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Burripalem is an area of Tenali in Guntur district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It is located in Tenali, Tenali mandal of Tenali revenue division.[2] It forms a part of Andhra Pradesh Capital Region.[5]

Key Information

Geography

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Demographics

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As of 2011 census of India, Burripalem had a population of 3,306. The total population constitute, 1,639 males and 1,667 females —a sex ratio of 1017 females per 1000 males. 262 children are in the age group of 0–6 years, of which 145 are boys and 117 are girls. The average literacy rate stands at 73.75% with 2,245 literates, significantly higher than the state average of 67.41%.[4][7]

Government and politics

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Burripalem gram panchayat is the local self-government of the village.[1] There are 12 wards, each represented by an elected ward member.[8] The sarpanch is elected indirectly by the ward members; the seat is presently held by Pemmasani Purushotama Rao.[when?][9] The village is administered by the Tenali Mandal Parisha at the intermediate level of panchayat raj institutions.[6]

Transport

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Tenali-Burripalem Road

The village has road connectivity to Tenali by the Tenali–Burripalem road.

This village was adopted by actor Mahesh Babu after his film Srimanthudu portrayed the concept of adoption of villages.

The village is 10 km from Tenali railway station.[10][11]

Notable people

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Chandra Sekhar Pemmasani, Minister of State for Rural Development and Communications, Member of Parliament for Guntur, Founder and CEO of UWorld (USMLEWorld LLC)[12]

Krishna, a Tollywood actor and ex-member of Indian Parliament who hails from Burripalem, and his son Mahesh Babu, also a Tollywood actor, adopted this village in 2015. They aim to provide clean drinking water, drainage and surfaced roads.[13]

Education

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The primary and secondary school education are imparted by government, aided and private schools, under the School Education Department of the state.[14][15] The total number of students enrolled in primary, upper primary and high schools of the village is 236.[16]

Zilla Parishad High School is a Zilla Parishad funded school, which provides secondary education in the village.[17]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Burripalem is a village situated in Tenali mandal of Guntur district in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, approximately 8 km from the town of Tenali.[1] As of the 2011 Census of India, the village had a total population of 3,306, comprising 1,639 males and 1,667 females, with a literacy rate of 73.8%.[2] Burripalem is the birthplace of the acclaimed Telugu film actor Krishna (Ghattamaneni Siva Rama Krishna Murthy), born on 31 May 1942, who rose to prominence as a leading star in Telugu cinema during the 1960s to 1980s and was known for his contributions to over 300 films.[3] In 2015, Krishna's son, prominent actor Mahesh Babu, announced plans to adopt the village—his ancestral home—under a development initiative inspired by his film Srimanthudu, leading to investments exceeding ₹2.14 crore for infrastructure improvements including roads, an Anganwadi centre, and other community facilities by 2016.[4][5]

History

Early Settlement and Development

Burripalem originated as a small agrarian village in the Tenali mandal of Guntur district, within the fertile western delta system of the Krishna River, where alluvial soils facilitated rice cultivation and supported early rural settlements by Telugu-speaking communities. Historical documentation remains limited, with no archaeological evidence of pre-colonial occupation identified in available records, reflecting its status as one of many unremarkable hamlets in the region under feudal land systems.[6] Local traditions, preserved in temple histories, attribute the village's founding to a land grant by the zamindar Rajavasi Venkatadri Naidu—likely referring to the historical figure Vasireddy Venkatadri Naidu, a regional ruler in the late 17th to early 18th century—to a woman named Burremma, from which the name Burripalem (meaning "Burremma's settlement") may derive.[7][6] These accounts, while rooted in oral and religious narratives rather than corroborated primary documents, align with the prevalent zamindari practice of distributing lands to dependents or devotees in coastal Andhra, fostering clustered agricultural villages tied to local patronage networks. Following British acquisition of the Northern Circars in 1788, Burripalem was incorporated into the Madras Presidency's administrative structure, with land revenue systems formalized via 19th-century surveys that measured fields, assessed cultivable extents, and established ryotwari tenures directly with individual farmers, replacing earlier zamindari intermediaries in parts of Guntur district.[8][9] These surveys, emphasizing precise mapping and taxation based on soil productivity, marked the transition to colonial governance, enhancing record-keeping but yielding scant specific details on Burripalem's pre-existing development.[9]

