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Pune district

Pune district (Marathi pronunciation: [puɳeː]) is a district in Western Maharashtra with Administrative Headquarters in Pune city. Pune district is the most populous district in the Indian state of Maharashtra. It is one of the most industrialised districts in India.

Pune district
Statue of Baji Rao I in front of Shaniwar Wada, Pataleshwar Caves, Pune, Mountains at Lonavala, View of Pune from Chaturshringi Temple, Lohagad
Location in Maharashtra
Country India
StateMaharashtra
DivisionPune
HeadquartersPune
Government
 • BodyPune Zilla Parishad
 • Guardian MinisterChandrakant Bacchu Patil
(Cabinet Minister MH)
 • President Zilla Parishad
  • President
    Nirmala Pansare
  • Vice President
    Mr. Ranjit Shivtare
 • District Collector
  • Dr. Rajesh Deshmukh (IAS)
 • CEO Zilla Parishad
  • Mr. Ayush Prasad (IAS)
 • MPs
Area
 • Total15,643 km2 (6,040 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
 • Total9,429,408
 • Density600/km2 (1,600/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Literacy87.19%[1]
 • Sex ratio919
Time zoneUTC+05:30 (IST)
PIN Code(s)
411xxx[2]
Major highwaysNH-48, NH-65, NH-60
Official LanguageMarathi
Per capita income (Pune district)INR 2,69,319(2019–20)[3]
Nominal gross domestic product(Pune district)INR 3,20,695crores(2019–20)[4]
Websitepune.gov.in

History Edit

 
The Great Chaitya at Karla Caves

Ancient and medieval history Edit

According to archaeological discoveries of the Jorwe culture in Chandoli and Inamgaon, portions of the district have been occupied by humans since the Chalcolithic (the Copper Age, 5th–4th millennium BCE).[5] Many ancient trade routes linking ports in western India (particularly those of coastal Konkan) with the Deccan Plateau pass through the district. The town of Junnar has been an important trading and political center for the last two thousand years, and it was first mentioned by Greco-Roman travellers in the early first millennium CE.[6][7][8] The Karla Caves in Karli, near Lonavala, are near the Western Ghats and a major ancient trade route running eastward from the Arabian Sea to the Deccan Plateau. The caves are a complex of ancient Indian Buddhist rock-cut shrines which were developed from the second century BCE to the fifth century CE; the oldest of the shrines is believed to date to 160 BCE. Traders and Satvahana rulers financed construction of the caves.[9] Buddhists, identified with commerce and manufacturing through their early association with traders, tended to locate their monasteries in natural formations near major trade routes to provide lodging for travelling traders.[10] Inscriptions at Karla and Junnar suggest that in the early part of the Common Era, the area was controlled by the Shaka ruler Nahapana.[11] Coins found further east in the district, near Indapur, suggest that the region may have been controlled by the Traikutaka king Dahragana in 465 CE; silver coins found at Junnar suggest that the region may also have been ruled by Andhra kings.[12]

The first reference to the Pune region is found on two copper plates, dated to 758 and 768 CE and issued by the Rashtrakuta ruler Krishna I. The plates call the region "Puny Vishaya" and "Punaka Vishaya", respectively. The Pataleshwar rock-cut temple complex was built during this time, and the area included Theur, Uruli, Chorachi Alandi, and Bhosari.[13] The region became part of the Yadava Empire of Deogiri from the ninth to the 13th centuries.

The Muslim Khalji rulers of the Delhi Sultanate overthrew the Yadavas in 1317, beginning three hundred years of Islamic control. The Khalji were followed by another sultanate dynasty, the Tughlaqs. A Tughlaq governor on the Deccan Plateau rebelled and created the Bahamani Sultanate, which later dissolved into the Deccan sultanates. During the 1400s, Russian traveler Afanasy Nikitin spent many months in Junnar during the monsoon season and vividly describes life in the region under Bahamani rule.[14] The fort at Chakan played an important role in the history of the Deccan sultanates.[15] The Bahamani Sultanate broke up in the early 16th century; the Nizamshahi kingdom controlled the region for most of the century, with Junnar its first capital.[16] During the early 1600s, the Nizam Shahi general Malik Ambar moved his capital there.[17]

 
Ruins of Chakan Fort

Deccan sultanates and the Bhosale jagir Edit

 
Malik Ambar, the minister of Nizamshahi of Ahmadnagar, who moved his administration to Junnar
 
Shivneri fort, birthplace of Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj

The district became politically important when the Nizamshahi capital was moved to Junnar at the beginning of the 16th century. The Bhosale family received a jagir (land grant), and control of the region shifted among the Bhosale rulers, the sultanates and the Mughals during the century. The district was central to the founding of the Maratha Empire by Shivaji.

Nizamshahi Edit

With the establishment of Nizamshahi rule, with Ahmednagar its headquarters, nearly all of the region was controlled by the Nizamshahi. It was formed into a district (or sarkar), with sub-divisions (paragana) and smaller ranges (prant or desh). Revenue collection was delegated to important chieftains of the Nizamshahi.

At Ahmednagar, the Sultan bore the brunt of a heavy attack from Mughal armies who converged on the capital in 1595. To rally the strongest possible local support against the Mughal invaders, and stabilise the territories ruled by Ahmednagar, local Maratha chieftains were given increased power. Amongst the chieftains was Maloji, who was made a raja in 1595; the districts of Pune and Supa were given to him as a jagir (fief). Maloji was also given charge of the forts at Shivneri and Chakan, which played an important role in the district's early political history.[18]

In 1600, Ahmednagar was captured by the Mughals. Nizamshahi minister Malik Ambar raised Murtaza Nizam Shah II to the throne, with its temporary headquarters at Junnar.[16] For nearly a generation, Ambar guided the Nizamshahi kingdom and the Pune region benefited from his leadership. By his death in 1626, the region's revenue system was sound and fair.

Bhosale jagir under the Adilshahi Edit

The Pune region was administered as a jagir during much of the 17th century by Maloji Bhosale, his son Shahaji and his grandson Shivaji. Its nominal sovereignty changed with shifting allegiances of the Bhosale family. In 1632, Shahaji forsook the Mughals and accepted the friendship of the Adilshahi rulers of Bijapur (the traditional rivals of Ahmadnagar Sultanate).

After the fall of the Ahmadnagar (Nizamshahi) Sultanate, its territory was divided between the Adilshahi and the Mughals with Pune region going to the former. Shahaji refused to surrender Junnar (the seat of the Nizamshahi dynasty) before he finally capitulated. However, Shahaji was apparently considered important enough by the Adilshah to play a key role in the new regime's administration. His jagir was confirmed, continuing the region's connection with the Bhosale family.[19]

 
Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, founder of the Maratha Empire

Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and the Mughals Edit

Shahaji Raje's second son, Shivaji (founder of the Maratha Empire), was born on the hill fort of Shivneri near Junnar on 19 February 1630.[20][21][22][23] Shivaji was named after a local deity, the goddess Shivai.[24] His mother was Jijabai, the daughter of Lakhuji Jadhavrao of Sindhkhed (a Mughal-allied sardar claiming descent from the Yadavas of Devagiri.[25][26]

Shahaji appointed Dadoji Konddeo administrator of the Pune jagir (which was restored to him after he joined the Adilshahi service in 1637), and was based in Bengaluru as the Adilshah commander. Konddeo established complete control over the Maval region, winning over (or subduing) most of the local Maval leaders.[27] He rebuilt the settlement of Pune, and prominent families who had left the town during its 1631 destruction by the Adilshahi general Murar Jaggdeo returned.[28] Shahaji selected Pune as the residence of his wife Jijabai and son Shivaji, and Konddeo oversaw the construction of their Lal Mahal palace.

Among Kondadeo's reported reforms was a tax of one-fourth the cash equivalent of a land's yield, and the Fasli calendar was introduced at this time. He is said to have focused on the western Pune region, and has been credited with overseeing Shivaji's education and training.[29][30][31] Kondadeo died in 1647, and Shivaji became his father's deputy.

Many of Shivaji's comrades (and, later, a number of his soldiers) came from the Maval region in the district's western mountains, including Yesaji Kank, Suryaji Kakade, Baji Pasalkar, Baji Prabhu Deshpande and Tanaji Malusare.[32] Shivaji traveled the hills and forests of the Sahyadri range with his Maval friends, acquiring skills and familiarity with the land which would be useful in his military career.[33] [34] Around 1645, the teenaged Shivaji first expressed his concept of Hindavi Swarajya (Indian self-rule) in a letter.[35][36][a] According to legend, he took an oath to that effect at the temple of Raireshwar near Bhor in the district.[40]

Shivaji began his rule in 1648 of the Pune region, taking possession of the key Torna Fort and controlling the Chakan and Purandar forts and raiding Junnar. He moved his administration to the newly built Rajgad in 1648 and a year later, when Muhammad Adil Shah of Bijapur took Shahaji hostage, restrained his expansionist schemes.[41]

During the late 1640s and 1650s, Shivaji controlled the Pune district and beyond. Rajgad was his seat of government until his 1674 coronation.[41]

During the 1660s, the Mughals under Aurangzeb began paying attention to Shivaji. Pune and the region's forts frequently changed hands between the Mughals and Shivaji.[42] In the Treaty of Purandar (1665), signed by the Mughal general Mirza Jaisingh and Shivaji, Shivaji ceded control of a number of forts in the district to the Mughals.[43] Shivaji recaptured many of these forts when the truce ended.

