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Khunti
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Khunti is the headquarter of Khunti district in the Indian state of Jharkhand. It is in South Chotanagpur division and one of the 24 districts in the Indian state of Jharkhand. The district of Khunti was carved out of Ranchi district on 12 September 2007. It is historically known as the centre of activity of the Birsa movement. As of 2011, it is the second least populous district of Jharkhand (out of 24), after Lohardaga. The district is a part of the Red Corridor.
Key Information
Geography
[edit]
5miles
Buru
River
River
River
M: municipality, CT: census town, R: rural/ urban centre, T: tourist centre
Owing to space constraints in the small map, the actual locations in a larger map may vary slightly
Location
[edit]Khunti is located at 23°04′52″N 85°16′39″E / 23.081026°N 85.277446°E.
Area overview
[edit]In the adjacent map the area shown is “undulating and covered with hills, hillocks and jungles (jungles/ forests are shown as shaded area in the map). The soil of the area is rocky, sandy and red loam upland. There are paddy fields only in the depressions. It has a gentle slope adjacent to the streams.” [1] A major part of the district is in the altitude range of 500–700 metres (1,600–2,300 ft), with up to ± 200 m for some parts.[2] In 2011, it had a density of population of 210 persons per km2. Khunti is an overwhelmingly rural district with 91.5% of the population living in rural areas.[3] Famous places in this area are Ulihatu, the birthplace of Bhagwan Birsa Munda, and Dombari Buru, the central point of his activity.[4]
Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the district. All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map.
Demographics
[edit]As of 2011[update] India census, Khunti had a population of 36,390. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Khunti has an average literacy rate of 83.12%, higher than the national average of 73.00%: male literacy is 88.65%, and female literacy is 77.39%. In Khunti, 13.09% of the population is under 6 years of age.
Politics
[edit]| District | No. | Constituency | Name | Party | Alliance | Remarks | Khunti | 59 | Torpa | Sudeep Gudhiya | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 | Khunti | Ram Surya Munda | |||||||||||
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "District Census Handbook, Khunti, Series 21, Part XII A" (PDF). Pages 9-10: Topographical and geographical features. Directorate of Census Operations Jharkhand. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
- ^ "Report on Slope, Aspect and Altitude of Khunti District, Jharkhand State" (PDF). Page 9: Physiography, Page 17: Altitude. Jharkhand Space Applications Centre, Department of Information Technology, Government of Jharkhand. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
- ^ "District Census Handbook, Khunti, Series 21, Part XII A" (PDF). Page 32: Census findings, population and its distribution. Directorate of Census Operations Jharkhand. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
- ^ "Places of Interest". Ulihatu and Dombari Buru. Khunti district administration. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
Further reading
[edit]- Ranjan, Mukesh (22 March 2022). "This Jharkhand village becomes perfect example for 'Atmanirbhar Bharat' as it builds back its water wealth". The New Indian Express.
Khunti
View on GrokipediaKhunti is a district in the South Chotanagpur division of Jharkhand, India, established on 12 September 2007 as the state's 23rd district by carving it out from Ranchi district.[1] The district covers an area of 2,535 square kilometers and is situated approximately 40 kilometers south of the state capital, Ranchi, featuring undulating uplands, lateritic soils, and rivers such as the Karo and Tajna.[1] As of the 2011 census, it had a population of 531,885, with a density of 210 persons per square kilometer, 91.55% rural residents, a sex ratio of 997 females per 1,000 males, and a literacy rate of 63.86%; Scheduled Tribes constitute 73.25% of the population, predominantly the Munda tribe.[1] The economy of Khunti is primarily agrarian and forest-dependent, with major crops including paddy and maize, supplemented by minor forest products like lac, mahua, and tendu leaves, reflecting the livelihoods of its tribal communities.[1] Culturally, the district is renowned for its Munda tribal heritage, including sacred groves known as Sarna for worship of deities like Singbonga, and festivals such as Sarhul, Mage, and Karam that involve traditional dances like Jhumur.[2] Khunti holds profound historical significance as the birthplace in Ulihatu village of Bhagwan Birsa Munda (1875–1900), the Munda tribal leader who spearheaded the Ulgulan rebellion from 1895 to 1900 against British colonial authorities and local zamindars, advocating for tribal land rights and autonomy in a movement that symbolized resistance to exploitation.[1][3][4]
History
Origins and Etymology
