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Pali district

Pali district is a district in Rajasthan, India. The city of Pali is its administrative headquarters. Pali is also known as the Industrial/Textile City and has been a hub for merchant activities for centuries. It has a rich heritage and culture, including beautiful Jain temples and other elaborate monuments.

Pali district
Clockwise from top-left: Dera Khairwa Fort, Kundeshwar Mahadev Temple, Velar Lake, Ranakpur Jain temple, Lake near Jawai Bera
Pali district in Rajasthan, India
Country India
StateRajasthan
HeadquartersPali
DivisionPali
Area
 • Total12,387 km2 (4,783 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total2,037,573
 • Density160/km2 (430/sq mi)
Languages
 • OfficialHindi, Rajasthani
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
306401
Telephone code02932
ISO 3166 codeRJ-IN
Vehicle registrationRJ-22
Literacy63.23%
Lok Sabha constituencyPali (Lok Sabha Constituency)
Avg. annual temperature22.5 °C (72.5 °F)
Avg. summer temperature45 °C (113 °F)
Avg. winter temperature00 °C (32 °F)
Websitepali.rajasthan.gov.in

History edit

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1901393,837—    
1911456,627+1.49%
1921403,318−1.23%
1931473,063+1.61%
1941555,586+1.62%
1951660,856+1.75%
1961805,682+2.00%
1971970,002+1.87%
19811,274,504+2.77%
19911,486,432+1.55%
20011,820,251+2.05%
20112,037,573+1.13%
source:[2]

In 120 AD, during the Kushana Age, King Kanishka conquered the Rohat and Jaitaran areas, parts of today's Pali district. Until the end of the seventh century, the Pushyabhuti king Harshavardhana ruled the area, along with other parts of what would be Rajasthan.

From the 10th to the 15th century, the boundaries of Pali extended to Mewar, Gorwar, and Marwar. Nadol was the capital of the Chauhan clan. All Rajput rulers resisted foreign invaders, but individually fought each other for land and leadership. After the defeat of Prithviraj Chauhan by Muhammad Ghori, the Rajput power in the area was removed. The Godwad area became subject to the then-ruler of Mewar, Maharana Kumbha; however, Pali, which was ruled by Rajputs with the patronage of neighbouring Rajput rulers, remained peaceful and progressive.

There were a number of battles in the surrounding areas of Pali in the 16th and 17th centuries. Shershah Suri defeated Rajput rulers in the Battle of Sammel near Jaitaran, and the Mughal emperor, Akbar, constantly battled with Maharana Pratap in the Gorwar area. After the Mughals had conquered almost all of Rajputana, Veer Durgadas Rathore of Marwar made organised efforts to take back Marwar from Aurangzeb, the last Mughal emperor. By then, Pali had become subservient to the Rathores of Marwar, and was reclaimed by Maharaja Vijay Singh before becoming a commercial centre.

During the British era in 1857, various Thakurs of Pali under the stewardship of the Thakur of Auwa fought against British rule. The British army surrounded Auwa Fort and the conflict lasted several days.

Geologists trace the settlement at Pali back to prehistory and maintain that Pali emerged from the vast western sea, which was spread over a large part of present-day Rajasthan. In the Vedic period, Maharshi Javali stayed in the area to meditate and interpret the Vedas. In the Mahabharata age,[clarification needed] the Pandavas made this area (near Bali) their resting place during exile. As a part of ancient Arbuda Province, the area was known as Balla-Desh.

Geography edit

The Aravalli Range forms the eastern boundary of the district, and the southern boundary ends at Bamnera village in Sumerpur Tehsil. There are foothills to the west, through which run some Luni River tributaries. The western portion of the district includes the alluvial plain of the Luni. The district is bounded by eight others: Nagaur District to the north, Ajmer District to the northeast, Rajsamand District to the east, Udaipur District to the southeast, Sirohi District to the southwest, Jalore District and Barmer District to the west, and Jodhpur District to the northwest. The major part of the district has ranges from 200 to 300 m above mean sea level in elevation, but in the east—toward the Aravalli Range—the elevation increases and the average is closer to 600 m, with some regions exceeding 1000 m.[3]

National geological monument edit

The Pali Barr Conglomerate has been declared a National Geological Monument of India by the Geological Survey of India for their protection, maintenance, promotion and enhancement of geotourism.[4][5][6]