He was succeeded on the Marathi throne by his eldest son, Sambhaji, in 1680. Shortly afterwards, the Mughal army under Aurangzeb moved into the Deccan Plateau and remained there for nearly three decades. Sambhaji was captured and executed, at Aurangzeb's order, in the village of Tulapur at the confluence of the Bheema and Indrayani Rivers.[44][45] According to other accounts, Sambhaji's remains were fed to dogs.[46]

The period following his 1689 death was one of political ferment in the Deccan Plateau, and the Pune region experienced major fluctuations in administrative authority. Shivaji's younger son, Rajaram I, ruled after his brother's death. He spent most of his time in Gingee, fighting the Mughal siege. Before the Mughals captured Gingee, Rajaram returned to Maharashtra and died in Sinhagad in 1700. Ambikabai,[47] one of his widows, committed sati at Rajaram's death.[48] The Bhimthadi (or Deccani) horse was developed in the region under Maratha rule by crossing Arabian and Turkic breeds with local ponies.[49][50]

Peshwa rule (1714–1818) Edit

 
Watercolor painting of Pune in the late Peshwa era at the confluence of the Mula and Mutha Rivers by British artist Henry Salt
 
Saswad, seen from the Sangameshwar temple in 1813 by British artist Robert Melville Grindlay

Shivaji's grandson, Shahu I, appointed the Chitpavan Brahmin Balaji Vishwanath as his Peshwa in 1714. Vishwanath received the area around Pune from the grateful mother of one of Shahu's ministers for saving her son's life.[51] In 1718, Shahu sent him to Delhi to assist the Sayyads; in return for this help, Muhammad Shah (the Mughal emperor in Delhi) granted Shahu sardeshmukhi rights for Pune, Supa, Baramati, Indapur and Junnar. Shahu appointed Baji Rao I Peshwa in 1720, succeeding his father.[52] Baji Rao moved his administration from Saswad to nearby Pune in 1728, laying the foundation for turning a kasbah into a large city.[53][54] Pune grew in size and influence as Maratha rule extended through the subcontinent in subsequent decades. A well-known saying in the era before the third battle of Panipat was that the "ponies of Bhimthadi[49] drank the water of the Indus river".

Pune under the Peshwas Edit

Pune gained more influence under the rule of Baji Rao I's son, Balaji Baji Rao (Nanasaheb). Maratha influence waned after the disastrous 1761 Battle of Panipat, and the Nizam of Hyderabad looted the city. It (and the empire) recovered during the brief reign of Peshwa Madhavrao. The rest of the Peshwa era was rife with family intrigue and political machinations. The leading role was played by the ambitious Raghunathrao, the younger brother of Nanasaheb, who wanted power at the expense of his nephews Madhavrao I and Narayanrao. After Narayanrao's 1775 murder by order of Raghunathrao's wife, power was exercised in the name of his son Madhavrao II by a regency council led by Nana Fadnavis for most of the century.[55] Under Peshwa rule, the urban elite came from the Chitpavan Brahmin community; they were the military commanders, the bureaucrats and the bankers, and had ties to each other by marriage.[56]

Nanasaheb built a lake in Katraj, on the city's outskirts, and a still-operational underground aqueduct to bring water from the lake to Shaniwar Wada.[57] The city received an underground sewage system in 1782 which discharged into the river.[28][58] Pune prospered during Nanasaheb's reign. On the southern fringe of the city, he built a palace on the Parvati Hill, developed a garden known as Heera Baug, and dug a lake near the hill with a Ganesha temple on an island in its centre which is called Sarasbaug. Nanasaheb also developed new commercial, trading, and residential localities: Sadashiv Peth, Narayan Peth, Rasta Peth and Nana Peth. During the 1790s, the city had a population of 600,000. In 1781, after a city census, a household tax (gharpatti) was levied on the more affluent: one-fifth to one-sixth of the property value.[59]

Order in Peshwa Pune was maintained by the kotwal, who was a police chief, magistrate and municipal commissioner and whose duties included investigating, levying and collecting fines for offences. The kotwal was assisted by police officers who manned the chavdi (police station), and clerks collected fines and paid informants who provided intelligence. Crimes included illicit affairs, violence and murder; in the case of murder, sometimes only a fine was imposed. Inter-caste or inter-religious affairs were also resolved with fines.[60] Although the kotwal's salary was as high as 9,000 rupees per month, it included officer salaries (mainly from the Ramoshi caste).[61] The best-known kotwal in Pune during Peshwa rule was Ghashiram Kotwal, and the city's police force was admired by European visitors.[62]

The patronage of the Brahmin Peshwas resulted in Pune's expansion, with the construction of about 250 temples and bridges (including the Lakdi Pul and the temples on Parvati Hill).[63] Many temples like Maruti, Vithoba, Vishnu, Mahadeo, Rama, Krishna and Ganesha temples were built during this era. Their patronage extended to 164 schools (pathshalas) in the city which taught Hindu holy texts (shastras) to Brahmin men.[64]

Pune also had many public festivals. Major festivals were Ganeshotsav, the Deccan New Year (Gudi Padwa), Holi, and Dasara. Holi at the Peshwa court was celebrated over a five-day period. The Dakshina festival, celebrated in the Hindu month of Shravan (when millions of rupees were distributed), attracted Brahmins from throughout India to Pune.[65][66] The festivals, the building of temples and temple rituals led to religion being responsible for about 15 percent of the city's economy during this period.[67][68][69]

Peshwas and knights residing in the city had individual hobbies and interests; Madhavrao II had a private collection of exotic animals, such as lions and rhinoceros, near the Peshwe Park zoo.[70] The last Peshwa, Baji Rao II, was a strength and wrestling enthusiast. The sport of pole gymnastics (mallakhamba) was developed in Pune under his patronage by Balambhat Deodhar.[71] Many Peshwas and their courtiers were patrons of lavani and Maharashtrian dance, and a number of composers (such as Ram Joshi, Anant Phandi, Prabhakar and Honaji Bala) flourished during this period. The dancers primarily came from the Mang and Mahar castes.[72][73] Lavani used to be essential part of Holi celebrations in the region's Peshwa courts.[74]

Peshwa influence in India declined after the defeat of Maratha forces in the 1761 Battle of Panipat, but Pune remained the seat of power. However, the city's fortunes declined rapidly after the 1795 accession of Baji Rao II. Pune was captured by Yashwantrao Holkar in the 1802 Battle of Pune, precipitating the Second Anglo-Maratha War of 1803–1805. Peshwa rule ended with the defeat of Baji Rao II by the British East India Company, under the leadership of Mountstuart Elphinstone, in 1818.

British rule and independence Edit

 
Poona (Pune) district in 1896
 
When the Khadakwasla Dam was built in 1878. At that time it was considered one of the world's largest dams.
 
Photograph of the railway reversing station at Bhor Ghat from 1880s

In 1818, the Pune region and the rest of the Peshwa territories came under the control of the British East India Company.One of the first tasks that the company did was to destroy Hill forts previously under Maratha control.This was to stop Maratha forces regrouping in the hills. The forts destroyed in Pune district included those in the Junnar region such Shivaji's birthplace of Shivneri, Hadsar, Narayangad, Chavand, and the important for of Sinhagad overlooking the city of Pune. [75] The governor of the new territories, Mountstuart Elphinstone, appointed a commissioner and left the district's boundaries almost intact. Elphinstone and other British officers enjoyed Saswad and the fertile valley around it.[76]

The annual Pandharpur Wari starts in two places in the district, namely Alandi and Dehu. In its present form the wari dates back to 1820s. At that time, Sant Tukaram's descendants, and a devotee of Sant Dnyaneshwar named Haibatravbaba Arphalkar, who was a courtier of Scindias, the Maratha rulers of Gwalior made changes to wari.[77][78] Haibatravbaba's changes involved carrying the paduka in a palkhi, having horses involved in the procession, and organizing the devotees or varkaris in Dindis (Dindi stands for a specific group of varkaris.).[79]

Company rule came to an end when, under the terms of a proclamation issued by Queen Victoria, the Bombay Presidency, Pune and the rest of British India came under the British crown in 1858.[80]

Villages in the district saw rioting in 1875 by peasants protesting Marwari and Gujarati moneylenders. The disturbances involved peasants getting the moneylenders to burn their documents and, in some cases, torching their houses. The riots were responsible for the Bombay presidency government enacting the Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act to protect peasants from land grabbing by money lenders.[81][82]

During the first and second Anglo-Maratha wars, it took four or five weeks to move materials from Mumbai to Pune. An 1804 military road constructed by the British East India Company reduced the journey to four or five days. The company built a macadam road between the two cities in 1830 which permitted mail-cart service.[83][84]

A rail line from Bombay, operated by the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR), reached Pune in 1858.[85][86] In the following decades, the line was extended east and south of the city. The GIPR extended its line east to Raichur in 1871, where it met the Madras Railway and connected the city to Madras.[87] The metre-gauge Pune-Miraj line was completed in 1886, making the city a rail junction. The Bombay-Poona line was electrified in the 1920s; this cut travel time between the cities to three hours, enabling day trips for events such as the Poona races.[88] Many villages in the west, east and south of the district, such as Lonavla, Uruli Kanchan and Daund, were connected by rail.

