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Gurdaspur
View on WikipediaThis article may contain original research. (May 2021) |
Gurdaspur is a city in the Majha region of the Indian state of Punjab, between the rivers Beas and Ravi. It houses the administrative headquarters of Gurdaspur District and is in the geographical centre of the district, which shares a border with Pakistan.
Key Information
Gurdaspur city was named after Mahant Guriya das ji.[2]
Demographics
[edit]According to the 2011 India census,[3] Gurdaspur had a population of 2,299,026 (1,212,995 males and 1,086,031 females). There was a 9.30% increase in population compared to that of 2001. In the previous 2001 census of India, Gurdaspur District had recorded a 19.74% increase to its population compared to 1991. According to religion, Hindus made up 68.9% of the city's population, with Sikhs making up 24.8%.[4]
The average literacy rate of Gurdaspur in 2011 was 81.10%, compared to 73.80% in 2001. The male and female literacy rates were 85.90% and 75.70%, respectively. For the 2001 census, the rates were 79.80% and 67.10% respectively. The total literate population was 1,668,339, consisting of 928,264 males and 740,075 females. Sex ratio is about 895 females per 1000 males. Population Density was 649 per square km.[3]
The table below shows the population of different religious groups in Gurdaspur city and their gender ratio, as of 2011 census.
| Religion | Total | Female | Male | Gender ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hindu | 53,675 | 25,232 | 28,443 | 887 |
| Sikh | 19,345 | 9,100 | 10,245 | 888 |
| Christian | 3,931 | 1,837 | 2,094 | 877 |
| Muslim | 383 | 143 | 240 | 595 |
| Buddhist | 9 | 5 | 4 | 1250 |
| Jain | 75 | 40 | 35 | 1142 |
| Other religions | 87 | 42 | 45 | 933 |
| Not stated | 423 | 218 | 205 | 1063 |
| Total | 77,928 | 36,617 | 41,311 | 886 |
Politics
[edit]The city is part of the Gurudaspur Assembly Constituency and Gurdaspur (Lok Sabha constituency).
Education
[edit]Gurdaspur is home to a variety of elementary and secondary schools.[7][8][9] The city also hosts several degree-level and engineering colleges, providing diverse educational opportunities. Among these is Beant College of Engineering and Technology, established by then-Chief Minister Beant Singh in 1995 and upgraded to a university in 2021. Additionally, the Guru Nanak Dev University Regional Campus in Gurdaspur offers education.[10][11] The city is also home to the nationally accredited Institute of Hotel Management, Catering & Nutrition, recognised by the Ministry of Tourism, India.[12]
University
- Sardar Beant Singh State University, Gurdaspur
Colleges
- Guru Nanak Dev University, Regional Campus, Gurdaspur[13]
- Golden College of Engineering And Technology
- Government College Gurdaspur
- City Nursing College[14]
- Sukhjinder Group Of Institutes (SGI)[15]
- Pt Mohan Lal SD college for women[16]
- Gurukul Degree College[17][18]
- Institute of Hotel Management[19]
- Tagore College for Education[20]
- City Degree College, Gurdaspur[21]
Major Schools
- Delhi Public School, Gurdaspur
- Gurdaspur Public School, Gurdaspur
- Little Flower Convent School, Gurdaspur
- Army Public School, Gurdaspur
- Doon International School, Gurdaspur
- H.R.A. Lotus School, Gurdaspur
- H.R.A. International School, Gurdaspur
- Cambridge International School Gurdaspur
- Golden Sen. Sec. School, Gurdaspur
- Sukhjinder Sen. Sec. School Gurdaspur
Administrative towns
[edit]Notable people
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2025) |
- Dev Anand (Film Actor)
- Mahbub ul Haq (Economist)
- Premchand Degra (Body builder)
- Vinod Khanna (Ex-MP)[22]
- Vijay Anand (Filmmaker)
- Chetan Anand (Filmmaker)
- Guru Randhawa (Singer)
- Aditya Puri (Businessman)
- Gurpreet Ghuggi (Film actor)
- Shivil Kaushik (Cricketer)
- Ranjit Bawa (Singer)
- AP Dhillon (Singer)
- Romesh Sharma (Film actor)
- Preet Harpal (Singer)
- Jasbir Jassi (Singer)
- Nimrat Khaira (Singer)
- Avtar Singh (Olympic judo player)
- Gurmeet Bawa (Singer)
- Sunny Deol (MP)
- Surjit Singh (Field hockey player)
- Sunanda Sharma (Singer)
- Dilpreet Bajwa (Cricketer)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Punjab Police Amritsar". gurdaspur.nic.in. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
- ^ "About District". Gurdaspur.nic.in. Archived from the original on 2 August 2005. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ a b "Gurdaspur District Population Census 2011, Punjab literacy sex ratio and density". Census2011.co.in.
