Garhwal division
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Garhwal (Garhwali: [ɡəɽʰʋaːɭ] is one of the two administrative divisions of the Indian state of Uttarakhand.[6] Lying in the Himalayas, it is bounded on the north by Tibet, on the east by Kumaon, on the south by Uttar Pradesh state, and on the northwest by Himachal Pradesh state. It includes the districts of Chamoli, Dehradun, Haridwar, Pauri Garhwal, Rudraprayag, Tehri Garhwal, and Uttarkashi. The people of Garhwal are known as Garhwali and speak the Garhwali language. The administrative center for Garhwal division is the town of Pauri. The Divisional Commissioner is the administrative head of the Division, and is a senior Indian Administrative Service officer. As the administrative head of the division, the Commissioner is overall incharge of the 7 districts in the Garhwal region of Uttarakhand, and is aided in his duties by an additional commissioner and the district magistrates. Sushil Kumar is the divisional commissioner of the Garhwal Division since December 2021.[7][8]
Key Information
History
[edit]The Garhwal Himalayas appear to have been a favourite locale for the voluminous mythology of the Puranic period. The traditional name of Garhwal was kedarkhand means "the land of God".[9] Excavations have revealed that it formed part of the Mauryan Empire.[10]
The earliest reference regarding Garhwal and its pride spots are cited in the Skanda Purana and the Mahabharata in the Van Parva. Skanda Purana defines the boundaries and extend of this holy land.[11] It also finds mention in the 7th-century travelogue of Huen Tsang. However, it is with Adi Shankaracharya that the name of Garhwal will always be linked, for the great 8th-century spiritual reformer visited the remote, snow-laden heights of Garhwal, established a Joshimath and restored some of the most sacred shrines, including Badrinath and Kedarnath.[citation needed]
The history of Garhwal as a unified whole began in the 15th century, when king Ajai Pal merged the 52 separate principalities, each with its own garh or fortress. For 300 years, Garhwal remained one kingdom, with its capital at Srinagar (on the left bank of Alaknanda river). Then Pauri and Dehradun were perforce ceded to the Crown as payment for British help, rendered to the Garhwalis during the Gurkha invasion, in the early 19th century.[12]
The earliest ruling dynasty of Garhwal known is of the Katyuris. The Katyuri Raja of Uttarakhand (Kumaon and Garhwal) was styled 'Sri Basdeo Giriraj Chakara Churamani'. The earliest traditions record that the possessions of Joshimath Katyuris in Garhwal extended from Satluj as far as Gandaki and from the snows to plains, including the whole of Rohilkhand. Tradition gives the origin of their Raj at Joshimath in the north near Badrinath and subsequent migration to Katyur Valley in Almora district, where a city called Kartikeyapura was founded.[11]
Katyuris ruled Uttarakhand up to the 11th century and in certain pockets even after their decline. In Garhwal their disruption brought into existence 52 independent chiefs. One of the important principalities in that period was that of Parmars, who held their sway over Chandpur Garhi or Fortress.[11] Katyuris ruled Uttarakhand up to the 11th century and in certain pockets even after their decline. Kanak Pal was progenitor of this dynasty. Raja Ajay Pal, a scion of the Parmars in the 14th century is credited with having brought these chiefs under his rule.[11] After his conquest Ajay Pal's domain was recognised as Garhwal owing to exuberance of forts. It is possible that after annexing all principalities, Raja Ajay Pal must have become famous as Garhwala, the owner of forts. With the passage of time his kingdom came to be known as Garhwal.[11]
Garhwal Kingdom
[edit]
Garhwal Kingdom was founded by Parmars. Nearly 700 years ago, one of these chiefs, Ajai Pal, reduced all the minor principalities under him and founded the Garhwal Kingdom. He and his ancestors ruled over Garhwal and the adjacent state of Tehri-Garhwal, in an uninterrupted line till 1803, when the Gurkhas invaded Kumaon and Garhwal, driving the Garhwal chief into the plains. For 12 years the Gurkhas ruled the country with an iron rod, until a series of encroachments by them on British territory led to the Gurkha War in 1814. At the termination of the campaign, Garhwal and Kumaon were converted into British districts, while the Tehri principality was restored to a son of the former chief.