Pune's first bus service began in 1941 with the Silver Bus Company, and Tanga (horse-drawn carriage) drivers went on strike in protest.[89] Tangas were a common mode of public transport well into the 1950s, and bicycles were a private vehicle choice in the 1930s.[90]

The British installed a telegraph system in Pune in 1858.[91] According to the 1885 Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency: Poona, the city and the GIPR had telegraph offices. In 1928, a relay station was built in Khadki to relay telegraph signals for the Imperial Wireless Chain. In 1885, Pune was a post-distribution hub for the district. There were two post offices in the city, which also offered money-order and savings-bank services.[92]

Areas east of Pune receive less rainfall than areas west of the city adjacent to the Western Ghats. To minimize drought risk, a masonry dam was built on the Mutha River at Khadakwasla in 1878. At the time, the dam was considered one of the world's largest. Two canals were dug on each riverbank to irrigate land east of the city and supply drinking water to the city and its cantonment.[93] In 1890 Poona Municipality spent Rs. 200,000 to install water filtration works.[94]

In the early part 20th century, hydroelectric plants were installed in the Western Ghats between Pune and Mumbai. The Poona electric-supply company, a Tata company, received power from the Khopoli (on the Mumbai side of the Ghats) and Bhivpuri plants near the Mulshi dam.[95] Power was used to electrify trains running between Mumbai and Pune and for industrial and residential use, and a dam was built on the Velvandi River in Bhor.[96][97]

Geography and climate Edit

 
Potholes in the Kukdi River near Nighoj
 
Confluence of the Indrayani and Bhima Rivers at Tulapur

The district is surrounded by Thane district on the northwest, Raigad district on the west, Satara district on the south, Solapur district on the southeast, and Ahmednagar district on the north and northeast. On the leeward side of the Western Ghats, it extends to the Deccan Plateau on the east. Pune is at an altitude of 559 metres (1,863 feet). The district is located between 17.5° and 19.2° north latitude and 73.2° and 75.1° east longitude.

The Bhima River, the Krishna River's main tributary, rises in the Western Ghats and flows east. All the district's rivers (the Pushpavati, Krushnavati, Kukadi, Meena, Ghod, Bhama, Andhra, Indrayani, Pavna, Mula, Mutha, Ambi, Mose, Shivganga, Kanandi, Gunjavni, Velvandi, Nira, Karha and Velu) flow into the Bhima or its tributaries. Major dams are on the Kukadi, Pushpavati, Ghod, Bhima, Pavna, Bhama, Mula, Mutha (the Temghar and Khadakwasla Dams) and Mose.[98]

Nine of the district's fifteen talukas are identified as drought-prone, covering a total area of 1,562,000 hectares (6,030 sq mi) and a cropped area of 1,095,000 hectares (4,230 sq mi). Of the cropped area, only 116,000 hectares (450 sq mi) are irrigated—nearly half by wells and tanks, and 40 percent by government canals. The district had a population of 4.2 million in 1991, of which 52 percent was rural. There were 1,530 villages in the district.[99] Its average rainfall is 600 to 700 millimetres (24 to 28 in), most of which falls during the monsoon months (July to October). The area adjacent to the Western Ghats gets more rain than areas further east. The Daund and Indapur talukas experience more-frequent droughts than Maval, on the district's western edge. Temperatures are moderate and rainfall is unpredictable, in tune with the Indian monsoon. Summers, from early March to July, are dry and hot. Temperatures range from 20 to 38 °C (68 to 100 °F), and may reach 40 °C (104 °F). Winter runs from November to February. Temperatures usually hover around 7 to 12 °C (45 to 54 °F), sometimes dipping to 3 °C (37 °F). June is the driest month, and the agricultural sector is considered vulnerable until 20 September.

Climate data for Pune
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 29.9
(85.8)
31.9
(89.4)
35.4
(95.7)
37.7
(99.9)
36.9
(98.4)
31.7
(89.1)
28.4
(83.1)
27.4
(81.3)
29.4
(84.9)
31.4
(88.5)
30.0
(86.0)
28.0
(82.4)
31.5
(88.7)
Average low °C (°F) 10.0
(50.0)
12.0
(53.6)
15.0
(59.0)
19.5
(67.1)
22.4
(72.3)
22.7
(72.9)
22.0
(71.6)
21.3
(70.3)
20.3
(68.5)
17.0
(62.6)
14.0
(57.2)
10.0
(50.0)
17.2
(62.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 0
(0)
3
(0.1)
2
(0.1)
11
(0.4)
40
(1.6)
138
(5.4)
163
(6.4)
129
(5.1)
155
(6.1)
68
(2.7)
28
(1.1)
4
(0.2)
741
(29.2)
Average precipitation days 0.1 0.3 0.3 1.1 3.3 10.9 17.0 16.2 10.9 5.0 2.4 0.3 67.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 291.4 282.8 300.7 303.0 316.2 186.0 120.9 111.6 177.0 248.0 270.0 288.3 2,895.9
Source: HKO

Demographics Edit

Historical population of Pune district
YearPop.±% p.a.
19011,095,858—    
19111,177,238+0.72%
19211,105,014−0.63%
YearPop.±% p.a.
19311,275,882+1.45%
19411,472,972+1.45%
19511,950,976+2.85%
YearPop.±% p.a.
19612,466,880+2.37%
19713,178,029+2.57%
19814,164,470+2.74%
YearPop.±% p.a.
19915,532,532+2.88%
20017,232,555+2.72%
20119,429,408+2.69%
source:[100]

Pune district had a population of 9,429,408 in the 2011 census,[101] roughly equal to the nation of Benin.[102] The fourth most populous of India's 640 districts,[101] it has a population density of 603 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,560/sq mi).[101] The district's population-growth rate between 2001 and 2011 was 30.34 percent.[101] Pune has a sex ratio of 910 females to every 1,000 males,[101] and a literacy rate of 87.19 percent.[101] By age, 685,022 were age four or younger; 1,491,352 were between ages five and 15; 4,466,901 were 15 to 59, and 589,280 were 60 years of age or older. For every 1,000 males age 6 and older, there were 919 females. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes made up 12.52% and 3.70% of the population respectively.[101]

Religion Edit

Religions in Pune district (2011)[103]
Religion Percent
Hinduism
85.80%
Islam
7.14%
Buddhism
3.61%
Christianity
1.42%
Jainism
1.36%
Other or not stated
0.67%

Hindus are the largest religious community, with a significant Muslim minority. In rural areas, Hindus are the predominant community. Buddhists are also significant, with smaller numbers of Christians and Jains concentrated in Pune city.[103]

Languages Edit

Languages in Pune district (2011)[104]

  Marathi (78.17%)
  Hindi (10.00%)
  Urdu (1.89%)
  Kannada (1.40%)
  Marwadi (1.34%)
  Telugu (1.30%)
  Gujarati (1.15%)
  Others (4.75%)

Marathi is the only official language of the district. At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 78.17% of the population in the district spoke Marathi, 10.00% Hindi, 1.89% Urdu, 1.40% Kannada, 1.34% Marwadi, 1.30% Telugu and 1.15% Gujarati as their first language.[104]

Administrative divisions Edit

 
The district's talukas

The district has two municipal corporations in the city of Pune namely Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) and Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC). PCMC, Pune is north western city limits of Pune and its corporation covers Nigdi, Akurdi, Pimpri, Chinchwad and Bhosari. The region was zoned for industrial development by the state of Maharashtra in the early 1960s & later acceded to the city limits.

Pune District is divided into fifteen talukasPune City taluka, Pimpri-Chinchwad taluka, Haveli taluka, Mulshi taluka, Velhe taluka, Bhor taluka, Purandar taluka, Baramati taluka, Daund taluka, Indapur taluka, Maval taluka, Khed taluka, Shirur taluka, Ambegaon taluka and Junnar taluka. There are thirteen panchayat samitis. The district has 1,866 villages and 21 Vidhan Sabha constituencies: Junnar, Ambegaon, Khed-Alandi, Maval, Mulshi, Haveli, Bopodi, Shivajinagar, Parvati (SC), Kasba Peth, Bhvani Peth, Camp Cantonment, Shirur, Daund, Indapur, Baramati, Purandhar and Bhor. Its four Lok Sabha constituencies are Pune, Baramati, Shirur and Maval (shared with Raigad district).

Talukas Edit

Cities and towns Edit

 
New housing in Kharadi, a suburb of Pune

The district has three cantonments, in Camp, Khadki and Dehu Road.

Smaller towns in the district have Nagar Palikas (municipal councils). Most are these are the headquarters of their respective taluka or its main town:

The growth of the Pune metropolitan area has led to the development of township schemes in the city such as Magarpatta, Amanora and Nanded City and development further from the city in the mountains, such as Lavasa.[105]

Villages Edit

District court Edit

Pune District Court administers justice at the district level, and is the principal court of original jurisdiction in civil matters. The district court is also a Sessions Court for criminal matters. It is presided over by a Principal District and Sessions Judge appointed by the state government.