Post-Independence Changes

Following India's independence in 1947, Burripalem experienced agrarian restructuring through land reforms enacted in Andhra State, which abolished the zamindari system by 1954, eliminating intermediaries and enabling direct tenancy rights for cultivators in Guntur district's delta regions.[10] The Andhra Pradesh Land Reforms (Ceiling on Agricultural Holdings) Act of 1973 further imposed holding limits of 10-54 acres depending on soil classification, redistributing approximately 2.18 lakh acres statewide to landless households by the 1980s, which in coastal areas like Guntur promoted smaller holdings and tenant protections.[11][12] The formation of Andhra Pradesh on November 1, 1956, by merging Andhra State with Telugu districts from Hyderabad State standardized policies, facilitating irrigation expansions such as the Prakasam Barrage upgrades in the 1950s-1960s, which irrigated over 1.2 million acres in the Krishna delta and supported Burripalem's rice-centric farming.) The Green Revolution's adoption of high-yielding varieties, fertilizers, and mechanization from the late 1960s shifted local agriculture toward commercial crops like cotton and chilies, increasing productivity but raising input costs and chemical dependency in Guntur.[13][14] Administrative decentralization arrived with the 1985 mandal system, which on May 25 replaced taluks with 685 smaller units for localized revenue and development functions; Burripalem fell under Tenali mandal, enabling Mandal Praja Parishads to handle planning, roads, and welfare more responsively than prior taluk structures.[15] This reform, under Andhra Pradesh Act 31 of 1986, improved oversight of village-level schemes without altering land ownership patterns.[16]

Geography

Location and Physical Features

Burripalem is a village located in Tenali mandal of Guntur district, Andhra Pradesh, India, at geographic coordinates 16°14′23″N 80°42′13″E. It forms part of the Tenali revenue division and lies within the administrative boundaries of the mandal, situated in the eastern coastal plain region influenced by the Krishna River delta. The village covers an area of 702 hectares.[17] The terrain is low-lying with an elevation of approximately 10 meters above sea level, characteristic of the deltaic landscape. Soils in the Tenali division, including areas around Burripalem, exhibit varied textures with sand content ranging from 20.6% to 92.0%, silt from 3.0% to 15.0%, and clay from 4.0% to 65.5%, predominantly alluvial and loamy to sandy loam types suited to the regional geology. Guntur district's predominant soil classification aligns with loamy to sandy loam formations derived from deltaic deposits.[18][19] Burripalem is positioned approximately 4 km from Tenali, the mandal headquarters and nearest urban center, with road connectivity via Tenali-Burripalem Road. It is about 35-43 km from Guntur city, the district headquarters. The proximity to Krishna River canals, which traverse the Tenali area, underscores its placement in the fertile delta zone.[20][21][22][23]

Climate and Environmental Conditions

Burripalem experiences a tropical savanna climate characterized by high temperatures year-round and a pronounced wet season dominated by the southwest monsoon from June to September. Average annual rainfall in the surrounding Guntur district measures approximately 831 mm, with the majority occurring during the monsoon period when monthly totals can exceed 150 mm.[24] Temperatures typically range from a minimum of 16°C in winter months (December to February) to maxima of 45°C during the hot season (April to June), with mean annual temperatures around 28°C.[24][25] The region's environmental conditions are influenced by its proximity to the Krishna River delta, contributing to periodic flooding risks, particularly during heavy monsoon discharges or post-cyclone events. Guntur district, including areas near Burripalem, falls within zones of moderate to high flood hazard as mapped by satellite data from 2000 to 2020, with inundation linked to Krishna River overflows affecting low-lying mandals like Tenali.[26] Additionally, as part of coastal Andhra Pradesh, the locality faces vulnerability to cyclonic storms originating in the Bay of Bengal, which can exacerbate rainfall and wind impacts despite its inland position roughly 30 km from the coast.[27] Historical records indicate cyclone-induced disruptions in Guntur, including heavy rains and associated flooding, underscoring the area's exposure to such tropical disturbances.[28]

Demographics

Population Composition

As per the 2011 Census of India, Burripalem had a total population of 3,306, comprising 1,639 males and 1,667 females, yielding a sex ratio of 1,017 females per 1,000 males.[29][2] The population resided across 954 households, resulting in an average household size of approximately 3.46 persons.[2] Burripalem remains a fully rural village with no urban population component, reflecting minimal urban influence and a urbanization rate below 20% in its mandal context.[29] The demographic composition features a significant proportion of Scheduled Castes (SC) at 36% of the total population (approximately 1,190 individuals) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) at 3.9% (129 individuals), with the remainder consisting primarily of other castes and communities.[2][29] Residents are predominantly Telugu speakers, consistent with the linguistic profile of Guntur district in Andhra Pradesh.[30] The population is overwhelmingly Hindu, aligning with the religious majority in rural Andhra Pradesh villages where Hinduism exceeds 90% adherence.