Politics edit

Lok Sabha edit

The Pali Lok Sabha constituency has jurisdiction over two districts: Pali and Jodhpur. The current member of parliament is P P Choudhary, who represents the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).[7]

Legislative assembly (Vidhan Sabha) edit

The district is represented in the State Legislature by six MLAs (Sojat, Jaitaran, Sumerpur, Bali, Pali and Marwar Junction) and one Member of Parliament.[8]

Administrative Structure edit

Sub-divisions edit

Pali District has ten sub-divisions: Sojat, Marwar Junction, Jaitaran, Raipur, Sumerpur, Bali, Pali, Rohat, Rani and Desuri.

Panchyat Samiti edit

The Pali district has ten panchayat samiti: five are reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Class, and the other five are general.[9]

Tehsils edit

There are 10 Tehsils in the district: Sojat, Marwar Junction, Jaitaran, Raipur, Sumerpur, Bali, Pali, Rohat and Desuri. Rani has been declared to become the tenth Tehsil.[10] Marwar Junction Tehsil has highest number of villages (142), Sumerpur Tehsil has lowest number of villages (42).

Villages edit

There are 1,030 villages under 320 gram panchayats in the Pali district.[11] Some villages in Pali district are following:

  • Jawadiya [1] * Akeli * Aaichiya * Arkawas * Bala * Baniyawas * Bhalelao * Kerala * Chatelaw * Vayad * Jaitpura
  • Gadwara * Moria * Bitu * Chotila * Gura Endla * Gura Pratapsingh * Guradai * Gura Khuni * Gura Sonigara
  • Hathlai * Indra Nagar * Kherwa * Khimel * Khinwara * Khudala * Koliwara * Korta * Koselao * Kot
  • Khand Solankiyan * Giradra * Mandiya * Mooliyawas * Jojawar * Dhola * Dhabar * Denda * Sirana etc.

Civic bodies edit

There are eight municipalities (Nagar Palika) in the district: Sojat, Jaitaran, Sumerpur, Sadri, Bali, Falna, Takhatgarh and Rani, Rajasthan; Pali is a Municipal Council (Nagar Parishad).

Places of interest edit

Hydrology edit

The area under irrigation is 2824.02 km2, which is about 22.79% of the total geographical area of the district. Wells are the main sources of irrigation in the district, which constitute the source for 75% of the total irrigated area, followed by ponds tanks (20%) and tube wells (5%). In all, the district has ninety-two dams, of which three are broken: one each at Gajni, Potalia and Chipatia.[citation needed] The total catchment area of all the dams is 238,150.14 acres (963.7594 km2). In 1990, the capacity of the 89 dams was 20,197.3 million cubic feet.[12]

There are 48 dams in the district, named with completion date where known:[13][14]

  • Jawai Dam (1957)
  • SardarSamand Dam (1905)
  • Hemawas Dam (1911)
  • Phulad Dam (1972)
  • Sindroo (1977)
  • Sadri Dam
  • Babra (1981)
  • Kana (1961)
  • Ker (1977)
  • Juna Malari (1978)
  • Dandiya (1978)
  • Shivnath Sagar (1971)
  • Giri-Nanda Dam
  • Bankli Dam
  • Kharda Dam
  • Rajpura Dam
  • Takhatgarh Dam
  • Mithari Dam
  • Kalibor Dam
  • Vayad
  • Sali ki Dhani
  • Khiwandi
  • Baniyawas
  • Endla
  • Giroliya
  • Borinada Dam
  • Siriyari
  • Kantaliya
  • Jogdawas I
  • Jogdawas II
  • Saran
  • Sindarli
  • Chirpatiya
  • Kot Baliyan
  • Dantiwara
  • Latara
  • Futiya
  • Peepla
  • Sewari
  • Rajsagar Chopra
  • Malpuriya
  • Kanawas
  • Muthana
  • Bandi Nehara
  • Bomdara
  • Kesuli
  • Lodiya
  • Hariom Sagar
  • Sali ki Nal

Some of the reservoirs created by the dams are used for irrigation, potable water, and flood control. Jawai Dam is the largest dam in western Rajasthan.[15]

Transport edit

The only two modes of travel available in the district are roadways and railways.