Court decisions are subject to the appellate jurisdiction of Bombay High Court. Pune District Court is under the High Court's administrative control.

Education Edit

 
Mahatma Gandhi Vidyalaya, a high school at Urali Kanchan

Primary and secondary education Edit

State primary schools in the cities and district are run by the city corporation and Zilla Parishads, respectively; private schools are operated by charitable trusts. Secondary schools are also run by charitable trusts. All schools are required to undergo inspection by the Zilla Parishad or city corporation.[106] Instruction is primarily in Marathi, English or Hindi, although Urdu is also used. Secondary schools are affiliated with the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) or the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education. Under the 10+2+3 plan, after completing secondary school students typically enroll for two years in a junior college (also known as pre-university) or a school with a higher secondary curriculum affiliated with the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education or a central board.

Vocational training Edit

Pune and the district have 55 post-secondary-school industrial training institutes (ITI) run by the government and private trusts which offer vocational training in trades such as construction, plumbing, welding and automobile repair. Successful candidates receive the National Trade Certificate.[107]

Higher education Edit

Pune city has been called the Oxford of the East.[106] The city is home to Savitribai Phule Pune University, and many of its affiliated colleges. The district has a number of central government run educational and training institutes, including the National Defence Academy, the Armed Forces Medical College and the Film and Television Institute of India. The district has many privately run colleges and universities (including religious and special-purpose institutions). Most of the private colleges were founded after the Maharashtra state government of Chief Minister Vasantdada Patil liberalised the education sector in 1982.[108] Politicians and other leaders were instrumental in establishing the private institutions.[109][110]

Other higher-education institutions in the district include:

Pune University

Economy Edit

Although the district is an industrial center, its economy also has a significant agricultural component. Pune is also considered an educational hub of the state of Maharashtra with students coming from all over India to attend the numerous colleges and institutes.

Manufacturing Edit

Industrial development began during the 1950s in Pune's outlying areas, such as Hadapsar, Bhosari and Pimpri. The government-run Hindustan Antibiotics was founded in Pimpri in 1954.[111]Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation (MIDC), the state government owned corporation tasked with industrial development in the state has over many decades earmarked specific areas in the district for industrial development. The first MIDC set up in the district was around Bhosari in the early 1960s.MIDC provides land, and infrastructure for manufacturing companies to set up business in the area .[112] So far MIDC has set up Industrial parks indifferent areas of the district at Pimpri, Chinchwad, Bhosari, Ranjangaon, Kurkumbh, Jejuri, Baramati, Chakan, Indapur, Hinjawadi,and Talawade.[113] Telco (now Tata Motors) began operations in 1961 around Chinchwad.By 1970s, Pune emerged as India's leading engineering region with the expansion of Telco, Bajaj, Kinetic, Bharat Forge, Alfa Laval, Atlas Copco, Sandvik and Thermax. The district vies with Chennai as the "Detroit of India".[114] Growth in the villages of Pimpri, Chinchwad and Bhosari allowed them (and their surrounding areas) to incorporate as separate governing body knows as the Pimpri Chinchawad Municipal Corporation, Pune. The Pune metropolitan area was defined in 1967 as the city, the three cantonment areas and the villages on its outskirts. Some of these villages, such as Kothrud, Katraj, Hadapsar, Hinjawadi and Baner, have become suburbs of Pune.[115] In 2008, General Motors, Volkswagen and Fiat built plants near Pune.

Information technology Edit

 
Infosys in Hinjawadi

After India's 1991 economic liberalization, Pune began attracting foreign capital from the information-technology and engineering industries. Between 1997 and 2000, IT parks were developed in Aundh and Hinjawadi.[116] Other IT parks have been set up at Baner, Magarpatta (in hadapsar), EON IT Park Kharadi and viman nagar.

Agriculture Edit

Although the region around Pune is industrialized, agriculture continues to be important elsewhere in the district. Since most arable land is still rain-fed, the southwest monsoon season (between June and September) is crucial to the district's food sufficiency and quality of life. Fluctuations in time, distribution or quantity of monsoon rains may lead to floods or droughts. The eastern part of the district has been historically drought-prone, but irrigation provided by dams, canals and wells have made agriculture less dependent on rainfall.[117] The overtapping of aquifers has led to increased water salinity in the talukas of Purandhar, Baramati, Daund, Indapur and Shirur (in the eastern part of the district), threatening agriculture and the drinking-water supply.[118]

Monsoon crops include rice, jwari and bajri. Other crops include wheat, pulses, vegetables and onions. Ambemohar, a mango-scented rice grown in Bhor taluka and areas near the Western Ghats, is popular throughout Maharashtra. Since it has a low yield, many farmers in the region grow the crossbred Indrayani rice instead.[119]

 
Barrels at the Narayangaon Winery

Major cash crops include sugarcane and oil seeds, including groundnut and sunflower. The district has significant fruit orchards, particularly mango, grape and orange. A winery in Narayangaon produces sparkling wine from locally-grown Thompson seedless grapes.[120] Most growers of cash crops (including cotton) in the district belong to agricultural cooperatives and sugar is produced in mills owned by local cooperative societies whose members of supply sugarcane to the mills.[121] During the last fifty years, the local sugar mills have played an important role in encouraging political participation and have been a stepping stone for aspiring politicians.[122]

Transport Edit

Highways Edit

 
Mumbai Pune Expressway

Pune district has 13,642 kilometres (8,477 mi) of roads. National and state highways crossing the district include:

  • NH-48, from Mumbai to Bangalore. The western Dehu Road-Katraj bypass was completed in 1989, reducing traffic congestion in Pune and leading to industrial and housing growth along the bypass.
  • NH-60, the Pune–Nashik National Highway
  • NH-65, the Pune–Solapur–Hyderabad–Suryapet–Vijayawada National Highway
  • Yashwantrao Chavan Mumbai Pune Expressway. Work on the six-lane toll road began in 1998 and was completed in 2001.

State highways include:

  • Pune–Ahmednagar-Aurangabad State Highway
  • Pune–Alandi State Highway
  • Pune–Saswad–Pandharpur State Highway
  • Pune–Paud Road State Highway
  • Talegaon–Chakan State Highway

Public transport Edit

Bus service by private companies was introduced in Pune shortly before the independence. The city took over the service after the independence in 1947 as Poona Municipal Transport (PMT) which later became Pune Municipal Transport. During the 1990s, PMT and Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Transport (PCMT, the bus-service provider in Pimpri-Chinchwad) had a combined fleet of over 1,000 buses. Because municipal transport coverage was patchy, a number of employers in the industrial belt near Pimpri-Chinchwad and Hadapsar offered bus service to their employees.[123] The companies used many more private buses than the municipal providers used.[123] The Pune Municipal Corporation began a bus rapid transit system (India's first) in 2006, but it encountered a number of difficulties. The two municipal bus companies merged in 2007 to form Pune Mahanagar Parivahan Mahamandal Limited (PMPML). The Commonwealth Youth Games were held the following year, which encouraged additional development in north-western Pune and added a fleet of buses running on compressed natural gas (CNG) to the city's streets. Maharashtra State Transport buses began operating in 1951 throughout the state.

During the 1960s, motorized three-wheeled auto rickshaws began replacing horse-drawn tangas in the district's urban areas; their number grew from 200 in 1960 to over 20,000 in 1996. Although Pune was known as the bicycle city of India in the 1930s, motorcycles began replacing bicycles in the 1970s; the number of motorcycles increased from five per 1,000 people in 1965 to 118 per 1,000 in 1995.[123]

Air Edit

Pune Airport (IATA: PNQ) is a civil enclave at Lohegaon Air Base, northeast of the city, with service to a number of domestic and international destinations. Since Pune's air traffic is controlled by the Indian Air Force (IAF),[124] there is occasional conflict between the Airports Authority of India and the IAF over flight schedules or night landings. The airport apron is becoming inadequate to handle the growing number of flights into Pune since the airport's upgrade to international status with flights to Dubai, Singapore and Frankfurt.[125][126] Pune Airport handled about 165 passengers a day in 2004–05, increasing to 250 passengers a day in 2005–06. There was a sharp rise in 2006–2007, when the number of daily passengers reached 4,309. In 2010–2011, the number of passengers was about 8,000 a day.[127]

The government of Maharashtra has entrusted responsibility to Maharashtra Airport Development Company (MADC) for the greenfield Chhatrapati Sambhaji Raje International Airport project,[128] in the Purandar area. Baramati Airport, 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) from Baramati and 100 kilometres (62 mi) from Pune and used for pilot training and charter flights, was being planned in 2011 as a private-jet hub by Reliance Infrastructure.[129]

Rail Edit

 
Lonavla EMU at Pune's platform 6
 
Bhima river and bridge near Daund

The district's two major rail junctions are Pune Junction and Daund Junction. All rail lines through Pune are broad gauge double track, and are part of Indian Railways' Central Railway zone. The Pune–Mumbai line, the district's most important rail route, was built during the British Raj. Khandala and Lonavala are on this route, which has a number of daily high-speed trains. The Mumbai–Kolhapur line also passes through the district, and other major Indian cities are connected to Pune by rail.

