Ludhiana district explained

Ludhiana district
Settlement Type:District of Punjab
Coordinates:30.8833°N 126°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: India
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Punjab
Seat Type:Headquarters
Seat:Ludhiana
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Rank:1 (out of 23)
Area Total Km2:3767
Population Total:3,498,739
Population As Of:2011
Population Rank:1 (out of 23)
Population Density Km2:975
Demographics Type1:Languages
Demographics1 Title1:Official
Demographics1 Info1:Punjabi
Timezone1:IST
Utc Offset1:+5:30
Blank1 Name Sec1:Sex ratio
Blank1 Info Sec1:1000/873 /
Blank2 Name Sec1:Literacy
Blank2 Info Sec1:73.5%
Blank3 Name Sec1:Lok Sabha constituency
Blank3 Info Sec1:1
Blank4 Name Sec1:Vidhan Sabha constituency
Blank4 Info Sec1:14

Ludhiana district is one of the 23 districts in the Indian state of Punjab. It is Punjab's largest district by both area and population. Ludhiana, the largest city in Punjab, is the district headquarters.

The main industries are bicycle parts and hosiery. Ludhiana is a hub of ladies footwear manufacturing, with around 10,000 small-scale units. The district is made up of seven tehsils, seven sub-tehsils and twelve development blocks.[1]

Ludhiana district has the highest HDI in Punjab at 0.761 (2004 UNDP).[2]

History

Ludhiana gets its name from the Lodhi Dynasty, which is believed to have founded the city in 1480. During the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar, the area formed part of the Sarkar of Sirhind. Chakar, Talwandi Rai in 1478 AD, Raikot in 1648 AD and Jagraon in 1688 AD were founded by the Rai family of Raikot.[3] It is said that one of the Rai rulers of Raikot, named Rai Kalha (chaudhary of Raikot and Jagraon), gave sanctuary to Guru Gobind Singh in 1705 in the aftermath of the Battle of Chamkaur and Uch-da-Peer (meaning "saint of Uch") episode of the tenth Guru's life, when the Mughal armies were in hot pursuit of the religious leader.[4] In thanks for this, the Guru gifted Ganga Sagar (a metal surahi) and a sword with an inscribed blade to the Rai dynasty of Raikot, known as the Raikot sword.

In the latter period of Mughal rule the western part of the district was leased to the Rais of Raikot. By the early eighteenth century, they had become semi-independent of the Mughals. The villages in Ludhiana district remained independent and under the rule of local powerful village Sikh chieftains, from 1707 to 1835. In 1747 Ahmad Shah Durrani invaded and battled the imperial army near Khanna. Although the Mughals were able to stop Ahmad Shah, his subsequent invasions weakened the Mughals, which allowed the Rais to take control of Ludhiana town in 1760.[5]

During the reign of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, Ludhiana became an important British cantonment. Initially, in 1805, Ranjit Singh occupied Ludhiana. However, in 1809, the British decided to curb his advance eastward and sent troops to confront him. Ranjit Singh was forced to sign the treaty of 'perpetual friendship' with the British, which confined his activities to the right bank of the Sutlej. British troops were permanently stationed in Ludhiana and the Cis-Sutlej states came under British protection.

According to the 1901 census, Hindus numbered 269,076, or 40% of the total; Muslims, 235,937, or 35%; and Sikhs, 164,919, or 24%.[6] The majority of the Muslim population within the district migrated to Pakistan as a result of the communal violence following the Partition of India.[7]

Geography

Ludhiana is a centrally located city of Punjab, which is on the Grand Trunk Road from Delhi to Amritsar at latitude 30.55 North and longitude 75.54 East in Northern India.

Ludhiana is the most centrally located district in the Malwa region of the state of Punjab. For administrative purposes, it has been placed in the Patiala Division. It lies between north latitude 30°-34' and 31°-01' and east longitude 75°-18' and 76°-20'.

It is bounded on the north by the Satluj River, which separates it from Jalandhar district. The river forms its northern boundary with Hoshiarpur district. On other sides it shares common boundaries with Rupnagar district in the east, Moga district in the west, and Barnala, Sangrur and Patiala districts in the south and southeast, respectively.[1]

Topography

The topography of the district is a typical representative of an alluvial plain. It owes its origin to the aggravation work of the Satluj River. The alluvium deposited by the river has been worked over by the wind, which gave rise to a number of small dunes and sand mounds. Most of these dunes have been levelled by farmers.

The district can be divided into the flood plain of the Satluj and the upland plain.

Climate

Ludhiana features a semi-arid climate under the Köppen climate classification, with three defined seasons; summer, monsoon, and winter. This climate is characterised by dryness except for a brief spell of monsoon season, a very hot summer, and a bracing winter. The cold season is from mid-November to the early part of March. The succeeding period until the end of June is the hot season. July, August and half of September constitute the southwest monsoon. The period of mid-September to about the middle of November may be termed as a post-monsoon or transitional period.