The British district of Garhwal was in the Kumaon Division of the United Provinces, and had an area of 5,629 sq mi (14,580 km2). After annexation, Garhwal rapidly advanced in material prosperity. IN 1901 the population was 429,900. Two battalions of the Indian army (the 39th Garhwal Rifles) were recruited in the district, which contained the military cantonment of Lansdowne. Grain and coarse cloth were exported, and salt, borax, livestock and wool were imported. Trade with Tibet was considerable. The administrative headquarters was at the village of Pauri, but Srinagar was the largest city. It was an important mart, as was Kotdwara, the terminus of a branch of the Oudh and Rohilkhand railway from Najibabad.
During the turn of the 19th century, the Gurkhas attacked Garhwal and drove the rulers of Garhwal down to the plains (Rishikesh, DehraDun). Pradyumna Shah died fighting at the battle of Khurbura. Thereafter the rulers of Garhwal took the help of the British forces in India and regained their kingdom. The rulers of Garhwal gave away 60% of their kingdom for the support the British gave them in driving back the Gurhkas.[citation needed]
During the Second World War, the Raja Narendra Shah contributed his troops and aircraft to the British war effort. In recognition for his services, the British gave him the title of "Maharaja", made him a Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India (KCSI) and knighted him. Thus his full title was Sir Maharaja Narendra Shah KCSI.[citation needed]
Geography
[edit]
The region consists almost entirely of rugged mountain ranges running in all directions and separated by narrow valleys, which in some cases become deep gorges or ravines. The only level portion of the district was a narrow strip of waterless forest between the southern slopes of the hills and the fertile plains of Rohilkhand. The highest mountains are in the eastern Chamoli district, the principal peaks being Nanda Devi 7,816 m (25,643 ft), Kamet 7,756 m (25,446 ft), Chaukhamba 7,138 m (23,419 ft), Trisul 7,120 m (23,360 ft), Dunagiri 7,066 m (23,182 ft), and Kedarnath 6,940 m (22,769 ft).
The Alaknanda River, one of the main sources of the Ganges, receives with its affluents the whole drainage of the district. At Devprayag the Alaknanda joins the Bhagirathi, and thenceforward the united streams bear the name of the Ganges. Cultivation is principally confined to the immediate vicinity of the rivers, which are employed for irrigation.
In June 2013 a multi-day cloudburst centered in the mountainous valleys of the area resulted in widespread damage and over 5,000 deaths.[13] It was India's worst natural disaster insofar as death toll since the 2004 tsunami.
Demographics
[edit]People
[edit]The majority of the inhabitants are Garhwalis. The culture of the present Garhwal is an amalgamation of influences from the indigenous population coupled with traditions superimposed by immigrants who settled in the region. A majority of the people are involved in the agriculture, tourism and the defence industry.[citation needed]
Languages
[edit]Native to 2.8 million people, Hindi has official status and is widely used in administration and education. Garhwali, spoken by about 2.3 million people as of the 2011 census, is the majority language in all but the two southern districts of Haridwar and Dehradun, where the language with the largest proportion of speakers according to the census was Hindi. Other languages with large numbers of speakers are Urdu (250,000, mostly in Haridwar and Dehradun), Jaunsari (140,000 people mostly in the Jaunsar–Bawar region of Dehradun), Nepali (86,000 speakers, with the largest concentration in Dehradun), and Punjabi (76,000, mostly in Dehradun).[14] The set of indigenous languages also includes Mahasu Pahari (found in the north-western district of Uttarkashi in the north-west), and the Sino-Tibetan languages Jad (also in Uttarkashi) and Rongpo (of Chamoli district).[15]