The district's rail lines are:

  • Pune–Kalyan (towards Mumbai)
  • Pune–Daund
  • Daund–Kurduwadi
  • Daund–Manmad
  • Daund–Baramati branch line (single-track)
  • Pune–Miraj (single-track from Pune to Miraj, towards Bangalore)

Although express trains on these routes skip many smaller stations, local "passenger trains" stop at each station. A suburban rail system, operated by Central Railway, connects Pune to its suburbs and neighboring villages west of the city. The system has two routes: from Pune Junction to Lonavala and to Talegaon. Five trains operate on the Pune Junction-Talegaon route, and eighteen trains operate on the Pune Junction-Lonavla route.[130] Eight passenger trains run between Pune Junction and Daund as suburban trains, making the Pune-Daund section a third suburban route. Major stations on this route are at Loni Kalbhor and Urali Kanchan.

Healthcare Edit

 
A Primary Healthcare center in the village of Amboli in Pune district

Healthcare in the district is provided by private and public facilities. Primary care is provided by practitioners of Allopathic medicine as well as traditional and alternative medicine (i.e. Ayurved, Homeopathy and Unani). For minor and chronic ailments, people in the district often rely on practitioners of traditional medicine.[131] Thedistrict is served by three government hospitals: Sassoon Hospital, Budhrani and Dr Ambedkar Hospital. There are also a number of private hospitals in the city of Pune such as Ranka Hospital, Sahyadri, Jahangir Nursing Home, Sancheti Hospital, Aditya Birla Memorial Hospital, KEM Hospital, Ruby Hall, Naidu Hospital[132] and Smile Inn Dental Clinic Pune.[133]

Tourism Edit

 
Khandoba temple at Jejuri, a kuldaiwat for a large percentage of Marathi Hindu families
 
Alandi, on the Indrayani River
 
Bhimashankar temple is considered one of the twelve Jyotirlinga

Pune district has been at the center of Maharashtraian and Marathi history for more than four hundred years, beginning with the Deccan sultanates and followed by the Maratha Empire. The district has a number of mountain forts and buildings from these eras, in addition to shrines revered by Marathi Hindus (including five of the eight Ashtavinayaka Ganesha temples). Samadhis of the two most revered Marathi Bhakti saints (Dnyaneshwar and Tukaram) are in Alandi and Dehu, respectively. The main temple of Khandoba, the family deity for most Marathi Hindus, is in Jejuri.[134]

The British designated Pune as the monsoon capital of the Bombay Presidency, and many buildings and parks from the era remain. Hill stations such as Lonavla and Khandala also date back to the Raj, and remain popular with residents of Pune and Mumbai for holidays.[135] The district's mountains, forests and reservoirs are popular for hiking and birdwatching. Bhigwan, a catchment area of the Ujjani Dam, is about from Pune on NH-65, the Pune–Solapur highway. An area of about 18,000 hectares (69 sq mi) has been proposed as a sanctuary for migratory birds.

Pilgrimage sites Edit

  • Alandi -The town attracts millions of devotees annually to the resting place or (Samadhi) of the 13th century Marathi Bhakti saint, Sant Dnyaneshwar[136]
  • Bhimashankar -Bhimashankar is one of the twelve Jyotirlinga Shiva temples in India. It is located high in the Sahyadri mountains, 127 km from Pune. Bhīmāshankar is also the source of the Bhima River, the main tributary of the Krishna river.
  • Dehu – The town on the banks of the indrayani river is associated with Tukaram,[137] the 17th-century poet-saint of the Bhakti movement in Maharashtra.[138] The town is visited by hundreds of thousands of people for the annual Pandharpur Wari when the paduka (symbolic sandals) of the saint are carried to Pandharpur in a palkhi.
  • Nira Narsingpur – The town has an historic temple dedicated to Lord Narasimha, an Avatar of Vishnu. The temple is located close to the ghat at the confluence of Bhima river and Nira river, at the south eastern tip of Pune district, in Indapur taluka. Shri Narsimha of Nira Narsingpur is the family deity of many families from Maharashtra and Karnataka
  • Jejuri – The town is foremost center of worship of the regional deity of Khandoba[139] It is situated 48 km from Pune, Maharashtra. Khandoba at Jejuri is the family deity of a large number of families from different MarathiHindu communities. There are two temples: the first is an ancient temple known as Kadepathar. Kadepathar is difficult to climb. The second one is the newer and more famous Gad-kot temple, which is easy to climb. Both temples are fort-like structures.[140]
  • Bhuleshwar temple – A 13th century Shiva temple on top of a hill. It is 45 kilometres from city of Pune and 10 km from Pune Solapur highway from Yawat. The temple is unique as its architecture is Islamic from outside and appears more as a mosque than a temple due to its resemblance of a circular tomb and minarets.
  • Morya Gosavi – Ganesh temple and tomb of Morya Gosavi at Chinchwad[141]

Ashtavinayak temples Edit

 
Lenyadri temple in a former Buddhist cave on a hilltop near Junnar

Ashtavinayak refers to eight historic Ganesh temples in Pune district and adjacent areas. Each of these temples have its own individual legend and history. Five of these temples are situated in Pune district:

Forts Edit

 
The medieval Purandar fort

A number of historically important hill forts and castles in the district date back to the Deccan sultanates and Maratha Empire. The forts and surrounding mountains are popular for trekking.[142]

Sports Edit

The Maharashtra cricket team has its home ground in Pune, playing at the new Maharashtra Cricket Association MCA Cricket Stadium in Gahunje. The I-League Pune Football Club plays in the league's First Division, and finished third in the 2009–10 season. FC Pune City played in the Indian Super League since the league's inception in 2014 until they folded in 2019, as did their women's and reserve and academy teams.

The 1993 National Games were held in Pune, and the new Sports City hosted the Commonwealth Youth Games in 2008. Puneri Paltan, one of ten teams in the professional kabaddi league, has its home ground in Balewadi.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Some scholars interpret Hindavi Swarajya as meaning self-rule of Hindu people,[37] while others state that Shivaji's struggle was for gaining "religious freedom" for Hindus.[38] However the term hindavi was in use by both Hindus and Muslims in the time period concerned.[39]

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External links Edit

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18°31′48″N 73°50′24″E / 18.53000°N 73.84000°E / 18.53000; 73.84000