- ^ "Gurdaspur City Population - Gurdaspur, Punjab". Censusindia2011.com. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
- ^ "Gurdaspur City Population - Gurdaspur, Punjab". Retrieved 2 December 2021.
- ^ "C-01: Population by religious community, Punjab - 2011". Archived from the original on 5 December 2024.
- ^ "Admissions". DPSGURDASPUR. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- ^ "Delhi Public School, Gurdaspur". The Tribune. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- ^ "Little Flower Convent School, Gurdaspur | Home". www.littleflowergurdaspur.org. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- ^ "Region's Best State University for Engineering, Research, Agriculture,Graduate & Post Graduate Courses". www.sbssugsp.ac.in. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- ^ "Guru Nanak Dev University – Regional Campus Gurdaspur". Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- ^ "Institute of Hotel Management – IHM Gurdaspur". Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- ^ "GNDU News". Archived from the original on 22 February 2025.
- ^ "City Nursing College, City Hospital, Gurdaspur | Nursing College". www.cnc.org.in. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "Sukhjinder Group of Institutes [SGI], Gurdaspur: Courses, Fees, Placements". universitykart.com. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "PT. Mohan Lal S.D. College for Women". Archived from the original on 23 December 2024.
- ^ "Gurukul Degree College - GDC, Gurdaspur About Us Courses, Fees, Admission, Ranking, Placement 2024". Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "Gurukul Degree College, Gurdaspur, Punjab | About College | Courses Offered | Contact Details".
- ^ "Tagore College of Education". Archived from the original on 22 March 2025.
- ^ "Institute of Hotel Management". Archived from the original on 3 April 2025.
- ^ "City Degree College - Gurdaspur - WorldPlaces".
- ^ http://india.gov.in/my-government/indian parliament/vinod-khanna
Further reading
[edit]- Chester, Lucy P. Borders and Conflict in South Asia: The Radcliffe Boundary Commission and the Partition of Punjab. Manchester UP, 2009.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Official website
Gurdaspur
View on GrokipediaGurdaspur is an administrative district in the northern Majha region of Punjab state, India, bordering Pakistan along its northwestern frontier and encompassing the rivers Beas and Ravi within its terrain.[1][2] Covering an area of 2,610 square kilometers, it had a population of 2,299,026 according to the 2011 census, with a literacy rate of 79.95 percent, and consists of 11 development blocks and 1,124 villages.[1] The district headquarters is situated in Gurdaspur city, established in the early 17th century by a local figure named Guriya Ji, who acquired land from nearby Jat communities.[3] Formally organized as a district in April 1849 following British annexation of Punjab, Gurdaspur holds historical prominence for sites such as Kalanaur, where Mughal emperor Akbar was enthroned, and Dera Baba Nanak, a key Sikh pilgrimage center linked to Guru Nanak's lineage.[4] Its allocation to India during the 1947 partition, despite demographic complexities, secured vital headworks of canal systems and facilitated access to Jammu and Kashmir, underscoring its strategic geopolitical role.[5] The region supports agriculture, manufacturing in towns like Batala, and experiences an average annual rainfall of 1,113 millimeters, primarily from the southwest monsoon.[6][2]
History
Founding and Early Development
Gurdaspur, the headquarters town of the district, was established in the early 17th century by Mahant Guriya Das Ji, a religious figure who acquired land from local Jat landowners to develop the settlement.[3][7] The town derived its name from him, with "pur" as a common suffix denoting a place or settlement in northern Indian nomenclature.[8] This founding marked the transition from scattered agrarian villages to a more organized urban center in the Punjab region, facilitated by its proximity to rivers like the Ravi and Beas, which supported early agriculture and trade.[9] The area's pre-17th-century history reflects broader Punjab patterns, with evidence of ancient settlements tied to Vedic-era migrations and later medieval influences, though the town itself emerged distinctly under Guriya Das Ji's initiative.[10] Early development involved basic infrastructure for a growing population of Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims, centered around religious sites and markets, setting the stage for its role as a regional hub before formal district administration.[11] By the mid-18th century, the town had fortified elements, as seen in a 1712 Mughal siege of a local fort that was later repurposed as a Brahman monastery, indicating defensive expansions amid regional conflicts.[12]British Colonial Period