| Garhwal division: mother-tongue of population, according to the 2011 Indian Census.[14] | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mother tongue code | Mother tongue | District | Garhwal division | |||||||
| Uttarkashi | Chamoli | Rudraprayag | Tehri Garhwal | Dehradun | Garhwal | Hardwar | People | Percentage | ||
| 002007 | Bengali | 839 | 472 | 102 | 813 | 9,258 | 435 | 3,708 | 15,627 | 0.3% |
| 006102 | Bhojpuri | 1,128 | 1,348 | 371 | 3,427 | 14,805 | 1,020 | 3,201 | 25,300 | 0.4% |
| 006195 | Garhwali | 266,621 | 350,667 | 228,916 | 560,020 | 285,563 | 572,792 | 14,638 | 2,279,217 | 38.9% |
| 006240 | Hindi | 24,035 | 19,956 | 10,167 | 37,092 | 1,014,363 | 91,360 | 1,649,529 | 2,846,502 | 48.6% |
| 006265 | Jaunpuri/Jaunsari | 3,066 | 59 | 22 | 6,046 | 126,098 | 126 | 88 | 135,505 | 2.3% |
| 006340 | Kumauni | 425 | 3,719 | 172 | 861 | 18,597 | 4,645 | 1,805 | 30,224 | 0.5% |
| 006439 | Pahari | 7,190 | 95 | 9 | 250 | 5,199 | 21 | 417 | 13,181 | 0.2% |
| 014011 | Nepali | 7,162 | 5,394 | 1,444 | 5,876 | 56,281 | 8,289 | 1,055 | 85,501 | 1.5% |
| 016038 | Punjabi | 958 | 433 | 83 | 541 | 56,927 | 1,377 | 15,570 | 75,889 | 1.3% |
| 022015 | Urdu | 1,317 | 563 | 155 | 622 | 64,762 | 2,860 | 182,536 | 252,815 | 4.3% |
| 031001 | Bhotia (also called "Jad") | 1,124 | 6,201 | 9 | 5 | 276 | 16 | 10 | 7,641 | 0.1% |
| 115008 | Tibetan | 20 | 5 | 0 | 9 | 9,892 | 8 | 16 | 9,950 | 0.2% |
| – | Others | 16,201 | 2,693 | 835 | 3,369 | 34,673 | 4,322 | 17,849 | 79,942 | 1.4% |
| Total | 330,086 | 391,605 | 242,285 | 618,931 | 1,696,694 | 687,271 | 1,890,422 | 5,857,294 | 100.0% | |
References
[edit]- ^ "History | District Pauri Garhwal, Government of Uttarakhand | India".
- ^ "Divisional Commissioner details: Office of Commissioner Garhwal, Pauri". garhwal.uk.gov.in. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
- ^ "Report of the Commissioner for linguistic minorities: 50th report (July 2012 to June 2013)" (PDF). Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities, Ministry of Minority Affairs, Government of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
- ^ Trivedi, Anupam (19 January 2010). "Sanskrit is second official language in Uttarakhand". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 1 February 2012. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
- ^ "Sanskrit second official language of Uttarakhand". The Hindu. 21 January 2010. Archived from the original on 3 March 2018. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
- ^ "Home: Office of Commissioner Garhwal, Pauri". garhwal.uk.gov.in. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
- ^ "Divisional Commissioner details: Office of Commissioner Garhwal, Pauri". garhwal.uk.gov.in. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
- ^ "कमिश्नर गढ़वाल सुशील कुमार ने संभाला कार्यभार". Hindustan (in Hindi). 2 December 2021. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
- ^ Budhwar, Kusum (2010). Where Gods Dwell. Penguin Books India. pp. Xviii. ISBN 9780143066026.
- ^ 'Ancient Communities of the Himalaya', Page 48, Dinesh Prasad Saklani, 1998
- ^ a b c d e Rawat, Ajay S. (20 November 2002). Garhwal Himalayas: A Study in Historical Perspective. Indus Publishing. ISBN 9788173871368. Retrieved 20 March 2020 – via Google Books.
- ^ "eUttaranchal - Rediscover Uttarakhand - Tourism, Culture & People". www.euttaranchal.com. Archived from the original on 20 March 2020. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
- ^ "India raises flood death toll to 5,700 as all missing persons now presumed dead". CBS News. 16 July 2013. Archived from the original on 17 July 2013. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
- ^ a b C-16 Population By Mother Tongue – Uttarakhand (Report). Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
- ^ Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D., eds. (2019). "India – Languages". Ethnologue (22nd ed.). SIL International. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019.