pune, district, marathi, pronunciation, puɳeː, district, western, maharashtra, with, administrative, headquarters, pune, city, most, populous, district, indian, state, maharashtra, most, industrialised, districts, india, districtstatue, baji, front, shaniwar, . Pune district Marathi pronunciation puɳeː is a district in Western Maharashtra with Administrative Headquarters in Pune city Pune district is the most populous district in the Indian state of Maharashtra It is one of the most industrialised districts in India Pune districtDistrictStatue of Baji Rao I in front of Shaniwar Wada Pataleshwar Caves Pune Mountains at Lonavala View of Pune from Chaturshringi Temple LohagadLocation in MaharashtraCountry IndiaStateMaharashtraDivisionPuneHeadquartersPuneGovernment BodyPune Zilla Parishad Guardian MinisterChandrakant Bacchu Patil Cabinet Minister MH President Zilla ParishadPresident Nirmala Pansare Vice President Mr Ranjit Shivtare District CollectorDr Rajesh Deshmukh IAS CEO Zilla ParishadMr Ayush Prasad IAS MPsGirish Bapat Pune Supriya Sule Baramati Dr Amol Kolhe Shirur Shrirang Barne Maval Area Total15 643 km2 6 040 sq mi Population 2011 Total9 429 408 Density600 km2 1 600 sq mi Demographics Literacy87 19 1 Sex ratio919Time zoneUTC 05 30 IST PIN Code s 411xxx 2 Major highwaysNH 48 NH 65 NH 60Official LanguageMarathiPer capita income Pune district INR 2 69 319 2019 20 3 Nominal gross domestic product Pune district INR 3 20 695crores 2019 20 4 Websitepune wbr gov wbr in Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient and medieval history 1 2 Deccan sultanates and the Bhosale jagir 1 2 1 Nizamshahi 1 2 2 Bhosale jagir under the Adilshahi 1 2 3 Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and the Mughals 1 3 Peshwa rule 1714 1818 1 3 1 Pune under the Peshwas 1 4 British rule and independence 2 Geography and climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Religion 3 2 Languages 4 Administrative divisions 4 1 Talukas 4 2 Cities and towns 4 3 Villages 5 District court 6 Education 6 1 Primary and secondary education 6 2 Vocational training 6 3 Higher education 7 Economy 7 1 Manufacturing 7 2 Information technology 7 3 Agriculture 8 Transport 8 1 Highways 8 2 Public transport 8 3 Air 8 4 Rail 9 Healthcare 10 Tourism 10 1 Pilgrimage sites 10 1 1 Ashtavinayak temples 10 2 Forts 11 Sports 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditSee also History of Pune nbsp The Great Chaitya at Karla CavesAncient and medieval history Edit According to archaeological discoveries of the Jorwe culture in Chandoli and Inamgaon portions of the district have been occupied by humans since the Chalcolithic the Copper Age 5th 4th millennium BCE 5 Many ancient trade routes linking ports in western India particularly those of coastal Konkan with the Deccan Plateau pass through the district The town of Junnar has been an important trading and political center for the last two thousand years and it was first mentioned by Greco Roman travellers in the early first millennium CE 6 7 8 The Karla Caves in Karli near Lonavala are near the Western Ghats and a major ancient trade route running eastward from the Arabian Sea to the Deccan Plateau The caves are a complex of ancient Indian Buddhist rock cut shrines which were developed from the second century BCE to the fifth century CE the oldest of the shrines is believed to date to 160 BCE Traders and Satvahana rulers financed construction of the caves 9 Buddhists identified with commerce and manufacturing through their early association with traders tended to locate their monasteries in natural formations near major trade routes to provide lodging for travelling traders 10 Inscriptions at Karla and Junnar suggest that in the early part of the Common Era the area was controlled by the Shaka ruler Nahapana 11 Coins found further east in the district near Indapur suggest that the region may have been controlled by the Traikutaka king Dahragana in 465 CE silver coins found at Junnar suggest that the region may also have been ruled by Andhra kings 12 The first reference to the Pune region is found on two copper plates dated to 758 and 768 CE and issued by the Rashtrakuta ruler Krishna I The plates call the region Puny Vishaya and Punaka Vishaya respectively The Pataleshwar rock cut temple complex was built during this time and the area included Theur Uruli Chorachi Alandi and Bhosari 13 The region became part of the Yadava Empire of Deogiri from the ninth to the 13th centuries The Muslim Khalji rulers of the Delhi Sultanate overthrew the Yadavas in 1317 beginning three hundred years of Islamic control The Khalji were followed by another sultanate dynasty the Tughlaqs A Tughlaq governor on the Deccan Plateau rebelled and created the Bahamani Sultanate which later dissolved into the Deccan sultanates During the 1400s Russian traveler Afanasy Nikitin spent many months in Junnar during the monsoon season and vividly describes life in the region under Bahamani rule 14 The fort at Chakan played an important role in the history of the Deccan sultanates 15 The Bahamani Sultanate broke up in the early 16th century the Nizamshahi kingdom controlled the region for most of the century with Junnar its first capital 16 During the early 1600s the Nizam Shahi general Malik Ambar moved his capital there 17 nbsp Ruins of Chakan FortDeccan sultanates and the Bhosale jagir Edit nbsp Malik Ambar the minister of Nizamshahi of Ahmadnagar who moved his administration to Junnar nbsp Shivneri fort birthplace of Chatrapati Shivaji MaharajThe district became politically important when the Nizamshahi capital was moved to Junnar at the beginning of the 16th century The Bhosale family received a jagir land grant and control of the region shifted among the Bhosale rulers the sultanates and the Mughals during the century The district was central to the founding of the Maratha Empire by Shivaji Nizamshahi Edit With the establishment of Nizamshahi rule with Ahmednagar its headquarters nearly all of the region was controlled by the Nizamshahi It was formed into a district or sarkar with sub divisions paragana and smaller ranges prant or desh Revenue collection was delegated to important chieftains of the Nizamshahi At Ahmednagar the Sultan bore the brunt of a heavy attack from Mughal armies who converged on the capital in 1595 To rally the strongest possible local support against the Mughal invaders and stabilise the territories ruled by Ahmednagar local Maratha chieftains were given increased power Amongst the chieftains was Maloji who was made a raja in 1595 the districts of Pune and Supa were given to him as a jagir fief Maloji was also given charge of the forts at Shivneri and Chakan which played an important role in the district s early political history 18 In 1600 Ahmednagar was captured by the Mughals Nizamshahi minister Malik Ambar raised Murtaza Nizam Shah II to the throne with its temporary headquarters at Junnar 16 For nearly a generation Ambar guided the Nizamshahi kingdom and the Pune region benefited from his leadership By his death in 1626 the region s revenue system was sound and fair Bhosale jagir under the Adilshahi Edit The Pune region was administered as a jagir during much of the 17th century by Maloji Bhosale his son Shahaji and his grandson Shivaji Its nominal sovereignty changed with shifting allegiances of the Bhosale family In 1632 Shahaji forsook the Mughals and accepted the friendship of the Adilshahi rulers of Bijapur the traditional rivals of Ahmadnagar Sultanate After the fall of the Ahmadnagar Nizamshahi Sultanate its territory was divided between the Adilshahi and the Mughals with Pune region going to the former Shahaji refused to surrender Junnar the seat of the Nizamshahi dynasty before he finally capitulated However Shahaji was apparently considered important enough by the Adilshah to play a key role in the new regime s administration His jagir was confirmed continuing the region s connection with the Bhosale family 19 nbsp Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj founder of the Maratha EmpireChatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and the Mughals Edit Shahaji Raje s second son Shivaji founder of the Maratha Empire was born on the hill fort of Shivneri near Junnar on 19 February 1630 20 21 22 23 Shivaji was named after a local deity the goddess Shivai 24 His mother was Jijabai the daughter of Lakhuji Jadhavrao of Sindhkhed a Mughal allied sardar claiming descent from the Yadavas of Devagiri 25 26 Shahaji appointed Dadoji Konddeo administrator of the Pune jagir which was restored to him after he joined the Adilshahi service in 1637 and was based in Bengaluru as the Adilshah commander Konddeo established complete control over the Maval region winning over or subduing most of the local Maval leaders 27 He rebuilt the settlement of Pune and prominent families who had left the town during its 1631 destruction by the Adilshahi general Murar Jaggdeo returned 28 Shahaji selected Pune as the residence of his wife Jijabai and son Shivaji and Konddeo oversaw the construction of their Lal Mahal palace Among Kondadeo s reported reforms was a tax of one fourth the cash equivalent of a land s yield and the Fasli calendar was introduced at this time He is said to have focused on the western Pune region and has been credited with overseeing Shivaji s education and training 29 30 31 Kondadeo died in 1647 and Shivaji became his father s deputy Many of Shivaji s comrades and later a number of his soldiers came from the Maval region in the district s western mountains including Yesaji Kank Suryaji Kakade Baji Pasalkar Baji Prabhu Deshpande and Tanaji Malusare 32 Shivaji traveled the hills and forests of the Sahyadri range with his Maval friends acquiring skills and familiarity with the land which would be useful in his military career 33 34 Around 1645 the teenaged Shivaji first expressed his concept of Hindavi Swarajya Indian self rule in a letter 35 36 a According to legend he took an oath to that effect at the temple of Raireshwar near Bhor in the district 40 Shivaji began his rule in 1648 of the Pune region taking possession of the key Torna Fort and controlling the Chakan and Purandar forts and raiding Junnar He moved his administration to the newly built Rajgad in 1648 and a year later when Muhammad Adil Shah of Bijapur took Shahaji hostage restrained his expansionist schemes 41 During the late 1640s and 1650s Shivaji controlled the Pune district and beyond Rajgad was his seat of government until his 1674 coronation 41 During the 1660s the Mughals under Aurangzeb began paying attention to Shivaji Pune and the region s forts frequently changed hands between the Mughals and Shivaji 42 In the Treaty of Purandar 1665 signed by the Mughal general Mirza Jaisingh and Shivaji Shivaji ceded control of a number of forts in the district to the Mughals 43 Shivaji recaptured many of these forts when the truce ended He was succeeded on the Marathi throne by his eldest son Sambhaji in 1680 Shortly afterwards the Mughal army under Aurangzeb moved into the Deccan Plateau and remained there for nearly three