females.[3][41] The district spans 1,321 square kilometers, yielding a population density of approximately 986 persons per square kilometer.[41] The decadal growth rate from 2001 to 2011 was 11.7%, lower than Uttar Pradesh's statewide average of 20.2%, reflecting relatively subdued expansion amid regional factors.[31] Of the 2011 population, 78.9% resided in rural areas (1,028,023 persons), while 21.1% lived in urban settings (275,025 persons), indicating a predominantly agrarian base with emerging urbanization near the district headquarters and towns like Baraut.[3] The overall sex ratio stood at 861 females per 1,000 males, below the national average of 943, with urban areas showing a slightly higher ratio of 880.[3] Projections based on 2001-2011 trends estimate the district's population at around 1.51 million by 2025, assuming continued low decadal growth of approximately 1.2% annually, though the absence of a 2021 census introduces uncertainty.[42] Baghpat's proximity to the Delhi-NCR region has driven significant out-migration for employment, particularly among males, tempering local growth; the district ranks among top Uttar Pradesh contributors to NCR labor inflows via road and rail networks.[43][13]| Metric | 2011 Census Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Total Population | 1,303,048 | Includes 700,070 males, 602,978 females[3] |
| Population Density | 986/km² | Based on 1,321 km² area[41] |
| Decadal Growth (2001-2011) | 11.7% | Lower than state average[31] |
| Rural Population Share | 78.9% | 1,028,023 persons[3] |
| Sex Ratio | 861/1,000 | Females per male[3] |
Religious and Caste Composition
According to the 2011 Census of India, Hindus constitute 70.41% of Baghpat district's population, totaling 917,474 individuals, while Muslims account for 27.98% or 364,583 persons; Christians represent 0.14% (1,840), Sikhs 0.04% (483), and Jains around 1% (approximately 13,000), with other religions and those not stating comprising the remainder under 1%.[44][45] This distribution reflects a Hindu-majority demographic with a substantial Muslim minority, concentrated in certain tehsils and urban pockets, where higher fertility rates among Muslims have been noted in local birth records as contributing to gradual shifts, though overall proportions remained stable from prior censuses.[45] Caste-wise, Scheduled Castes form 11.4% of the total population (about 148,700 individuals), primarily Dalit groups such as Chamars and other backward classes, while Scheduled Tribes are absent at 0%.[45] The dominant social groups include Jats, who predominate in rural areas as a landowning agrarian community comprising a significant share of Hindu households, alongside Gujjars, Yadavs, Tyagis, Rajputs, and Muslim populations; these structures underpin endogamous marriage practices and concentrated land ownership, with Jats controlling much of the fertile agricultural holdings in the district's Jat heartland.[46][45] Such caste dynamics causally shape resource allocation, with upper and backward castes holding disproportionate influence over farming output in this Yamuna basin region.[46]Literacy and Socioeconomic Indicators
According to the 2011 Census of India, Baghpat district recorded an overall literacy rate of 72.01 percent, surpassing the state average of 67.68 percent for Uttar Pradesh but reflecting a significant gender disparity, with male literacy at 82.45 percent and female literacy at 59.95 percent.[45][31] Rural areas showed slightly lower rates at 71.67 percent overall, with male and female figures of 82.69 percent and 58.86 percent, respectively.[47]| Literacy Indicator (2011 Census) | Rate (%) |
|---|---|
| Overall | 72.01 |
| Male | 82.45 |
| Female | 59.95 |