External links
[edit]
Garhwal travel guide from Wikivoyage
Garhwal division
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins and Garhwal Kingdom
The Garhwal region, encompassing the western Himalayan tracts of present-day Uttarakhand, originated as a patchwork of autonomous principalities known as garhs (forts), numbering around 52, each governed by local chieftains who controlled fortified hilltops and surrounding valleys. This fragmented political landscape persisted through the medieval period, with the area's strategic position along trade routes and pilgrimage paths to sites like Badrinath fostering intermittent alliances and conflicts among rulers. Archaeological evidence from medieval strongholds indicates a network of defensive structures dating to the 14th–15th centuries, reflecting the need for protection against invasions from neighboring Kumaon and external powers.[3][2] The Panwar (Parmar) dynasty, claiming Rajput lineage from Malwa, gradually asserted dominance over these garhs, with traditional genealogies tracing origins to Kanak Pal around 823 CE, who purportedly established initial rule at Chandpur Garhi through marriage alliances. However, primary historical records for Kanak Pal remain elusive, suggesting this narrative may derive from later dynasty chronicles rather than inscriptions or contemporary accounts; firmer attestation of Panwar authority emerges in the 14th century via temple grants and land endowments.[2][4] The Garhwal Kingdom proper coalesced in the late 14th to early 15th century under Ajay Pal (r. circa 1358–1391 or late 1400s), the dynasty's most pivotal ruler, who unified the principalities through military campaigns, diplomacy, and religious patronage, conquering or subordinating over 50 garhs. Relocating the capital from Chandpur to Devalgarh and later Srinagar Garh, Ajay Pal centralized administration, promoted Shaivite institutions including temple constructions, and instituted reforms blending martial governance with scholarly pursuits, laying the foundation for a kingdom that endured until the Gorkha invasions of 1803. His reign marked the transition from feudal fragmentation to a cohesive polity, distinct from the contemporaneous Chand dynasty in Kumaon, with which Garhwal maintained rivalrous relations.[3][2][4]Conflicts and Decline
The Garhwal Kingdom endured repeated invasions from neighboring powers, including Kumaon, Mughals, Sikhs, and Rohillas, spanning nearly three centuries from the late 15th century onward, yet maintained its sovereignty under rulers like Ajay Pal and his successors.[2] These conflicts tested the kingdom's resilience but did not precipitate its fragmentation, as Garhwali forces often repelled or mitigated threats through defensive strategies and alliances.[2] The decisive blow came with the Gorkha invasion of 1803, following their conquest of Kumaon. Gorkha forces advanced in three columns against Garhwal, overwhelming King Pradyumna Shah's army of approximately 5,000 soldiers.[2] [5] Pradyumna Shah, seeking to bolster defenses, relocated to Dehradun and mobilized additional troops, but his forces proved no match for the Gorkha military superiority.[2] The Battle of Khurbura (also known as Khudbuda), fought on May 14, 1804, near present-day Dehradun, marked the kingdom's collapse. Pradyumna Shah was killed in the engagement, his son Sudarshan Shah—then a minor—was evacuated to safety by courtiers, and Gorkha troops crushed the remaining Pawar dynasty resistance.[2] [5] [6] This victory enabled Gorkha occupation of Garhwal from 1804 to 1815, characterized by severe brutality—local accounts describe widespread atrocities, with the term "Gorkhyani" enduring as a synonym for oppression and violence.[2] Prior to the invasion, Garhwal had been weakened by a severe famine in 1794–1795, which eroded economic stability and military readiness.[5] The Gorkha rule fragmented administrative control and extracted heavy tributes, accelerating the kingdom's decline. Intervention by the British East India Company during the Anglo-Nepalese War (1814–1816) expelled the Gorkhas westward beyond the Kali River in 1815, but resulted in the permanent division of Garhwal: the eastern territories became British-administered, while the western portion was restored as the princely state of Tehri Garhwal under Sudarshan Shah, with Tehri as the new capital.[2] [5] This bifurcation ended the unified Garhwal Kingdom established centuries earlier.[2]Colonial Era and Princely State