Following the annexation of the Punjab by the British East India Company on 29 March 1849, after the defeat of the Sikh Empire in the Second Anglo-Sikh War, the Gurdaspur region was incorporated into British-administered Punjab Province as part of the Lahore Division.[13] The area, previously under Sikh misl confederacies and Maharaja Ranjit Singh's empire, underwent administrative reorganization to facilitate land revenue collection and governance, with deputy commissioners overseeing tehsils including Gurdaspur, Batala, Pathankot, and Shakargarh.[14] British policy emphasized stability through alliances with local Sikh and Muslim elites, while suppressing potential dissent via military garrisons and intelligence networks. Economic development centered on agriculture, leveraging the fertile doab lands between the Ravi and Beas rivers for wheat, rice, and cotton cultivation. The Upper Bari Doab Canal, one of the first major post-annexation irrigation projects initiated in the 1860s, commanded over 2,710 square miles across Gurdaspur, Amritsar, and Lahore districts, transforming arid tracts into productive farmland and boosting revenue yields.[15][16] This perennial canal system, drawing from the Ravi and Upper Chenab, reduced flood risks and enabled double-cropping, though it prioritized export-oriented cash crops over subsistence farming, altering traditional agrarian structures. During the Indian Rebellion of 1857, Gurdaspur district experienced minimal disruption due to proactive British measures, including the disarmament of Hindustani sepoys—numbering fewer than in central India—and reliance on loyal Punjabi irregulars for suppression.[17] Local administrators enforced quarantines on suspect regiments and bolstered garrisons, preventing widespread mutiny; the district's Sikh and Muslim populations largely remained supportive of British authority, viewing it as a counter to potential Mughal revivalism. By the rebellion's suppression, Gurdaspur's stability reinforced Punjab's role as a key recruiting ground for British Indian Army units, with Sikhs from the region forming significant contingents in frontier campaigns.[14]Partition of 1947 and Radcliffe Award
During the Partition of India, enacted under the Indian Independence Act of July 18, 1947, the Punjab province was divided between India and the newly formed Pakistan based on contiguous religious majorities, as assessed by the Punjab Boundary Commission chaired by Sir Cyril Radcliffe. Gurdaspur district, located in the northern Punjab with a 1941 census population of approximately 757,000, recorded Muslims at 50.2 percent, Sikhs at around 27 percent, and Hindus at 21 percent, making it one of several districts with a narrow Muslim plurality rather than an overwhelming majority.[18][19] The district's tehsils showed variation: Shakargarh was predominantly Muslim (over 60 percent), while Gurdaspur, Batala, and Pathankot had mixed demographics with stronger non-Muslim presences in rural and urban pockets. The Radcliffe Award, finalized by August 12 but publicly announced on August 17, 1947, dissected Gurdaspur by assigning the Muslim-heavy Shakargarh tehsil to Pakistan—encompassing about 40 percent of the district's area—while granting the remaining three tehsils to India, thereby allocating roughly 60 percent of the land and population to the Indian side despite the district's overall Muslim edge. This outcome deviated from a strict application of demographic majorities, as initial drafts reportedly favored Pakistan based on population figures, but revisions prioritized India's strategic connectivity.[20][21][22] The primary rationale cited for the allocation was to secure India's land access to the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir via the Pathankot-Madhopur route, alongside control of essential canal headworks at Madhopur that irrigated downstream areas in Indian Punjab; without this, India risked losing viable linkage to Kashmir, which Maharaja Hari Singh had not yet acceded to either dominion. Pakistani authorities, led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, immediately decried the decision as a violation of partition principles favoring Muslim-majority territories for Pakistan, attributing it to undue influence from Viceroy Lord Mountbatten and Indian Congress leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru and Vallabhbhai Patel, though some analyses indicate it echoed Lord Wavell's earlier 1946 boundary proposals that balanced demographics with irrigation and access imperatives.[23][24][25] The award's implementation sparked ferocious communal riots in Gurdaspur, displacing hundreds of thousands and contributing to the broader Punjab violence that claimed over 500,000 lives province-wide, with non-Muslims fleeing westward and Muslims eastward in the awarded areas.[26] This linkage later enabled Indian troop deployments to Kashmir on October 27, 1947, amid the tribal incursion, solidifying the district's role in the ensuing Indo-Pakistani conflict over the region.[27]Post-Independence Era