Socio-Economic Indicators

As per the 2011 census, Burripalem's overall literacy rate stands at 73.75%, exceeding the Guntur district average of 67.4% and the state average of 67.02%.[29][31] Male literacy is recorded at 77.78%, compared to 69.87% for females, reflecting a gender disparity of nearly 8 percentage points that aligns with broader rural patterns in Andhra Pradesh where female education lags due to early marriage and household responsibilities.[29] The workforce participation rate in Burripalem is approximately 48.8%, with 1,614 individuals engaged in economic activities out of a total population of 3,306. Among workers, 88.91% are main workers, while the remainder are marginal. Agriculture dominates employment, accounting for about 71% of workers through 303 cultivators and 843 agricultural laborers, underscoring the village's reliance on farming amid limited diversification into non-farm sectors like household industries (16 workers) or other occupations (273 workers).[29][2] This structure contributes to seasonal migration patterns, as residents seek supplementary income in nearby urban centers such as Tenali and Guntur when agricultural yields falter. Access to basic amenities has seen incremental improvements via post-2000s government initiatives, including rural electrification drives and drinking water programs like the Jal Jeevan Mission extensions, which have addressed prior shortages in potable water supply for households.[32] These efforts have enhanced living standards, though challenges persist in consistent sanitation and power reliability during peak agricultural seasons.[29]

Economy

Agricultural Base

Burripalem's agricultural economy is predominantly based on the cultivation of paddy, tobacco, and chili, which thrive in the fertile alluvial soils of the Krishna River delta region within Guntur district.[33] These crops form the backbone of local farming, with paddy grown as the primary staple during the kharif season, while tobacco and chili are key cash crops suited to the district's black cotton and red soils enhanced by delta sedimentation.[33] Guntur district, encompassing Burripalem mandal, accounts for significant shares of Andhra Pradesh's production in these commodities, including over 30% of India's chili output from the state.[34] Irrigation in Burripalem relies heavily on canal networks fed by the Krishna River, particularly through the Prakasam Barrage (formerly Krishna Anicut), which supplies water to the Krishna delta ayacut covering parts of Guntur.[35] This system supports multiple cropping cycles, mitigating some risks from variable rainfall, though supplemental dependence on monsoon inflows persists for reservoir recharge and kharif paddy transplantation.[36] Land holdings in the area are characteristically small-scale, with Guntur district's average operational holding size at 0.79 hectares, where small and marginal farmers (under 2 hectares) constitute 92.3% of the 8.41 lakh total holdings.[37] This fragmentation influences mechanization levels and input efficiency, often leading to reliance on family labor and seasonal migrant workers during peak planting and harvest periods. Crop yields vary by season and input use, but district-level data from recent agricultural reports show paddy productivity averaging around 5-6 tons per hectare under irrigated conditions, bolstered by hybrid varieties and fertilizer application.[33] Tobacco yields in Guntur's light soils reach 1.5-2 tons per hectare for flue-cured varieties, while chili production benefits from the region's dry spells post-monsoon, yielding 2-3 tons per hectare of dry pods in commercial farms.[38] Monsoon variability, including delays or excess rains, disrupts these cycles, as seen in 2022 when untimely precipitation damaged harvested paddy and chili in Guntur, underscoring ongoing vulnerability despite irrigation infrastructure.[39]

Modern Economic Initiatives

In 2016, Telugu film actor Mahesh Babu adopted Burripalem through the Mahesh Babu Foundation, launching infrastructure development projects valued at approximately ₹2.14 crore to address local needs.[40] These efforts focused on constructing roads, drainage systems, and computer labs in government schools, alongside modernization of basic amenities.[41] The foundation's ongoing work has extended to building libraries and Anganwadi centers, enhancing community facilities that facilitate daily economic activities such as agriculture and small-scale trade.[42] By improving access to education and sanitation, these private initiatives have supported resident productivity and reduced migration pressures, though measurable economic impacts remain tied to broader regional tobacco processing in nearby Guntur without specific agro-unit establishments in Burripalem as of 2023.[42] Philanthropic funding has complemented government efforts, with projects implemented incrementally through 2018.[43]