Almost all of the villages are connected by roads. There are two depots of government-owned state transport: Pali and Falna.

The only railway junction in the district is Marwar Junction, which is connected to Jodhpur, Ajmer, Ahmedabad, and Udaipur. Pali railway station is on the Jodhpur route while the second highest earning railway station in the Ajmer division, Falna is on the Ahmedabad route.

The district received the railway in the early age of Indian Railways in 1881 when the Ahmedabad-Ajmer line opened at Rajputana State Railway. Pali was connected to Marwar Junction on 24 June 1882 and to Luni on 17 June 1884. Jodhpur was connected to the district via Luni in 1885 by the Rajputana-Malwa Railway network, and the first train traveled on this route on 9 March 1885. The line later became part of the Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway.[16]

The Phulera-Marwar Junction line was converted from Meter Gauge to Broad Gauge in 1995, while the Ahmedabad-Ajmer line was converted in 1997.[17] During 1997–98, the 72 km Jalore-Falna route was also surveyed by Indian Railways.[18]

Demographics edit

Religions in Pali district (2011)[19]
Religion Percent
Hinduism
92.79%
Islam
5.87%
Jainism
1.12%
Other or not stated
0.22%

According to the 2011 census Pali district has a population of 2,037,573, giving it a ranking of 255th out of 640.[1] This gives it a ranking of 225th in India (out of a total of 640). Its population growth rate over the decade 2001–2011 was 11.99%.[1] Pali had a sex ratio of 987 females for every 1000 males,[1] and a literacy rate of 63.23%. 22.58% of the population lives in urban areas. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 19.54% and 7.10% of the population respectively.[1]

After the reorganization of districts, the new Pali district has a population of 1,605,543. The district has a sex ratio of 986 females per 1000 males. 437,385 (27.24%) lived in urban areas. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes made up 317,836 (19.80%) and 142,911 (8.90%) of the population respectively.[1]

Languages in Pali district (2011)[20]

  Rajasthani (59.45%)
  Marwari (35.17%)
  Hindi (3.24%)
  'Other' Hindi (1.73%)
  Others (0.41%)

At the time of the 2011 census, 59.45% of the population spoke Rajasthani, 35.17% Marwari and 3.24% Hindi as their first language. 1.43% of the population spoke 'Others' under Hindi.[20]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "District Census Handbook 2011 - Pali" (PDF). Census of India. Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  2. ^ Decadal Variation In Population Since 1901
  3. ^ Pali, India, Sheet NG 43-09 (topographic map, scale 1:250,000), Series U-502, United States Army Map Service, November 1959
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 July 2017. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  5. ^ "Geo-Heritage Sites". pib.nic.in. Press Information Bureau. 9 March 2016. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  6. ^ national geo-heritage of India, INTACH
  7. ^ "Pali 'dyeing': Jobless workers, farmers hoping against hope - Times of India". indiatimes.com.
  8. ^ "Delimitation of parliamentary and assembly constituencies order, 2008" (PDF). Election Commission of India. 26 November 2008. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 4 November 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
  11. ^ Village Panchayats of Pali, Rajasthan 2016-03-11 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "Irrigation by Different Sources, District: Pali" (PDF). Central Groundwater Board.
  13. ^ "National Register of Large Dams-2009" (PDF). Central Water Commission.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 February 2012.
  15. ^ "Jawai Dam". The Times of India. 17 February 2022. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  16. ^ "[IRFCA] Indian Railways FAQ: IR History: Early Days - 2". irfca.org.
  17. ^ "[IRFCA] Indian Railways FAQ: IR History: Part 6". irfca.org.
  18. ^ Survey of New Lines
  19. ^ "Table C-01 Population By Religion - Rajasthan". census.gov.in. Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  20. ^ a b "Table C-16 Population by Mother Tongue: Rajasthan". censusindia.gov.in. Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.

External links edit

  • Geographical features
  • Official website
  • . Excise Department, Government of Rajasthan. Archived from the original on 11 March 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  • "Rivers: Luni Basin". Water Resources Department, Government of Rajasthan. from the original on 18 October 2012.