The name Khunti derives from a Khuntkatti village established by Setea, the eldest of eight great-grandsons of the legendary Munda ruler Madra Munda, who migrated southward from the Ranchi area to found the settlement, according to Munda oral traditions preserved in local histories.[4] Khuntkatti refers to original villages settled by Munda tribes under communal land rights, predating external land alienations and reflecting early indigenous agrarian organization in the Chota Nagpur plateau.[4] An alternative legend attributes the name to Kunti, the Mahabharata figure and mother of the Pandavas, claiming she and her sons resided in the area during exile, though this mythological connection lacks archaeological or textual evidence beyond folklore.[4] The region's origins trace to ancient tribal migrations, with Munda peoples displacing pre-existing Asur and Tirkir groups to dominate the landscape, establishing a society reliant on shifting cultivation, lac production, and fortified villages.[4] These communities maintained autonomy until British colonial incursions in the 19th century disrupted traditional Khuntkatti tenure through zamindari systems, setting the stage for later resistance movements.[4]Birsa Munda Uprising and Colonial Resistance
Birsa Munda, born on November 15, 1875, in Ulihatu village within present-day Khunti district, emerged as a leader of tribal resistance in the Chotanagpur region against British colonial policies that eroded indigenous land rights.[3] The Khuntkatti system, under which Munda tribes collectively held ancestral village lands, was dismantled by the Permanent Settlement of 1793, enabling non-tribal moneylenders and zamindars—known as dikus—to acquire lands through debt defaults and impose heavy rents, forcing Mundas into bonded labor (beth begari).[5] This land alienation, coupled with restrictions on forest access and cultural impositions including missionary activities, fueled widespread discontent among approximately 100,000 Mundas in the region south of Ranchi, including Khunti's Murhu block.[4][6] Munda responded by founding the Birsait movement, a revivalist faith blending tribal animism with opposition to Christianity and colonial authority, positioning himself as a divine messenger promising liberation.[4] After an initial arrest on August 24, 1895, for inciting unrest and a two-year imprisonment until November 30, 1897, he intensified mobilization, preaching the restoration of tribal self-rule.[3] On December 24, 1899, Munda launched the Ulgulan ("Great Tumult"), rallying thousands of followers armed with traditional weapons like bows, arrows, and axes to attack police stations, zamindar properties, and symbols of British control, declaring an end to colonial rule and the advent of "Abua Raj" (our kingdom) with tribal sovereignty over water, forests, and land.[3][5] The British response involved military deployment, culminating in the January 9, 1900, battle at Dombari Buru hill in Khunti, where forces using guns and cannons killed around 400 rebels.[3] Munda evaded capture initially but was arrested on February 3, 1900, in forests near Chaibasa while attempting to flee.[3] He died on June 9, 1900, at age 25 in Ranchi jail under circumstances officially attributed to illness but suspected by contemporaries to involve foul play.[3] The suppression dismantled the immediate uprising, yet it underscored systemic tribal grievances, influencing later tenancy protections like the Chotanagpur Tenancy Act of 1908.[5] Khunti's role as a focal point of the movement cemented its historical association with anti-colonial tribal defiance.[4]Post-Independence Developments
Khunti, originally part of Ranchi district in Bihar state following India's independence in 1947, experienced administrative continuity under the Bihar administration until the creation of Jharkhand state on November 15, 2000, which separated the region's southern districts amid long-standing demands for tribal autonomy and resource control.[7] The area's predominantly tribal population, facing persistent land alienation and displacement from post-independence development projects such as mining and industrialization, saw limited infrastructural gains, with agriculture remaining the primary livelihood and literacy rates lagging behind national averages.[8] On September 12, 2007, Khunti was formally carved out as a separate district from Ranchi to enhance local governance and address tribal-specific administrative needs, comprising six community development blocks and serving a population of approximately 531,000 as per the 2011 census.[9] This reorganization aimed to decentralize services like health, education, and irrigation, though implementation faced challenges from Naxalite insurgency, with Khunti designated as one of Jharkhand's 18 Maoist-affected districts, leading to security-focused interventions that sometimes exacerbated local distrust.[10] A significant post-independence assertion of tribal rights emerged through the Pathalgadi movement, beginning around 2016 in Khunti's Munda-dominated villages, where communities erected stone plaques (pathalgadi) invoking the Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (PESA), to declare gram sabhas as sovereign and bar non-tribal entry, outsiders' land deals, and state-led development without consent.[11] The movement, strongest in blocks like Arki and Karra, protested perceived violations of constitutional safeguards under the Fifth Schedule, including encroachments by mining firms and government schemes, but drew criticism for fostering isolationism and links to vigilante actions, resulting in over 10,000 police cases and arrests by 2018.[10] [12] Proponents argued it revived Birsa Munda's legacy against exploitation, while state authorities viewed it as anti-constitutional, highlighting ongoing tensions between tribal self-determination and centralized development.[8] Efforts to bolster infrastructure post-2007 included initiatives under the Jharkhand Urban Infrastructure Development Corporation, such as the Khunti water supply project funded by the World Bank, targeting improved access in municipal areas, and district irrigation plans under Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana to expand coverage from low baselines.[13] [14] Tribal development programs, like those in the World Bank-assisted Jharkhand Rural Livelihoods Project, incorporated Khunti for skill training and forest rights implementation, yet reports indicate uneven progress amid land disputes and cultural erosion from urbanization pressures.Geography