June is generally the hottest month. Hot and scorching dust-laden winds blow during the summer season. December and January are the coldest months. Ludhiana on average sees roughly 809.3mm of precipitation annually. The official weather station for the city is in the compound of the Civil Surgeon's Office to the west of Ludhiana. Weather records here data back to 1 August 1868.

Rainfall

The rainfall in the district increases from the southwest toward the northeast. About 70% of the rainfall is received during the period of July through September. The rainfall between December and March accounts for 16% of the rainfall; the remaining 14% rainfall is received in the other months.

Pollution

Ludhiana has one of the worst air pollution problems in India, with particulate matter being over six times the World Health Organization recommended standard, making it the 13th most polluted city in the world in the year 2014.[8] [9] Industrial water pollution is also of significant concern in portions of Ludhiana, notably along the Budha Dariya.[10]

Rivers and drains

The Sutlej and its tributary, the Buddha Nala, constitute the chief hydrographic features of the district. A brief description of these is as follows.

Sutlej River: originates from Lake Manasarovar in Tibet. After flowing through Himachal Pradesh, it debouches from the Shivaliks. Just about Rupnagar, 32 km east of the boundary of Samrala Tehsil, it flows due west along the top of the district for 96 km and turns, as it leaves Jagraon Tehsil, slightly north toward its junction with the Beas at Harike. It maintains an east–west direction. It can be devastating during floods. The Sutlej has experienced a westward drift during recent times. Old towns and villages, such as Bahlulpur, Machhiwara, and Kum Kalan, were built on its banks. The river has since been dammed at Bhakhra, which has considerably checked its flooding menace in the district.
Buddha Nala: It runs parallel to the Satluj on its south for a fairly large section of its course in the district and ultimately joins the Satluj at Gorsian Kadar Baksh in the northwestern corner of the district. It floods during the rainy season, but in the dry season, it can be crossed on foot at certain points. Ludhiana and Machhiwara are to the south of the Buddha Nala. The water of the stream is polluted after it enters Ludhiana City.

Demographics

According to the 2011 census, Ludhiana district has a population of 3,498,739[11] roughly equal to the nation of Panama[12] or the US state of Connecticut.[13] Ludhiana district has a total of 2,560,225 literates which constitutes 73.5% of the population, of which male literary is 76.5% and female literacy is 69.4%. The effective literacy of 7+ population of Ludhiana district is 82.20%, of which male is 86% and female literacy is 77.9%. The sex ratio of 873 females for every 1,000 males.[11] The total Scheduled Caste population is 923,358 (26.39%). There were 716826 households in the district in 2011.[11]

The number of workers in the district is 1285,000, which means a work participation rate of 36.7%. Out of the total workforce of the district, 18.7% are engaged in the agriculture sector, 5.6% are working in the household industry, and the rest are employed in other sectors/industries.[14]

Gender

The table below shows the sex ratio of Ludhiana district through decades.

Sex ratio of Ludhiana district[15] !Census year!!Ratio
2011873
2001824
1991844
1981860
1971848
1961856
1951852
1941832
1931791
1921784
1911765
1901829

The table below shows the child sex ratio of children below the age of 6 years in the rural and urban areas of Ludhiana district.

Child sex ratio of children below the age of 6 years in Ludhiana district[16] !Year!!Urban!!Rural
2011860859
2001819815

Religion

Religious
group! colspan="2"
2011[17]
Sikhism1,863,408
Hinduism1,502,403
Islam77,713
Christianity16,517
Others38,698
Total Population3,498,739

The table below shows the population of different religions in absolute numbers in the urban and rural areas of Ludhiana district.

Absolute numbers of different religious groups in Ludhiana district[18] !Religion!!Urban (2011)!!Rural (2011)!!Urban (2001)!!Rural (2001)!!Urban (1991)!!Rural (1991)
Hindu12,89,1592,13,24410,46,2851,58,8434,71,8011,14,722
Sikh6,80,18911,83,2195,83,99611,60,4502,78,5669,31,420
Christian13,4693,0489,9001,7563,229811
Muslim53,20124,512 35,02217,1982,3366,977
Other religions33,6905,008 18,4509318,208842
Religious
group! colspan="2"
1901[19] 1911[20] [21] 1921[22] 1931[23] 1941[24]
269,076131,370135,512120,161171,715
235,937176,043192,961235,598302,482
164,919207,042235,721312,829341,175
2,2171,8491,7961,4191,279
9478881,6132,4771,913
101951
00050
00000
Others000050
Total population673,097517,192567,622672,494818,615
Tehsil! colspan="2"
OthersTotal
Ludhiana Tehsil95,362171,482168,011840605327436,627
Jagraon Tehsil33,52981,380110,0612896694225,932
Samrala Tehsil42,82449,62063,10350351156,056

Language

At the time of the 2011 census 79.65% of the population spoke Punjabi and 18.19% Hindi as their first language. Hindi is spoken mainly in urban areas.[25]

Health

The table below shows the data from the district nutrition profile of children below the age of 5 years, in Ludhiana, as of year 2020.