25°46′N 73°19′E / 25.767°N 73.317°E / 25.767; 73.317

pali, district, this, article, about, district, eponymous, headquarters, pali, rajasthan, district, taiwan, bali, district, district, rajasthan, india, city, pali, administrative, headquarters, pali, also, known, industrial, textile, city, been, merchant, acti. This article is about the district For its eponymous headquarters see Pali Rajasthan For the district in Taiwan see Bali District Pali district is a district in Rajasthan India The city of Pali is its administrative headquarters Pali is also known as the Industrial Textile City and has been a hub for merchant activities for centuries It has a rich heritage and culture including beautiful Jain temples and other elaborate monuments Pali districtDistrict of RajasthanClockwise from top left Dera Khairwa Fort Kundeshwar Mahadev Temple Velar Lake Ranakpur Jain temple Lake near Jawai BeraPali district in Rajasthan IndiaCountry IndiaStateRajasthanHeadquartersPaliDivisionPaliArea Total12 387 km2 4 783 sq mi Population 2011 1 Total2 037 573 Density160 km2 430 sq mi Languages OfficialHindi RajasthaniTime zoneUTC 5 30 IST PIN306401Telephone code02932ISO 3166 codeRJ INVehicle registrationRJ 22Literacy63 23 Lok Sabha constituencyPali Lok Sabha Constituency Avg annual temperature22 5 C 72 5 F Avg summer temperature45 C 113 F Avg winter temperature00 C 32 F Websitepali wbr rajasthan wbr gov wbr in Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 National geological monument 3 Politics 3 1 Lok Sabha 3 2 Legislative assembly Vidhan Sabha 4 Administrative Structure 4 1 Sub divisions 4 2 Panchyat Samiti 4 3 Tehsils 5 Villages 5 1 Civic bodies 6 Places of interest 7 Hydrology 8 Transport 9 Demographics 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory editHistorical populationYearPop p a 1901393 837 1911456 627 1 49 1921403 318 1 23 1931473 063 1 61 1941555 586 1 62 1951660 856 1 75 1961805 682 2 00 1971970 002 1 87 19811 274 504 2 77 19911 486 432 1 55 20011 820 251 2 05 20112 037 573 1 13 source 2 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message In 120 AD during the Kushana Age King Kanishka conquered the Rohat and Jaitaran areas parts of today s Pali district Until the end of the seventh century the Pushyabhuti king Harshavardhana ruled the area along with other parts of what would be Rajasthan From the 10th to the 15th century the boundaries of Pali extended to Mewar Gorwar and Marwar Nadol was the capital of the Chauhan clan All Rajput rulers resisted foreign invaders but individually fought each other for land and leadership After the defeat of Prithviraj Chauhan by Muhammad Ghori the Rajput power in the area was removed The Godwad area became subject to the then ruler of Mewar Maharana Kumbha however Pali which was ruled by Rajputs with the patronage of neighbouring Rajput rulers remained peaceful and progressive There were a number of battles in the surrounding areas of Pali in the 16th and 17th centuries Shershah Suri defeated Rajput rulers in the Battle of Sammel near Jaitaran and the Mughal emperor Akbar constantly battled with Maharana Pratap in the Gorwar area After the Mughals had conquered almost all of Rajputana Veer Durgadas Rathore of Marwar made organised efforts to take back Marwar from Aurangzeb the last Mughal emperor By then Pali had become subservient to the Rathores of Marwar and was reclaimed by Maharaja Vijay Singh before becoming a commercial centre During the British era in 1857 various Thakurs of Pali under the stewardship of the Thakur of Auwa fought against British rule The British army surrounded Auwa Fort and the conflict lasted several days Geologists trace the settlement at Pali back to prehistory and maintain that Pali emerged from the vast western sea which was spread over a large part of present day Rajasthan In the Vedic period Maharshi Javali stayed in the area to meditate and interpret the Vedas In the Mahabharata age clarification needed the Pandavas made this area near Bali their resting place during exile As a part of ancient Arbuda Province the area was known as Balla Desh Geography editThe Aravalli Range forms the eastern boundary of the district and the southern boundary ends at Bamnera village in Sumerpur Tehsil There are foothills to the west through which run some Luni River tributaries The western portion of the district includes the alluvial plain of the Luni The district is bounded by eight others Nagaur District to the north Ajmer District to the northeast