Following India's independence and the 1947 partition, Gurdaspur district underwent profound demographic transformation as the Muslim population, which constituted a slim majority of 50.2% in 1941, largely migrated to Pakistan, resulting in their share plummeting to negligible levels by 1951.[18][28] This exodus facilitated the rehabilitation of Hindu and Sikh refugees from West Punjab, who were allotted evacuee properties and land under government programs managed by the Rehabilitation Department, enabling resettlement of agriculturists and urban displaced persons.[29][30] The district's economy, anchored in agriculture, benefited from Punjab's Green Revolution starting in the mid-1960s, which introduced high-yielding crop varieties, expanded irrigation, and increased fertilizer use, boosting wheat and rice productivity across the region including Gurdaspur.[31][32] Agricultural output grew significantly, with Punjab's agricultural GDP expanding at 5.7% annually during the peak period, transforming Gurdaspur into a key producer of wheat, rice, maize, and other crops traded through local markets.[31][10] To support technical education in this border area, the Punjab government established Beant College of Engineering and Technology in 1995, later upgraded to Sardar Beant Singh State University, fostering industrial and engineering development.[33] From the 1980s to mid-1990s, Gurdaspur, as a border district, was impacted by Punjab's Sikh militancy tied to the Khalistan movement, experiencing terrorist incidents, infiltrations, and counter-insurgency operations that contributed to thousands of civilian and security personnel deaths statewide.[34][35] Militancy subsided by the late 1990s following intensified security measures. In a notable post-militancy development, the Kartarpur Sahib Corridor opened on November 9, 2019, linking Dera Baba Nanak in Gurdaspur to Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan, allowing visa-free access for Sikh pilgrims and enhancing religious tourism and cross-border ties.[36][37]Geography
Location and Borders
Gurdaspur District occupies the northernmost position in Punjab state, India, within the Majha region, and forms part of the Jalandhar Division. It is geographically positioned between the Ravi River to the west and the Beas River to the east, spanning north latitudes 31°36′ to 32°34′ and east longitudes 74°56′ to 75°24′. The district covers a total area of 2,610 square kilometers and comprises 11 development blocks: Gurdaspur, Dhariwal, Kalanaur, Dorangla, Kahnuwan, Dinanagar, Batala, Qadian, Shri Hargobindpur, Fatehgar Churian, and Dera Baba Nanak.[38] The district's borders reflect its frontier status, sharing an international boundary with Pakistan to the northwest, primarily along segments of the Ravi River, which demarcates parts of the Line of Control in this sector. Domestically, it adjoins Pathankot District to the north, the Beas River forming a natural northeastern limit, Hoshiarpur District to the southeast, Kapurthala District to the south, and Amritsar District to the southwest. This configuration places approximately 75 kilometers of the district's western perimeter along the India-Pakistan border, contributing to its strategic significance for cross-border security and trade dynamics.[38]Topography and Rivers
The topography of Gurdaspur district consists primarily of alluvial plains, encompassing undulating upland areas and low-lying floodplains along its rivers, with a generally flat to gently sloping terrain characteristic of northern Punjab.[39][6] The upland plain exhibits a gentle southwestward slope, with elevations decreasing from 305 meters above sea level in the northeast to 213 meters in the southwest at a gradient of approximately 1 meter per 1.6 kilometers.[39] In the southern region, spanning about 128 square kilometers, the landscape becomes more dissected and undulating, with elevations varying between 305 and 381 meters above sea level.[6] Sharp bluffs, carved by river action, demarcate the floodplains from the uplands, while swampy depressions called chhambs—such as the extensive Kahnuwan Chhamb adjacent to the Beas River and the reclaimed Keshopur Chhamb—add localized wetland features to the otherwise plain terrain.