decades Sambhaji was captured and executed at Aurangzeb s order in the village of Tulapur at the confluence of the Bheema and Indrayani Rivers 44 45 According to other accounts Sambhaji s remains were fed to dogs 46 The period following his 1689 death was one of political ferment in the Deccan Plateau and the Pune region experienced major fluctuations in administrative authority Shivaji s younger son Rajaram I ruled after his brother s death He spent most of his time in Gingee fighting the Mughal siege Before the Mughals captured Gingee Rajaram returned to Maharashtra and died in Sinhagad in 1700 Ambikabai 47 one of his widows committed sati at Rajaram s death 48 The Bhimthadi or Deccani horse was developed in the region under Maratha rule by crossing Arabian and Turkic breeds with local ponies 49 50 Peshwa rule 1714 1818 Edit nbsp Watercolor painting of Pune in the late Peshwa era at the confluence of the Mula and Mutha Rivers by British artist Henry Salt nbsp Saswad seen from the Sangameshwar temple in 1813 by British artist Robert Melville GrindlayShivaji s grandson Shahu I appointed the Chitpavan Brahmin Balaji Vishwanath as his Peshwa in 1714 Vishwanath received the area around Pune from the grateful mother of one of Shahu s ministers for saving her son s life 51 In 1718 Shahu sent him to Delhi to assist the Sayyads in return for this help Muhammad Shah the Mughal emperor in Delhi granted Shahu sardeshmukhi rights for Pune Supa Baramati Indapur and Junnar Shahu appointed Baji Rao I Peshwa in 1720 succeeding his father 52 Baji Rao moved his administration from Saswad to nearby Pune in 1728 laying the foundation for turning a kasbah into a large city 53 54 Pune grew in size and influence as Maratha rule extended through the subcontinent in subsequent decades A well known saying in the era before the third battle of Panipat was that the ponies of Bhimthadi 49 drank the water of the Indus river Pune under the Peshwas Edit Pune gained more influence under the rule of Baji Rao I s son Balaji Baji Rao Nanasaheb Maratha influence waned after the disastrous 1761 Battle of Panipat and the Nizam of Hyderabad looted the city It and the empire recovered during the brief reign of Peshwa Madhavrao The rest of the Peshwa era was rife with family intrigue and political machinations The leading role was played by the ambitious Raghunathrao the younger brother of Nanasaheb who wanted power at the expense of his nephews Madhavrao I and Narayanrao After Narayanrao s 1775 murder by order of Raghunathrao s wife power was exercised in the name of his son Madhavrao II by a regency council led by Nana Fadnavis for most of the century 55 Under Peshwa rule the urban elite came from the Chitpavan Brahmin community they were the military commanders the bureaucrats and the bankers and had ties to each other by marriage 56 Nanasaheb built a lake in Katraj on the city s outskirts and a still operational underground aqueduct to bring water from the lake to Shaniwar Wada 57 The city received an underground sewage system in 1782 which discharged into the river 28 58 Pune prospered during Nanasaheb s reign On the southern fringe of the city he built a palace on the Parvati Hill developed a garden known as Heera Baug and dug a lake near the hill with a Ganesha temple on an island in its centre which is called Sarasbaug Nanasaheb also developed new commercial trading and residential localities Sadashiv Peth Narayan Peth Rasta Peth and Nana Peth During the 1790s the city had a population of 600 000 In 1781 after a city census a household tax gharpatti was levied on the more affluent one fifth to one sixth of the property value 59 Order in Peshwa Pune was maintained by the kotwal who was a police chief magistrate and municipal commissioner and whose duties included investigating levying and collecting fines for offences The kotwal was assisted by police officers who manned the chavdi police station and clerks collected fines and paid informants who provided intelligence Crimes included illicit affairs violence and murder in the case of murder sometimes only a fine was imposed Inter caste or inter religious affairs were also resolved with fines 60 Although the kotwal s salary was as high as 9 000 rupees per month it included officer salaries mainly from the Ramoshi caste 61 The best known kotwal in Pune during Peshwa rule was Ghashiram Kotwal and the city s police force was admired by European visitors 62 The patronage of the Brahmin Peshwas resulted in Pune s expansion with the construction of about 250 temples and bridges including the Lakdi Pul and the temples on Parvati Hill 63 Many temples like Maruti Vithoba Vishnu Mahadeo Rama Krishna and Ganesha temples were built during this era Their patronage extended to 164 schools pathshalas in the city which taught Hindu holy texts shastras to Brahmin men 64 Pune also had many public festivals Major festivals were Ganeshotsav the Deccan New Year Gudi Padwa Holi and Dasara Holi at the Peshwa court was celebrated over a five day period The Dakshina festival celebrated in the Hindu month of Shravan when millions of rupees were distributed attracted Brahmins from throughout India to Pune 65 66 The festivals the building of temples and temple rituals led to religion being responsible for about 15 percent of the city s economy during this period 67 68 69 Peshwas and knights residing in the city had individual hobbies and interests Madhavrao II had a private collection of exotic animals such as lions and rhinoceros near the Peshwe Park zoo 70 The last Peshwa Baji Rao II was a strength and wrestling enthusiast The sport of pole gymnastics mallakhamba was developed in Pune under his patronage by Balambhat Deodhar 71 Many Peshwas and their courtiers were patrons of lavani and Maharashtrian dance and a number of composers such as Ram Joshi Anant Phandi Prabhakar and Honaji Bala flourished during this period The dancers primarily came from the Mang and Mahar castes 72 73 Lavani used to be essential part of Holi celebrations in the region s Peshwa courts 74 Peshwa influence in India declined after the defeat of Maratha forces in the 1761 Battle of Panipat but Pune remained the seat of power However the city s fortunes declined rapidly after the 1795 accession of Baji Rao II Pune was captured by Yashwantrao Holkar in the 1802 Battle of Pune precipitating the Second Anglo Maratha War of 1803 1805 Peshwa rule ended with the defeat of Baji Rao II by the British East India Company under the leadership of Mountstuart Elphinstone in 1818 British rule and independence Edit nbsp Poona Pune district in 1896 nbsp When the Khadakwasla Dam was built in 1878 At that time it was considered one of the world s largest dams nbsp Photograph of the railway reversing station at Bhor Ghat from 1880sIn 1818 the Pune region and the rest of the Peshwa territories came under the control of the British East India Company One of the first tasks that the company did was to destroy Hill forts previously under Maratha control This was to stop Maratha forces regrouping in the hills The forts destroyed in Pune district included those in the Junnar region such Shivaji s birthplace of Shivneri Hadsar Narayangad Chavand and the important for of Sinhagad overlooking the city of Pune 75 The governor of the new territories Mountstuart Elphinstone appointed a commissioner and left the district s boundaries almost intact Elphinstone and other British officers enjoyed Saswad and the fertile valley around it 76 The annual Pandharpur Wari starts in two places in the district namely Alandi and Dehu In its present form the wari dates back to 1820s At that time Sant Tukaram s descendants and a devotee of Sant Dnyaneshwar named Haibatravbaba Arphalkar who was a courtier of Scindias the Maratha rulers of Gwalior made changes to wari 77 78 Haibatravbaba s changes involved carrying the paduka in a palkhi having horses involved in the procession and organizing the devotees or varkaris in Dindis Dindi stands for a specific group of varkaris 79 Company rule came to an end when under the terms of a proclamation issued by Queen Victoria the Bombay Presidency Pune and the rest of British India came under the British crown in 1858 80 Villages in the district saw rioting in 1875 by peasants protesting Marwari and Gujarati moneylenders The disturbances involved peasants getting the moneylenders to burn their documents and in some cases torching their houses The riots were responsible for the Bombay presidency government enacting the Deccan Agriculturists Relief Act to protect peasants from land grabbing by money lenders 81 82 During the first and second Anglo Maratha wars it took four or five weeks to move materials from Mumbai to Pune An 1804 military road constructed by the British East India Company reduced the journey to four or five days The company built a macadam road between the two cities in 1830 which permitted mail cart service 83 84 A rail line from Bombay operated by the Great Indian Peninsula Railway GIPR reached Pune in 1858 85 86 In the following decades the line was extended east and south of the city The GIPR extended its line east to Raichur in 1871 where it met the Madras Railway and connected the city to Madras 87 The metre gauge Pune Miraj line was completed in 1886 making the city a rail junction The Bombay Poona line was electrified in the 1920s this cut travel time between the cities to three hours enabling day trips for events such as the Poona races 88 Many villages in the west east and south of the district such as Lonavla Uruli Kanchan and Daund were connected by rail Pune s first bus service began in 1941 with the Silver Bus Company and Tanga horse drawn carriage drivers went on strike in protest 89 Tangas were a common mode of public transport well into the 1950s and bicycles were a private vehicle choice in the 1930s 90 The British installed a telegraph system in Pune in 1858 91 According to the 1885 Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Poona the city and the GIPR had telegraph offices In 1928 a relay station was built in Khadki to relay telegraph signals for the Imperial Wireless Chain In 1885 Pune was a post distribution hub for the district There were two post offices in the city which also offered money order and savings bank services 92 Areas east of Pune receive less rainfall than areas west of the city adjacent to the Western Ghats To minimize drought risk a masonry dam was built on the Mutha River at Khadakwasla in 1878 At the time the dam was considered one of the world s largest Two canals were dug on each riverbank to irrigate land east of the city and supply drinking water to the city and its cantonment 93 In 1890 Poona Municipality spent Rs 200 000 to install water filtration works 94 In the early part 20th century hydroelectric plants were installed in the Western Ghats between Pune and Mumbai The Poona electric supply company a Tata company received power from the Khopoli on the Mumbai side of the Ghats and Bhivpuri plants near the Mulshi dam 95 Power was used to electrify trains running between Mumbai and Pune and for industrial and