Location and Physical Features
Khunti district occupies the southern part of Jharkhand state in eastern India, lying approximately 40 kilometers south of the state capital, Ranchi.[9] It extends between latitudes 22°58′ N to 23°45′ N and longitudes 84°55′ E to 85°35′ E, encompassing a total geographical area of 2,611 square kilometers.[1] The district borders Ranchi to the east, Gumla to the north, Simdega to the northwest, and West Singhbhum to the south.[15] The physical landscape of Khunti forms part of the Chota Nagpur Plateau, characterized by undulating uplands, isolated hills, gently sloping plateaus, and rugged terrain with soaring cliffs and profound valleys.[1][15] Elevations in the district include numerous hillocks rising to about 700 meters above mean sea level.[16] Forests cover roughly 40 percent of the area, supporting a mix of sal-dominated woodlands typical of the region, while soils predominantly consist of lateritic, red, and sandy loam types.[1]
Climate and Natural Resources
Khunti district exhibits a tropical monsoon climate typical of the Chota Nagpur Plateau, with three distinct seasons: summer (March to May), monsoon (June to September), and winter (October to February). Summer temperatures frequently exceed 40°C, reaching maxima of up to 46°C, accompanied by low humidity, while winter lows dip to around 10–13°C.[15][17] The district falls in an unassured rainfall zone, receiving the bulk of its precipitation during the southwest monsoon, with an average annual rainfall of about 1,100 mm, though actual figures can vary significantly year-to-year, as evidenced by 1,563 mm recorded in 2021–22.[18][19][20] The district's natural resources are dominated by extensive forest cover, comprising tropical moist deciduous forests that account for a significant portion of its ecological landscape across low hills and plateaus. These forests, part of the Eastern Chotanagpur Plateau's biodiversity, support local livelihoods through non-timber products and wildlife, though deforestation pressures from agriculture and human settlement persist. Khunti lacks major mineral reserves such as coal or iron ore found elsewhere in Jharkhand, but it hosts deposits of minor minerals, including stone suitable for quarrying, with mining activities regulated under environmental guidelines.[1][21][22] Water resources include rivers like the North Koel and local streams, supplemented by groundwater in phreatic aquifers, which is generally alkaline and used for irrigation and domestic purposes amid efforts to improve recharge and efficiency through district-level plans. Forested watersheds contribute to these surface and subsurface flows, though seasonal variability and reliance on monsoon recharge pose challenges for sustainable utilization.[18][14]Demographics
Population and Composition
As of the 2011 census, Khunti district had a total population of 531,885, with 266,335 males and 265,550 females.[23] The sex ratio stood at 997 females per 1,000 males, indicating a relatively balanced gender distribution compared to the state average.[23] The population density was approximately 202 persons per square kilometer, reflecting the district's rural and forested character.[24] The decade 2001–2011 saw a population growth rate of 22.32 percent, from 434,619 in 2001, driven primarily by natural increase in tribal communities with limited out-migration.[25] Rural areas accounted for about 91.5 percent of the population, with urban residents comprising roughly 8.5 percent, concentrated in Khunti town.[1] Scheduled Tribes dominate the demographic composition, forming 73.25 percent of the population (approximately 389,626 individuals), primarily from indigenous groups such as the Munda, Oraon, and Ho, who maintain distinct cultural and linguistic identities tied to agrarian and forest-based livelihoods.[1][16] Scheduled Castes constitute about 4–5 percent (around 21,000–26,000 persons), while the remainder falls under other backward classes or general categories, estimated at 22 percent overall non-tribal and non-SC population.[16] Religiously, the district exhibits pluralism reflective of its tribal heritage: Hinduism accounts for 26.11 percent, Christianity 25.65 percent (concentrated among converted tribal groups), Islam 2.47 percent, with the balance including adherents of Sarna (tribal animism) at around 45 percent, often categorized under "other religions" in census data due to self-identification practices among indigenous communities.[23] This composition underscores Khunti's role as a stronghold of tribal spiritual traditions amid influences from missionary activities and Hindu assimilation.[1]| Demographic Category | Percentage of Population (2011) | Approximate Number |
|---|---|---|
| Scheduled Tribes | 73.25% | 389,626 |
| Scheduled Castes | ~4% | ~21,000 |
| Other/ General | ~22.75% | ~121,000 |
| Religion | Percentage (2011) | Approximate Number |
|---|---|---|
| Sarna/ Tribal | ~45% | ~239,000 |
| Hinduism | 26.11% | 138,863 |
| Christianity | 25.65% | 136,438 |
| Islam | 2.47% | 13,122 |
| Others (Sikh, Buddhist, etc.) | <1% | <500 |