Governance and Administration

Local Government Structure

Burripalem operates under the Gram Panchayat system as the foundational tier of rural local governance in Andhra Pradesh, with the panchayat directly administering village-level affairs such as infrastructure maintenance, water supply, sanitation, and dispute resolution.[1] The elected sarpanch, chosen through periodic panchayat elections under the Andhra Pradesh Panchayat Raj Act, 1994, leads the body, supported by ward members representing specific village wards.[44] This structure aligns with the three-tier Panchayati Raj framework, where the Burripalem Gram Panchayat reports to the intermediate Tenali Mandal Parishad for coordination on mandal-wide development projects.[45] As a designated revenue village within Tenali mandal, Burripalem's administrative functions integrate with the Guntur district collectorate, which handles revenue collection, land records, and oversight of local fiscal allocations through the district's revenue division.[44] The village's pincode, 522301, supports integration with state postal and revenue services, enabling efficient delivery of government documents and subsidies.[46] Panchayat elections occur every five years, with the most recent cycle in 2021 aligning statewide rural polls, ensuring democratic renewal of leadership amid varying voter turnout influenced by local demographics.[47] Fiscal operations emphasize implementation of central and state rural schemes, notably the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), under which the Burripalem Gram Panchayat (code 0207032015) executes works like canal renovations from Sivaluru Drain to Polimera Varaku.[48] In the 2024-2025 financial year, the panchayat facilitated employment for households through 2,785 person-days in early phases, reflecting moderate uptake tied to agricultural seasonality and labor demand, though exact participation rates vary by fiscal quarter per official muster rolls.[49] Budgets derive from state allocations and central grants, prioritizing verifiable wage payments and asset creation over discretionary spending, with transparency enforced via public portals.[50]

Political Dynamics and Representation

Burripalem village, situated in Tenali mandal of Guntur district, falls under the Tenali Assembly constituency for state legislative representation and the Guntur Lok Sabha constituency for parliamentary elections.[21][20] These affiliations position local political dynamics within broader regional contests dominated by the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and Yuvajana Sramika Rythu Congress Party (YSRCP), with voting patterns reflecting agrarian concerns such as water allocation and rural development.[51] In the 2019 Andhra Pradesh Assembly elections, the YSRCP secured the Tenali seat with Annabathuni Siva Kumar polling 94,495 votes against the TDP's Alapati Rajendra Prasad's 76,846 votes, indicative of YSRCP's statewide sweep amid promises of welfare schemes.[52] However, the 2024 elections marked a decisive shift, with the TDP-led alliance (including Jana Sena Party) reclaiming the seat; Nadendla Manohar of JSP defeated the YSRCP incumbent Siva Kumar by securing 123,961 votes to 70,425, mirroring TDP's resurgence in coastal Andhra districts driven by anti-incumbency against YSRCP governance.[53][54] This reversal aligned with TDP's broader assembly gains, capturing 135 of 175 seats statewide.[55] At the parliamentary level, Guntur Lok Sabha mirrored these trends, transitioning from YSRCP control in 2019 to TDP victory in 2024, where Chandra Sekhar Pemmasani, originating from Burripalem, defeated the incumbent by a substantial margin as part of the National Democratic Alliance's regional dominance.[56] Pemmasani's win, followed by his induction as Union Minister of State for Rural Development and Panchayati Raj on June 9, 2024, exemplifies how local rural constituencies can propel representatives to national roles, emphasizing TDP's strategy of fielding high-profile candidates to address irrigation and infrastructure deficits in mandal-level politics.[57][58] Mandal politics in Burripalem often centers on irrigation disputes tied to Krishna River dependencies, influencing voter preferences toward parties promising canal enhancements and water equity, though specific panchayat-level outcomes remain embedded in Tenali's aggregate results without isolated village data.[51] These dynamics underscore causal links between electoral promises on resource management and shifts from YSRCP's 2019 hold to TDP's 2024 mandate, prioritizing verifiable development over entrenched incumbency.

Infrastructure and Connectivity

Transportation Networks

Burripalem connects to regional transport hubs primarily through road links, with the Tenali-Burripalem Road serving as a key arterial route to Tenali town, approximately 5-10 kilometers away.[20] Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) provides bus services from nearby stops, facilitating travel to Tenali and Guntur, with the Tenali APSRTC Bus Station acting as the primary depot for these routes.[20] Private bus options are also available within the village limits.[17] Rail connectivity relies on Tenali Junction railway station, situated 5-10 kilometers from Burripalem, which handles regional passenger and freight trains on the South Central Railway network.[20] Chinnaravuru railway station offers an additional nearby access point for local services.[20] Road networks extend from Tenali to state highways, enabling access to Vijayawada, about 40 kilometers north, where proximity to National Highway 16 supports longer-distance travel along the eastern coastal corridor.[59] Internal village roads remain predominantly local, with connectivity focused on agricultural and residential access rather than high-volume traffic.[20]