Rajsamand District to the east Udaipur District to the southeast Sirohi District to the southwest Jalore District and Barmer District to the west and Jodhpur District to the northwest The major part of the district has ranges from 200 to 300 m above mean sea level in elevation but in the east toward the Aravalli Range the elevation increases and the average is closer to 600 m with some regions exceeding 1000 m 3 National geological monument edit The Pali Barr Conglomerate has been declared a National Geological Monument of India by the Geological Survey of India for their protection maintenance promotion and enhancement of geotourism 4 5 6 Politics editLok Sabha edit The Pali Lok Sabha constituency has jurisdiction over two districts Pali and Jodhpur The current member of parliament is P P Choudhary who represents the Bharatiya Janata Party BJP 7 Legislative assembly Vidhan Sabha edit The district is represented in the State Legislature by six MLAs Sojat Jaitaran Sumerpur Bali Pali and Marwar Junction and one Member of Parliament 8 Administrative Structure editSub Divisions of Pali District Sub Division Tehsil Panchayat Samiti Bali Bali Bali Desuri Desuri Desuri Raipur Raipur Raipur Rohat Rohat Rohat Rani Rani Rani Pali Pali Pali Jaitaran Jaitaran Jaitaran Marwar Junction Marwar Junction Marwar Junction Sojat Sojat Sojat Sumerpur Sumerpur Sumerpur Sub divisions edit Pali District has ten sub divisions Sojat Marwar Junction Jaitaran Raipur Sumerpur Bali Pali Rohat Rani and Desuri Panchyat Samiti edit The Pali district has ten panchayat samiti five are reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Class and the other five are general 9 Tehsils edit There are 10 Tehsils in the district Sojat Marwar Junction Jaitaran Raipur Sumerpur Bali Pali Rohat and Desuri Rani has been declared to become the tenth Tehsil 10 Marwar Junction Tehsil has highest number of villages 142 Sumerpur Tehsil has lowest number of villages 42 Villages editThere are 1 030 villages under 320 gram panchayats in the Pali district 11 Some villages in Pali district are following Jawadiya 1 Akeli Aaichiya Arkawas Bala Baniyawas Bhalelao Kerala Chatelaw Vayad Jaitpura Gadwara Moria Bitu Chotila Gura Endla Gura Pratapsingh Guradai Gura Khuni Gura Sonigara Hathlai Indra Nagar Kherwa Khimel Khinwara Khudala Koliwara Korta Koselao Kot Khand Solankiyan Giradra Mandiya Mooliyawas Jojawar Dhola Dhabar Denda Sirana etc Civic bodies edit There are eight municipalities Nagar Palika in the district Sojat Jaitaran Sumerpur Sadri Bali Falna Takhatgarh and Rani Rajasthan Pali is a Municipal Council Nagar Parishad Places of interest editRanakpur Temple Somnath Temple Pali Jawai Bandh Leopard sightings at Jawai Jadan Ashram Parashuram Mahadev Temple walking route starts in Pali district Om Banna Shrine Nimbo Ka Nath Muchala Mahavir JiHydrology editThe area under irrigation is 2824 02 km2 which is about 22 79 of the total geographical area of the district Wells are the main sources of irrigation in the district which constitute the source for 75 of the total irrigated area followed by ponds tanks 20 and tube wells 5 In all the district has ninety two dams of which three are broken one each at Gajni Potalia and Chipatia citation needed The total catchment area of all the dams is 238 150 14 acres 963 7594 km2 In 1990 the capacity of the 89 dams was 20 197 3 million cubic feet 12 There are 48 dams in the district named with completion date where known 13 14 Jawai Dam 1957 SardarSamand Dam 1905 Hemawas Dam 1911 Phulad Dam 1972 Sindroo 1977 Sadri Dam Babra 1981 Kana 1961 Ker 1977 Juna Malari 1978 Dandiya 1978 Shivnath Sagar 1971 Giri Nanda Dam Bankli Dam Kharda Dam Rajpura Dam Takhatgarh Dam Mithari Dam Kalibor Dam Vayad Sali ki Dhani Khiwandi Baniyawas Endla Giroliya Borinada Dam Siriyari Kantaliya Jogdawas I Jogdawas II Saran Sindarli Chirpatiya Kot Baliyan Dantiwara Latara Futiya Peepla Sewari Rajsagar Chopra Malpuriya Kanawas Muthana Bandi Nehara Bomdara Kesuli Lodiya Hariom Sagar Sali ki Nal Some of the reservoirs created by the dams are used for irrigation potable water and flood control Jawai Dam is the largest dam in western Rajasthan 15 Transport editMain article Roads in Pali district The only two modes of travel available in the district are roadways and railways Almost all of the villages are connected by roads There are two depots of government owned state transport Pali and Falna The only railway junction in the district is Marwar Junction which is