The Garhwal Kingdom fell to Gurkha forces in 1804 after a prolonged invasion beginning in 1803, placing the region under Nepalese rule until the Anglo-Nepalese War of 1814–1816.[7] The British East India Company emerged victorious, leading to the Treaty of Sugauli, signed on December 2, 1815, and ratified on March 4, 1816, whereby Nepal ceded control over Kumaon, Garhwal, and other territories to the British. In the treaty's aftermath, the British retained the eastern portion of Garhwal as the directly administered Garhwal District while restoring the western hills to Sudarshan Shah, a scion of the displaced Garhwal royal family, thereby establishing the princely state of Tehri-Garhwal in 1816.[8][9] Sudarshan Shah reigned as the first Raja of Tehri-Garhwal from 1815 to 1859, relocating the capital to Tehri and constructing the Puranadarbar Palace in 1815 to consolidate administrative control amid post-war reconstruction.[7][5] He navigated British paramountcy by maintaining internal autonomy while acknowledging suzerainty, a arrangement formalized through subsidiary alliances typical of princely states.[10] Successors included Bhawani Shah (1859–1871) and Pratap Shah (1871–1887), under whose rule the state integrated into the British-administered Punjab Hill States Agency, which oversaw 32 hill princely states from 1936 onward.[11][7] Tehri-Garhwal's governance blended autocratic monarchical rule with feudal land tenure systems, where the Raja held absolute authority over revenue, justice, and military affairs, subject to British veto on external relations and strategic matters.[10] The British exerted indirect control through political agents and influenced economic policies, notably by contracting state forests for timber extraction to support colonial infrastructure like railways and shipbuilding, beginning in the late 19th century.[12] This period saw limited modernization, with the state maintaining traditional agrarian economies while facing internal challenges from feudal obligations and occasional popular unrest against taxation and corvée labor.[10]Post-Independence Integration
Following India's independence on August 15, 1947, the princely state of Tehri Garhwal, encompassing significant portions of the Garhwal region, initially maintained autonomy under Maharaja Manabendra Shah. However, mounting internal pressures from the Praja Mandal movement, which demanded democratic reforms and opposition to the ruler's autocratic governance, accelerated integration efforts. These popular agitations, including protests and satyagrahas led by figures such as Jayanand Bharati and Anusuya Prasad Bahuguna, highlighted grievances over taxation, forced labor, and lack of civil liberties, culminating in widespread unrest by 1948.[13] Negotiations between the Maharaja and representatives of the Dominion of India, including Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel's States Department, resulted in a merger agreement signed on May 18, 1949. This instrument formalized the accession and merger of Tehri Garhwal into the United Provinces (later Uttar Pradesh) effective August 1, 1949, abolishing the princely state and integrating its approximately 11,655 square kilometers and population of over 300,000 into the Indian Union. The Maharaja received privy purse and privileges as per the agreement, while administrative control transferred to the central government, marking the end of monarchical rule in the region.[14][15][7] The British-administered Garhwal District, already part of the United Provinces since 1815, seamlessly continued under provincial governance without disruption. Post-merger, Tehri Garhwal was reconstituted as a district within Uttar Pradesh, alongside the existing Garhwal District, facilitating unified administration. This integration addressed immediate post-independence consolidation but sowed seeds for future regional demands, as the hilly Garhwal areas faced developmental disparities compared to the plains. Subsequent reorganizations, such as the 1960 bifurcation of Garhwal District into Pauri Garhwal and Chamoli districts, refined local governance but were extensions of the initial merger framework.[16]Geography
Topography and Hydrology
The Garhwal division encompasses rugged Himalayan terrain characterized by north-west to south-easterly trending mountain ranges forming spurs from the Tibetan watershed, with elevations ranging from approximately 500 meters in lower valleys to over 7,000 meters at high peaks. [17] [18] The region features narrow valleys, deep gorges, and alpine meadows known as bugyals, contributing to a varied physiography that includes snow-capped summits and glacial landscapes. [19] Prominent peaks include Nanda Devi at 7,816 meters in Chamoli district, the highest in the Garhwal Himalayas, along with Chaukhamba I at 7,138 meters, Satopanth at 7,075 meters, and Kedarnath at 6,940 meters. [20] [21] Hydrologically, Garhwal serves as the origin for major rivers of northern India, primarily fed by glacial meltwater and monsoon precipitation. The Bhagirathi River emerges from the Gangotri Glacier in Uttarkashi district, while the Alaknanda River originates from the Satopanth and Bhagirath Kharak glaciers near Badrinath in Chamoli district; these two headstreams converge at Devprayag to form the Ganga River. [21] [22] The Yamuna River arises from the Yamunotri Glacier at 6,387 meters elevation in Uttarkashi, marking another key hydrological feature. [23] Significant tributaries include the Mandakini River, sourced from the Chorabari Glacier near Kedarnath and joining the Alaknanda at Rudraprayag, and the Pindar River in the Alaknanda basin, which drains parts of Chamoli and Pithoragarh. [24] [22] These perennial rivers support downstream agriculture and hydropower, though the region's steep gradients and seismic activity influence erosion and sediment transport patterns. [25] The average elevation across Garhwal is about 2,621 meters, underscoring its high-altitude hydrological regime dominated by snow and ice contributions. [26]Climate and Biodiversity