Education and Health Facilities

Burripalem's education infrastructure primarily consists of government-operated primary and upper primary schools managed under the Tenali mandal education department. The Mandal Parishad Primary School (MPPS) Burri Palem serves students in grades 1 through 5, focusing on foundational education in a co-educational setting without attached upper grades or secondary facilities.[60] Enrollment data for these institutions reflects modest local access, though specific figures remain tied to periodic government surveys rather than real-time reporting. Literacy initiatives, including state-driven programs, have supported a village literacy rate of 73.8% as recorded in the 2011 Census of India, exceeding the district average of 60.6% at the time.[2] Private educational options supplement public schools, with institutions like Narayana English Medium School on Burripalem Road offering instruction from grades 1 to 10, emphasizing competitive exam preparation in a co-educational environment.[61] However, vocational training remains underdeveloped locally, with no dedicated centers identified in government listings, leading residents to pursue such programs at district-level facilities in Guntur or Tenali. Higher secondary and collegiate education similarly depends on external access, as Burripalem lacks autonomous colleges or specialized institutes. Health facilities in Burripalem are basic and decentralized, relying on sub-centers for primary care and Anganwadi centers for maternal and child welfare services under the Integrated Child Development Services scheme. These outposts handle routine vaccinations, nutrition monitoring, and minor ailments but lack advanced diagnostics or inpatient capabilities. The nearest full-service hospital is in Tenali, approximately 10-15 km away, where residents access comprehensive care through government or private providers.[20] No dedicated primary health center operates within the village boundaries, underscoring dependence on mandal-level networks for secondary referrals.

Notable Individuals

Political Figures

Dr. Chandra Sekhar Pemmasani, born on March 7, 1976, in Burripalem village, Tenali mandal, Guntur district, Andhra Pradesh, emerged as a prominent political figure following his successful transition from entrepreneurship to public office.[57] An NRI physician who founded the online education platform UWorld in the United States, Pemmasani returned to India to contest the 2024 Lok Sabha elections on a Telugu Desam Party (TDP) ticket from the Guntur constituency, securing victory with 851,020 votes against his nearest rival.[62] His electoral success marked a significant achievement for Burripalem, highlighting the village's connection to national politics through his agricultural family roots and professional expertise in education and healthcare.[63] In June 2024, Pemmasani was appointed Minister of State for Rural Development and Communications in the Narendra Modi-led Union Council of Ministers, leveraging his background to advocate for rural infrastructure and digital connectivity initiatives.[64] His role emphasizes policy implementation in areas such as panchayati raj strengthening and telecommunications expansion, aligning with TDP's focus on developmental governance in Andhra Pradesh.[65] Pemmasani's contributions include securing over ₹955 crore in central funds for Guntur constituency development post-election, targeting rural economic enhancement.[66] Local political leadership in Burripalem operates through the gram panchayat structure, with elected sarpanches overseeing village administration, though specific tenures and impacts of recent leaders remain undocumented in public records beyond routine developmental oversight. No other nationally prominent political figures from Burripalem have been identified in verifiable sources.

Cultural and Entertainment Personalities

Ghattamaneni Siva Rama Krishna Murthy, professionally known as Krishna, was born on May 31, 1943, in Burripalem, a village in Guntur district, Andhra Pradesh, to Veeraraghavayya Chowdhary and Nagaratnamma Ghattamaneni.[67] A pioneering figure in Telugu cinema, he debuted as a lead actor in the 1966 film Paradesi and went on to star in over 340 films, earning the moniker "Superstar Krishna" for his versatile portrayals in action, drama, and social genres that shaped commercial Telugu filmmaking from the 1970s onward.[68] [69] Krishna also directed films such as Meena (1977) and produced under his Padmalaya Studios banner, which released over 100 movies and introduced innovative production techniques to the industry.[70] His contributions extended to mentoring emerging talent and promoting rural narratives in cinema, with films like Alluri Seetarama Raju (1974) drawing from historical Andhra events and achieving commercial success through pan-Indian appeal. Krishna received four Filmfare Awards South for best actor and the Raghupathi Venkaiah Award in 1987 for lifetime achievement in Telugu cinema.[71] He passed away on November 15, 2022, in Hyderabad following a brief illness, prompting widespread tributes in Burripalem where he was remembered for blending stardom with local ties.[72] [71] No other prominent figures in music, visual arts, or broader cultural fields originating from Burripalem have achieved comparable national recognition in available records.

References

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