connected to Jodhpur Ajmer Ahmedabad and Udaipur Pali railway station is on the Jodhpur route while the second highest earning railway station in the Ajmer division Falna is on the Ahmedabad route The district received the railway in the early age of Indian Railways in 1881 when the Ahmedabad Ajmer line opened at Rajputana State Railway Pali was connected to Marwar Junction on 24 June 1882 and to Luni on 17 June 1884 Jodhpur was connected to the district via Luni in 1885 by the Rajputana Malwa Railway network and the first train traveled on this route on 9 March 1885 The line later became part of the Jodhpur Bikaner Railway 16 The Phulera Marwar Junction line was converted from Meter Gauge to Broad Gauge in 1995 while the Ahmedabad Ajmer line was converted in 1997 17 During 1997 98 the 72 km Jalore Falna route was also surveyed by Indian Railways 18 Demographics editReligions in Pali district 2011 19 Religion Percent Hinduism 92 79 Islam 5 87 Jainism 1 12 Other or not stated 0 22 According to the 2011 census Pali district has a population of 2 037 573 giving it a ranking of 255th out of 640 1 This gives it a ranking of 225th in India out of a total of 640 Its population growth rate over the decade 2001 2011 was 11 99 1 Pali had a sex ratio of 987 females for every 1000 males 1 and a literacy rate of 63 23 22 58 of the population lives in urban areas Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 19 54 and 7 10 of the population respectively 1 After the reorganization of districts the new Pali district has a population of 1 605 543 The district has a sex ratio of 986 females per 1000 males 437 385 27 24 lived in urban areas Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes made up 317 836 19 80 and 142 911 8 90 of the population respectively 1 Languages in Pali district 2011 20 Rajasthani 59 45 Marwari 35 17 Hindi 3 24 Other Hindi 1 73 Others 0 41 At the time of the 2011 census 59 45 of the population spoke Rajasthani 35 17 Marwari and 3 24 Hindi as their first language 1 43 of the population spoke Others under Hindi 20 Notable people editDr RS Champawat Indian scientist Meera Bai Maharana Pratap Adho Duraso Kushal Singh ChampawatSee also editKharchia wheatReferences edit a b c d e f District Census Handbook 2011 Pali PDF Census of India Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India Decadal Variation In Population Since 1901 Pali India Sheet NG 43 09 topographic map scale 1 250 000 Series U 502 United States Army Map Service November 1959 National Geological Monument from Geological Survey of India website Archived from the original on 12 July 2017 Retrieved 21 January 2019 Geo Heritage Sites pib nic in Press Information Bureau 9 March 2016 Retrieved 15 September 2018 national geo heritage of India INTACH Pali dyeing Jobless workers farmers hoping against hope Times of India indiatimes com Delimitation of parliamentary and assembly constituencies order 2008 PDF Election Commission of India 26 November 2008 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 4 November 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Rajasthan Budget 2012 13 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 27 March 2012 Village Panchayats of Pali Rajasthan Archived 2016 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Irrigation by Different Sources District Pali PDF Central Groundwater Board National Register of Large Dams 2009 PDF Central Water Commission Dams Archived from the original on 27 February 2012 Jawai Dam The Times of India 17 February 2022 Retrieved 27 February 2022 IRFCA Indian Railways FAQ IR History Early Days 2 irfca org IRFCA Indian Railways FAQ IR History Part 6 irfca org Survey of New Lines Table C 01 Population By Religion Rajasthan census gov in Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India a b Table C 16 Population by Mother Tongue Rajasthan censusindia gov in Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pali district Geographical features Official website Pali District Gram Panchayat Samiti and Ward Map Excise Department Government of Rajasthan Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 21 May 2013 Rivers Luni Basin Water Resources Department Government of Rajasthan Archived from the original on 18 October 2012 25 46 N 73 19 E 25 767 N 73 317 E 25 767 73 317 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pali district amp oldid 1193554989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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