The climate of Garhwal division varies significantly with altitude, ranging from subtropical in the lower valleys to temperate and alpine conditions in the higher Himalayan reaches. In lower elevations such as Dehradun and Haridwar districts, summers can reach maximum temperatures of up to 40–45°C in June, while winters remain mild with minima around 5–10°C; higher altitudes like Pauri and Chamoli experience cooler summers (15–25°C) and severe winters with temperatures dropping to -10°C or below, often accompanied by snowfall.[27][28] Annual precipitation, primarily from the southwest monsoon between June and September, averages 1,500–2,500 mm across the region, with peaks in August exceeding 300 mm monthly in many areas; post-monsoon and winter rainfall has shown an increasing trend in recent decades, contributing to landslides and glacial lake outbursts.[29][30][31] Garhwal's biodiversity is exceptionally high due to its steep altitudinal gradients (300–7,000 m), fostering diverse ecosystems from tropical moist forests in the foothills to alpine meadows and glaciers. Flora includes subtropical sal (Shorea robusta) and chir pine (Pinus roxburghii) forests at lower levels, transitioning to oak (Quercus spp.), rhododendron, and deodar (Cedrus deodara) dominated temperate forests, with over 100 medicinal plant species such as Aconitum heterophyllum and Rhododendron arboreum documented in restored sites.[32][33][34] Alpine zones feature endemic herbs and flowers, notably in areas like Bedni Bugyal and the Valley of Flowers UNESCO site, supporting over 500 floral species during summer blooms.[35] Fauna encompasses a range of mammals adapted to varied habitats, including Himalayan black bears (Ursus thibetanus), leopards (Panthera pardus), snow leopards (Panthera uncia) in higher elevations, musk deer (Moschus chrysogaster), bharal (blue sheep, Pseudois nayaur), and langurs (Semnopithecus).[32][28][36] Bird diversity exceeds 160 species in protected forests, with raptors like the lammergeier (Gypaetus barbatus) and endemic avifauna; reptiles and smaller mammals such as wild goats and foxes are prevalent in oak-pine zones.[34][37] Conservation efforts, including national parks like Nanda Devi and Rajaji, have preserved habitats amid threats from climate shifts and human encroachment, though regeneration status in oak forests indicates vulnerability in disturbed areas.[38][39]Administration
Districts and Governance
Garhwal Division comprises seven districts: Chamoli, Dehradun, Haridwar, Pauri Garhwal, Rudraprayag, Tehri Garhwal, and Uttarkashi.[40] These districts cover a diverse terrain ranging from Himalayan highlands to Doab plains, with a combined population of 5,857,294 as per the 2011 census and a density of 178.10 inhabitants per square kilometer.| District | Headquarters | Area (km²) | Population (2011) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chamoli | Gopeshwar | 8,030 | 391,114 |
| Dehradun | Dehradun | 3,088 | 1,696,694 |
| Haridwar | Haridwar | 2,360 | 1,890,422 |
| Pauri Garhwal | Pauri | 5,281 | 687,271 |
| Rudraprayag | Rudraprayag | 1,984 | 242,285 |
| Tehri Garhwal | New Tehri | 4,080 | 618,931 |
| Uttarkashi | Uttarkashi | 8,016 | 330,577 |
Political Representation
The Garhwal division, comprising the districts of Chamoli, Pauri Garhwal, Rudraprayag, Tehri Garhwal, and Uttarkashi, is represented in the Lok Sabha by two parliamentary constituencies: Garhwal and Tehri Garhwal. The Garhwal Lok Sabha seat, which encompasses assembly segments primarily from Chamoli, Pauri Garhwal, Rudraprayag, and Uttarkashi districts, is currently held by Anil Baluni of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), who secured victory in the 2024 general election with 432,159 votes.[43][44] The Tehri Garhwal Lok Sabha seat, covering Tehri Garhwal district and adjacent areas, is held by Mala Rajya Laxmi Shah of the BJP, reflecting the party's dominance in the region's parliamentary politics since 2014.[45] In the Uttarakhand Legislative Assembly, the division's five districts contribute 20 seats, distributed as follows: Uttarkashi (3 seats: Purola (SC), Yamunotri, Gangotri), Chamoli (3 seats: Badrinath, Tharali (SC), Karanprayag), Rudraprayag (2 seats: Kedarnath, Rudraprayag), Pauri Garhwal (6 seats: Yamkeshwar, Pauri (SC), Srinagar, Chaubattakhal, Lansdowne, Kotdwar), and Tehri Garhwal (6 seats: Ghansali (SC), Mussoorie, Pratapnagar, Tehri, Dhanaulti, Deoprayag).[46][47] In the 2022 state assembly elections, the BJP secured a majority of these seats, continuing its electoral strength in the hilly Garhwal region, where voter preferences have shifted toward the party amid regional dynamics favoring hill constituencies over plains areas.[48] The Indian National Congress, historically influential in Garhwal, has seen diminished representation in recent cycles, with the BJP achieving consecutive wins in both Lok Sabha seats as of 2024.[49]Demographics