District nutrition profile of children under 5 years of age in Ludhiana, year 2020[26] !Indicators!!Number of children (<5 years)!! Percent (2020)!! Percent (2016)
Stunted58,00922%30%
Wasted15,4366%18%
Severely wasted2,5771%3%
Underweight32,71212%28%
Overweight/obesity16,8566%1%
Anemia184,06278%61%
Total children262,962

The table below shows the district nutrition profile of Ludhiana of women between the ages of 15 to 49 years, as of year 2020.

District nutritional profile of Ludhiana of women of 15–49 years, in 2020!Indicators!!Number of women (15–49 years)!! Percent (2020)!!Percent (2016)
Underweight (BMI <18.5 kg/m^2)113,22610%9%
Overweight/obesity504,98345%35%
Hypertension294,32126%15%
Diabetes171,79915%NA
Anemia (non-preg)727,40465%66%
Anemia (preg)NANA46%
Total women (preg)62,825
Total women1,119,944

The table below shows the current use of family planning methods by currently married women between the age of 15 and 49 years, in Ludhiana district.

Family planning methods used by women between the ages of 15 and 49 years, in Ludhiana district[27] !Method!!Total (2015–16)!! Urban (2015–16)!!Rural (2015–16)
Female sterilisation34.2%30.4%40.7%
Male sterilisation0.6%0.2%1.3%
IUD/PPIUD7.2%9.2%3.8%
Pill1.8%2.1%1.2%
Condom18.0%18.3%17.4%
Any modern method61.7%60.1%64.3%
Any method72.8%72.3%73.5%
Total unmet need5.0%4.5%5.9%
Unmet need for spacing2.1%1.5%3.1%

Government and politics

Politics

The district is a part of the Ludhiana Lok Sabha constituency and Fatehgarh Sahib Lok Sabha constituency. Ludhiana East, Ludhiana North, Ludhiana Central, Ludhiana West, Ludhiana South, Atam Nagar, Dakha, Gill and Jagraon comes under Ludhiana Lok Sabha constituency . Khanna, Samrala, Sahnewal, Payal and Raikot comes under Fatehgarh Sahib Lok Sabha constituency .Amrinder Singh Raja Warring is the MP from Ludhiana and Dr. Amar Singh is current MP from Fatehgarh Sahib, they both are member of Indian National Congress . Amrinder Singh Raja Warring is MP since 2024 and Dr. Amar Singh is MP since 2019 . There are total 14 assembly constituencies in Ludhiana district . Following is a list of the assembly constituencies in the district.

MLAs

No.ConstituencyName of MLAPartyBench
57KhannaTarunpreet Singh SondGovernment
58SamralaJagtar SinghGovernment
59SahnewalHardeep Singh MundianGovernment
60Ludhiana EastDaljit Singh GrewalGovernment
61Ludhiana SouthRajinder Pal Kaur ChhinaGovernment
62Atam NagarKulwant Singh SidhuGovernment
63Ludhiana CentralAshok Prashar PappiGovernment
64Ludhiana WestGurpreet GogiGovernment
65Ludhiana NorthMadan Lal BaggaGovernment
66Gill (SC)Jiwan Singh SangowalGovernment
67Payal (SC)Manwinder Singh GyaspuraGovernment
68DakhaManpreet Singh AyaliOpposition
69Raikot (SC)Hakam Singh ThekedarGovernment
70Jagraon (SC)Saravjit Kaur ManukeGovernment

Administrative divisions

For the administrative purpose, Ludhiana district is divided into seven tehsils, which are: -

  1. Jagraon
  2. Khanna
  3. Ludhiana (East)
  4. Ludhiana (West)
  5. Payal
  6. Raikot
  7. Samrala

Ludhiana West Tehsil is a tehsil in Ludhiana district. It has 125 villages.

See main article: Villages in Ludhiana West Tehsil.

Ludhiana East Tehsil is a tehsil in Ludhiana district. It has 181 villages.

See main article: Villages in Ludhiana East Tehsil. Also, there are seven sub-tehsils in Ludhiana district: -

  1. Dehlon
  2. Koom Kalan
  3. Ludhiana Central
  4. Machhiwara
  5. Maloud
  6. Mullanpur Dakha
  7. Sidhwan Bet

Economy

See main article: Economy of Ludhiana.