[39] The Beas and Ravi rivers constitute the district's primary drainage system, both originating near the Rohtang Pass in Himachal Pradesh and flowing through Gurdaspur to deposit fertile alluvial soils in their floodplains.[39] These rivers support extensive irrigation via the Upper Bari Doab Canal network, which includes branches such as the Lahore, Kasur, and Sabhraon canals, diverting Ravi waters into tributaries like the Chakki Khad of the Beas.[39] The Ravi bounds the district on the west, contributing to seasonal flooding risks in its floodplain zones, while the Beas traverses the eastern tehsils, fostering sandy to loamy soils with low clay content (under 10%) across much of the area.[39][38]Climate and Environmental Challenges
The climate of Gurdaspur district features a humid subtropical pattern with distinct seasons: scorching summers from April to June, a monsoon period from July to September, a transitional post-monsoon phase, and cool winters from December to February. Average annual precipitation measures 1,106 mm, predominantly during the monsoon when over 70% of rainfall occurs, supporting agriculture but also contributing to seasonal waterlogging.[40] Summer highs routinely reach 40–42°C in May and June, while winter lows average 5–7°C in January, with occasional cold waves dipping further.[41] [40] Flooding poses the most acute environmental threat, driven by overflow from the Ravi River and tributaries amid intense monsoon downpours, compounded by inadequate drainage infrastructure and upstream deforestation. In the 2025 floods, triggered by rainfall 46% above normal in catchment areas, 324 villages in Gurdaspur were submerged—the highest in Punjab—resulting in over 100,000 acres of cropland devastation, livestock losses, and displacement of tens of thousands.[42] [43] Observational data indicate rising frequency and severity of such extremes, attributable to enhanced monsoon variability rather than solely long-term trends.[44] Groundwater quality degradation affects habitability and agriculture, with transboundary aquifers showing elevated nitrates from fertilizer leaching and geogenic heavy metals like arsenic and uranium. A 2021 assessment of five blocks revealed unsuitable levels for drinking in multiple sites due to total dissolved solids exceeding 500 mg/L and nitrate concentrations above WHO limits in agrarian zones.[45] [46] While depletion is less severe than in arid Punjab districts—owing to recharge from higher rainfall—overpumping for paddy cultivation has categorized some blocks as semi-critical, risking salinization.[2] Agricultural runoff exacerbates surface water eutrophication in rivers, though industrial pollution remains minimal given the district's rural profile.[47]Demographics
Population Trends
The population of Gurdaspur district underwent dramatic shifts following the 1947 Partition of India, as the district—allocated to India despite a slim Muslim majority of 51.1% in the 1941 census—saw the exodus of most of its Muslim residents to Pakistan alongside an influx of Hindu and Sikh refugees from western Punjab districts now in Pakistan, comprising roughly 34% of the district's post-partition inhabitants.[48] This displacement contributed to rapid early growth in the initial post-independence decades, driven by refugee resettlement and natural increase in a predominantly agrarian society. Decadal growth rates have since decelerated, reflecting broader Punjab trends of declining fertility and emigration for employment. The 1981 census recorded a population of 1,513,435.[49] By 1991, this rose to approximately 1,757,000, followed by 2,103,455 in 2001 (a 19.74% decadal increase) and 2,299,026 in 2011 (a 9.30% increase from 2001).[50]| Census Year | Population | Decadal Growth Rate (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1981 | 1,513,435 | - |
| 1991 | ~1,757,000 | ~16 |
| 2001 | 2,103,455 | 19.74 |
| 2011 | 2,299,026 | 9.30 |
Religious and Linguistic Composition
According to the 2011 Indian census, Gurdaspur district's population of 2,298,323 exhibited a religious composition dominated by Hindus and Sikhs, with Hindus comprising 1,074,332 individuals or 46.74%, and Sikhs numbering 1,002,874 or 43.64%. Christians formed the third-largest group at 176,587 persons or 7.68%, reflecting missionary activities since the 19th century and concentrations in tehsils like Batala and Pathankot. Muslims accounted for 27,667 or 1.20%, while other religions and those not stating their religion totaled approximately 16,863 or 0.73%.[53]| Religion | Population | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Hindu | 1,074,332 | 46.74% |
| Sikh | 1,002,874 | 43.64% |
| Christian | 176,587 | 7.68% |
| Muslim | 27,667 | 1.20% |
| Others/Not stated | 16,863 | 0.73% |