Population Dynamics
The Garhwal division, comprising the districts of Chamoli, Pauri Garhwal, Rudraprayag, Tehri Garhwal, Dehradun, and Haridwar, had a combined population of approximately 5.53 million as per the 2011 census, with Dehradun (1,696,694) and Haridwar (1,890,422) accounting for over 65% of the total due to their plains location and urban centers.[50][51] The remaining hilly districts—Chamoli (391,605), Pauri Garhwal (687,271), Rudraprayag (242,285), and Tehri Garhwal (618,931)—collectively housed about 1.94 million residents, predominantly in rural areas with low population densities ranging from 36 to 129 persons per square kilometer.[52][53] Between 2001 and 2011, population growth in the division was uneven, driven largely by the plains districts where Dehradun and Haridwar recorded decadal increases of 33.8% and 31.9%, respectively, fueled by urbanization, industrial development, and pilgrimage tourism.[50][51] In contrast, the hilly districts exhibited stagnant or negative growth: Pauri Garhwal declined by 4.7% (from 721,325 to 687,271), reflecting net out-migration exceeding natural increase, while Chamoli and Tehri Garhwal grew at modest rates of 6.5% and 10.4%, respectively.[52] This disparity contributed to an overall divisional growth rate below the state average of 18.8%, with rural hill areas experiencing depopulation as villages lost up to 65% of residents in surveyed cases.[54] Out-migration remains the dominant dynamic, particularly from rural hilly areas, where youth seek employment, education, and better infrastructure in urban plains or metropolitan centers like Delhi and Mumbai; surveys indicate 34-52% of hill households have at least one migrant, often males aged 18-35, leading to feminization of agriculture and aging rural populations.[55] Natural constraints such as limited arable land, harsh terrain, and vulnerability to landslides exacerbate this trend, with over 565 villages in Uttarakhand's hills (many in Garhwal) losing more than half their population post-2011.[56] Temporary return migration surged during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns but reversed as economic pressures resumed, underscoring the structural push factors over pull factors in destination areas.[55] Projections for 2021-2031 suggest continued low growth in hills (under 5% decadal) unless local job creation intervenes, while plains districts may exceed 20% amid ongoing urbanization.[57]Ethnic Composition and Languages
The ethnic composition of Garhwal division is predominantly Garhwali, an Indo-Aryan group native to the Himalayan foothills encompassing districts such as Chamoli, Pauri Garhwal, Rudraprayag, Tehri Garhwal, and Uttarkashi. This population features a hierarchical caste system rooted in Hindu traditions, with major communities including Brahmins (priestly class) and Rajputs (warrior-landowning clans of purported Aryan descent, who arrived in successive migrations from the plains). Other significant groups comprise artisan and service castes, alongside Scheduled Castes, which account for 16.5% of the population in Tehri Garhwal and 17.8% in Pauri Garhwal as per 2011 census data.[58][59] Tribal populations remain marginal, constituting under 1% across most districts, including 0.1% Scheduled Tribes in Tehri Garhwal. Notable indigenous tribes include the Bhotias (also known as Shaukas), a semi-nomadic group of Tibetan-Burman origin residing in high-altitude valleys of Chamoli and Uttarkashi, traditionally engaged in trans-Himalayan trade; and the Jadhs (or Marchas), a related pastoralist community in Uttarkashi's border areas with seasonal migrations. These groups maintain distinct cultural practices influenced by proximity to Tibet, though integration with broader Garhwali society has increased post-independence.[60][58][61] Garhwali, a Central Pahari language of the Indo-Aryan family, is the primary vernacular spoken natively by around 2.3 million people in Uttarakhand's Garhwal region according to the 2011 census, serving as a marker of ethnic identity with dialects varying by valley and elevation (e.g., Jaun-sari influences in southern Tehri). Hindi functions as the official language, predominant in government, schooling, and inter-community communication, often encompassing reported mother-tongue responses that blur with Garhwali due to linguistic standardization. In tribal enclaves, minority languages such as Bhotia (a Tibeto-Burman dialect) or hybrid Sino-Tibetan forms persist among Bhotias and Jadhs, though Hindi dominance has led to their decline.[62][63]Religion and Social Structure