Culture/Cityscape

Places of interest

Notable people

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Administrative Set-Up . District official website . 19 July 2012.
  2. Web site: Punjab. UNDP in India. en. 10 October 2019.
  3. Ludhiana Dist. Gazetteer 1888-89 & 1904. Chiefs of Punjab 1890, 1909 & 1940
  4. Book: Singh, Kulwant . Nishaan Nagaara magazine (annual issue) . 2002 . 52–54 . Search for the Sacred Swords .
  5. Web site: Imperial Gazetteer2 of India, Volume 16, page 200 -- Imperial Gazetteer of India -- Digital South Asia Library. dsal.uchicago.edu.
  6. Web site: Imperial Gazetteer2 of India, Volume 16, page 202 -- Imperial Gazetteer of India -- Digital South Asia Library. dsal.uchicago.edu.
  7. Web site: Violence, Displacement and the Issue of Identity - 1947. 9 March 2005. https://web.archive.org/web/20050309201057/http://www.sdpi.org/help/research_and_news_bulletin/Nov_Dec_2004/violence_displacement_1947.htm. 9 March 2005.
  8. News: Majeed, Shariq . 26 March 2014 . Ludhiana worries over its PM . The Times of India . https://web.archive.org/web/20140327153327/http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ludhiana/Ludhiana-worries-over-its-PM/articleshow/32709885.cms . 27 March 2014 . live .
  9. News: Preet, Jatinder. 16 October 2011. Ludhiana fourth most polluted city in the world. Delhi, India. The Sunday Guardian. https://web.archive.org/web/20140412184445/http://www.sunday-guardian.com/news/ludhiana-fourth-most-polluted-city-in-the-world. 12 April 2014. live.
  10. News: 1 December 2013. How air and water pollution plagues Indian cities. Hindustan Times. https://web.archive.org/web/20140129025745/http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/how-air-and-water-pollution-plagues-indian-cities/article1-1157717.aspx. 29 January 2014. dead.
  11. Web site: District Census Hand Book – Ludhiana . . Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  12. Web site: US Directorate of Intelligence . Country Comparison:Population . https://web.archive.org/web/20070613004507/https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2119rank.html . dead . 13 June 2007 . 1 October 2011 . Panama 3,460,462 July 2011 est..
  13. Web site: 2010 Resident Population Data . U. S. Census Bureau . 30 September 2011 . Connecticut 3,574,097 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131019160532/http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/apportionment-pop-text.php . 19 October 2013.
  14. Web site: Population of Ludhiana, Ludhiana Population 2018. www.punjabdata.com.
  15. Web site: District-wise Decadal Sex ratio in Punjab . Open Government Data (OGD) Platform India . 21 January 2022 . 20 November 2023.
  16. Web site: District-wise Rural and Urban Child Population (0-6 years) and their sex ratio in Punjab . Open Government Data (OGD) Platform India . 21 January 2022 . 21 November 2023.
  17. Web site: Table C-01 Population by Religious Community: Punjab . censusindia.gov.in . Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  18. Web site: Open Government Data (OGD) Platform India - All Religions . data.gov.in . 7 August 2023 . 21 January 2022.
  19. Web site: Census of India 1901. [Vol. 17A]. Imperial tables, I-VIII, X-XV, XVII and XVIII for the Punjab, with the native states under the political control of the Punjab Government, and for the North-west Frontier Province. ]. saoa.crl.25363739 . 23 March 2024 . 1901 . 34.
  20. Web site: Census of India 1911. Vol. 14, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables. . saoa.crl.25393788 . 23 March 2024 . 1911 . 27.
  21. Web site: Census Of India 1911 Punjab Vol XIV Part II . 23 March 2024 . 1911 . 27 . Kaul, Harikishan.
  22. Web site: Census of India 1921. Vol. 15, Punjab and Delhi. Pt. 2, Tables. . saoa.crl.25430165 . 23 March 2024 . 1921 . 29.
  23. Web site: Census of India 1931. Vol. 17, Punjab. Pt. 2, Tables. . saoa.crl.25793242 . 23 March 2024 . 1931 . 277.
  24. Web site: Census of India, 1941. Vol. 6, Punjab . saoa.crl.28215541 . 23 March 2024 . 1941 . 42 . India Census Commissioner . 6 .
  25. Web site: Table C-16 Population by Mother Tongue: Punjab . censusindia.gov.in . Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  26. Web site: Ludhiana District Nutrition Profiles . . 14 December 2023.
  27. "National Family Health Survey - 42015 -16, District Fact Sheet, Ludhiana, Punjab", http://rchiips.org/nfhs/FCTS/PB/PB_FactSheet_41_Ludhiana.pdf