The religious landscape of Garhwal division is overwhelmingly dominated by Hinduism, which constitutes approximately 96-98% of the population across its districts as per the 2011 Indian census. In Pauri Garhwal district, Hindus form 96.11% of the 687,271 residents, while in Tehri Garhwal district, they account for 98.53% of the 618,931 inhabitants.[64][65] Similar high proportions prevail in other Garhwal districts like Chamoli, Rudraprayag, and Uttarkashi, reflecting the region's deep-rooted Hindu traditions with minimal presence of Islam (around 1-2%), Christianity, Sikhism, or other faiths.[66] Garhwal's religious prominence stems from its hosting of the Hindu Char Dham pilgrimage sites—Yamunotri, Gangotri, Kedarnath, and Badrinath—which draw millions of devotees annually for spiritual purification and darshan, underscoring Shaivite and Vaishnavite sects central to local worship. These sites, embedded in the Himalayan terrain, have sustained temple-centric rituals and festivals like the annual yatras since ancient times, fostering a culture where religious practices integrate with daily life and ecology.[21] Social structure in Garhwal adheres to a hierarchical caste system derived from the traditional varna framework, with Brahmins (priests and scholars) and Rajputs (warriors and landowners) occupying the upper echelons among the Khas ethnic majority. Other groups include Scheduled Castes (traditionally lower strata involved in manual labor) comprising nearly one-fifth of the population, and tribal communities such as Bhotias (trans-Himalayan traders), Jaunsaris, and Jadhs, who exhibit varying degrees of caste rigidity influenced by geography and occupation.[67][60] Marriages remain largely endogamous within castes, joint family systems persist in rural areas, and patriarchal norms govern inheritance and decision-making, though urbanization and migration are eroding some orthodoxies.[63]Economy
Primary Sectors
The primary sectors in Garhwal division, encompassing agriculture, forestry, livestock rearing, and limited mining, underpin the rural economy, with approximately 70% of the hill population dependent on agriculture and allied activities for livelihood. These sectors face constraints from steep topography, fragmented landholdings averaging under 1 hectare, and rainfed cultivation, leading to low productivity and subsistence farming. In 2021-22, the aggregated Garhwal Mandal's agriculture, forestry, and fishing subsector contributed Rs. 1,395,367 lakh to gross district domestic product (GDDP) at current prices, equating to 8.78% of total GDDP, while mining and quarrying added Rs. 169,871 lakh or 1.07%. District variations highlight higher reliance in remote areas, such as Uttarkashi (29.03% from primary sectors) and Chamoli (25.67%), compared to more accessible Pauri Garhwal (18.54%).[68][69][68] Agriculture centers on terraced rice-paddy cultivation in lower valleys and millets (e.g., finger millet or mandua, barnyard millet or jhangora), wheat, barley, pulses, and potatoes on slopes, with crops accounting for Rs. 613,701 lakh regionally in 2021-22. Horticulture gains prominence in mid-to-high altitudes, producing temperate fruits like apples (0.91 lakh MT statewide, concentrated in Uttarkashi and Chamoli), pears (1.02 lakh MT in Pauri and Tehri), plums, peaches, and walnuts, contributing over 30% to Uttarakhand's agricultural GDP and generating an annual turnover of Rs. 2,300 crore. Vegetables such as potatoes and peas thrive in Tehri and Pauri, supporting local markets amid diversification efforts to counter declining staple yields from soil erosion and migration. Livestock integration bolsters incomes through dairy (cows, buffaloes) and small ruminants (sheep, goats for wool and meat), valued at Rs. 363,460 lakh across Garhwal in 2021-22, with subsector shares like 3.82% in Pauri Garhwal.[68][70][68] Forestry dominates due to extensive cover exceeding 60% in many districts, yielding timber, fuelwood, and non-timber forest products (e.g., medicinal herbs, resins), with Rs. 414,573 lakh added regionally in 2021-22 and notable outputs like Rs. 95,280 lakh in Chamoli and Rs. 65,665 lakh in Pauri. This sector sustains ecological services and rural energy needs but contends with overexploitation and conservation restrictions. Mining remains marginal, focusing on limestone, dolomite, and magnesite extraction in Tehri and Uttarkashi, contributing under 0.2% per district (e.g., Rs. 683 lakh in Uttarkashi), constrained by environmental regulations and infrastructure deficits. Overall, primary sectors employ 47.4% of Uttarakhand's workforce, reflecting Garhwal's agrarian character despite shifts toward services via outmigration.[68][71]| District | Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing (Rs. lakh, 2021-22) | % of GDDP | Mining & Quarrying (Rs. lakh) | % of GDDP |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pauri Garhwal | 134,984 | 18.54 | 2,069 | 0.12 |
| Tehri Garhwal | 154,248 | 19.76 | 1,105 | 0.14 |
| Chamoli | 152,359 | 25.67 | N/A | N/A |
| Rudraprayag | 49,867 | 18.50 | 138 | 0.10 |
| Uttarkashi | 191,600 | 29.03 | 683 | N/A |