residential use and a dam was built on the Velvandi River in Bhor 96 97 Geography and climate Edit nbsp Potholes in the Kukdi River near Nighoj nbsp Confluence of the Indrayani and Bhima Rivers at TulapurThe district is surrounded by Thane district on the northwest Raigad district on the west Satara district on the south Solapur district on the southeast and Ahmednagar district on the north and northeast On the leeward side of the Western Ghats it extends to the Deccan Plateau on the east Pune is at an altitude of 559 metres 1 863 feet The district is located between 17 5 and 19 2 north latitude and 73 2 and 75 1 east longitude The Bhima River the Krishna River s main tributary rises in the Western Ghats and flows east All the district s rivers the Pushpavati Krushnavati Kukadi Meena Ghod Bhama Andhra Indrayani Pavna Mula Mutha Ambi Mose Shivganga Kanandi Gunjavni Velvandi Nira Karha and Velu flow into the Bhima or its tributaries Major dams are on the Kukadi Pushpavati Ghod Bhima Pavna Bhama Mula Mutha the Temghar and Khadakwasla Dams and Mose 98 Nine of the district s fifteen talukas are identified as drought prone covering a total area of 1 562 000 hectares 6 030 sq mi and a cropped area of 1 095 000 hectares 4 230 sq mi Of the cropped area only 116 000 hectares 450 sq mi are irrigated nearly half by wells and tanks and 40 percent by government canals The district had a population of 4 2 million in 1991 of which 52 percent was rural There were 1 530 villages in the district 99 Its average rainfall is 600 to 700 millimetres 24 to 28 in most of which falls during the monsoon months July to October The area adjacent to the Western Ghats gets more rain than areas further east The Daund and Indapur talukas experience more frequent droughts than Maval on the district s western edge Temperatures are moderate and rainfall is unpredictable in tune with the Indian monsoon Summers from early March to July are dry and hot Temperatures range from 20 to 38 C 68 to 100 F and may reach 40 C 104 F Winter runs from November to February Temperatures usually hover around 7 to 12 C 45 to 54 F sometimes dipping to 3 C 37 F June is the driest month and the agricultural sector is considered vulnerable until 20 September Climate data for PuneMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 29 9 85 8 31 9 89 4 35 4 95 7 37 7 99 9 36 9 98 4 31 7 89 1 28 4 83 1 27 4 81 3 29 4 84 9 31 4 88 5 30 0 86 0 28 0 82 4 31 5 88 7 Average low C F 10 0 50 0 12 0 53 6 15 0 59 0 19 5 67 1 22 4 72 3 22 7 72 9 22 0 71 6 21 3 70 3 20 3 68 5 17 0 62 6 14 0 57 2 10 0 50 0 17 2 62 9 Average precipitation mm inches 0 0 3 0 1 2 0 1 11 0 4 40 1 6 138 5 4 163 6 4 129 5 1 155 6 1 68 2 7 28 1 1 4 0 2 741 29 2 Average precipitation days 0 1 0 3 0 3 1 1 3 3 10 9 17 0 16 2 10 9 5 0 2 4 0 3 67 8Mean monthly sunshine hours 291 4 282 8 300 7 303 0 316 2 186 0 120 9 111 6 177 0 248 0 270 0 288 3 2 895 9Source HKODemographics EditHistorical population of Pune districtYearPop p a 19011 095 858 19111 177 238 0 72 19211 105 014 0 63 YearPop p a 19311 275 882 1 45 19411 472 972 1 45 19511 950 976 2 85 YearPop p a 19612 466 880 2 37 19713 178 029 2 57 19814 164 470 2 74 YearPop p a 19915 532 532 2 88 20017 232 555 2 72 20119 429 408 2 69 source 100 Pune district had a population of 9 429 408 in the 2011 census 101 roughly equal to the nation of Benin 102 The fourth most populous of India s 640 districts 101 it has a population density of 603 inhabitants per square kilometre 1 560 sq mi 101 The district s population growth rate between 2001 and 2011 was 30 34 percent 101 Pune has a sex ratio of 910 females to every 1 000 males 101 and a literacy rate of 87 19 percent 101 By age 685 022 were age four or younger 1 491 352 were between ages five and 15 4 466 901 were 15 to 59 and 589 280 were 60 years of age or older For every 1 000 males age 6 and older there were 919 females Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes made up 12 52 and 3 70 of the population respectively 101 Religion Edit Religions in Pune district 2011 103 Religion PercentHinduism 85 80 Islam 7 14 Buddhism 3 61 Christianity 1 42 Jainism 1 36 Other or not stated 0 67 Hindus are the largest religious community with a significant Muslim minority In rural areas Hindus are the predominant community Buddhists are also significant with smaller numbers of Christians and Jains concentrated in Pune city 103 Languages Edit Languages in Pune district 2011 104 Marathi 78 17 Hindi 10 00 Urdu 1 89 Kannada 1 40 Marwadi 1 34 Telugu 1 30 Gujarati 1 15 Others 4 75 Marathi is the only official language of the district At the time of the 2011 Census of India 78 17 of the population in the district spoke Marathi 10 00 Hindi 1 89 Urdu 1 40 Kannada 1 34 Marwadi 1 30 Telugu and 1 15 Gujarati as their first language 104 Administrative divisions EditThis section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The district s talukasThe district has two municipal corporations in the city of Pune namely Pune Municipal Corporation PMC and Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation PCMC PCMC Pune is north western city limits of Pune and its corporation covers Nigdi Akurdi Pimpri Chinchwad and Bhosari The region was zoned for industrial development by the state of Maharashtra in the early 1960s amp later acceded to the city limits Pune District is divided into fifteen talukas Pune City taluka Pimpri Chinchwad taluka Haveli taluka Mulshi taluka Velhe taluka Bhor taluka Purandar taluka Baramati taluka Daund taluka Indapur taluka Maval taluka Khed taluka Shirur taluka Ambegaon taluka and Junnar taluka There are thirteen panchayat samitis The district has 1 866 villages and 21 Vidhan Sabha constituencies Junnar Ambegaon Khed Alandi Maval Mulshi Haveli Bopodi Shivajinagar Parvati SC Kasba Peth Bhvani Peth Camp Cantonment Shirur Daund Indapur Baramati Purandhar and Bhor Its four Lok Sabha constituencies are Pune Baramati Shirur and Maval shared with Raigad district Talukas Edit Pune City taluka Pimpri Chinchwad taluka Haveli taluka Mulshi taluka Velhe taluka Bhor taluka Purandar taluka Baramati taluka Daund taluka Indapur taluka Maval taluka Khed taluka Shirur taluka Ambegaon taluka Junnar talukaCities and towns Edit nbsp New housing in Kharadi a suburb of PuneThe district has three cantonments in Camp Khadki and Dehu Road Smaller towns in the district have Nagar Palikas municipal councils Most are these are the headquarters of their respective taluka or its main town Alandi Baramati taluka headquarters Bhigwan Bhor taluka headquarters Chakan Daund taluka headquarters Indapur taluka headquarters Jejuri Junnar taluka headquarters Rajgurunagar taluka headquarters Lonavla Khandala Narayangaon Nasrapur Shivatkar Nira Pirangut Saswad taluka headquarters Shirur taluka headquarters Talegaon Dabhade Wadgaon Uruli Kanchan Mulshi The growth of the Pune metropolitan area has led to the development of township schemes in the city such as Magarpatta Amanora and Nanded City and development further from the city in the mountains such as Lavasa 105 Villages Edit Mahalunge PadawalDistrict court EditPune District Court administers justice at the district level and is the principal court of original jurisdiction in civil matters The district court is also a Sessions Court for criminal matters It is presided over by a Principal District and Sessions Judge appointed by the state government Court decisions are subject to the appellate jurisdiction of Bombay High Court Pune District Court is under the High Court s administrative control Education Edit nbsp Mahatma Gandhi Vidyalaya a high school at Urali KanchanPrimary and secondary education Edit State primary schools in the cities and district are run by the city corporation and Zilla Parishads respectively private schools are operated by charitable trusts Secondary schools are also run by charitable trusts All schools are required to undergo inspection by the Zilla Parishad or city corporation 106 Instruction is primarily in Marathi English or Hindi although Urdu is also used Secondary schools are affiliated with the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations CISCE the Central Board of Secondary Education CBSE the National Institute of Open Schooling NIOS or the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Under the 10 2 3 plan after completing secondary school students typically enroll for two years in a junior college also known as pre university or a school with a higher secondary curriculum affiliated with the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education or a central board Vocational training Edit Pune and the district have 55 post secondary school industrial training institutes ITI run by the government and private trusts which offer vocational training in trades such as construction plumbing welding and automobile repair Successful candidates receive the National Trade Certificate 107 Higher education Edit Pune city has been called the Oxford of the East 106 The city is home to Savitribai Phule Pune University and many of its affiliated colleges The district has a number of central government run educational and training institutes including the National Defence Academy the Armed Forces Medical College and the Film and Television Institute of India The district has many privately run colleges and universities including religious and special purpose institutions Most of the private colleges were founded after the Maharashtra state government of Chief Minister Vasantdada Patil liberalised the education sector in 1982 108 Politicians and other leaders were instrumental in establishing the private institutions 109 110 Other higher education institutions in the district include Abasaheb Garware College Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Army Institute of Technology AIT affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University B J Medical College Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Bharati Vidyapeeth Deemed university Brihan Maharashtra College of Commerce Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University College of Agriculture Pune COAP affiliated with Mahatma Phule Krishi Vidyapeeth College of Engineering Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Dnyaneshwar Vidyapeeth autonomous university Shri Shau Mandir Mahavidyalaya commerce engineering agriculture and arts Pune University Dr D Y Patil College of Engineering Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Deccan College Post Graduate and Research Institute Institute of Management Development and Research an autonomous B School under the aegis of Deccan Education Society Fergusson College Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Government Polytechnic Pune diploma courses in engineering Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics Pune ILS Law College Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Indian Naval Training Colleges Lonavala Maharashtra Institute of Technology Modern College of Arts Science and Commerce Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University National Chemical Laboratory Sinhgad College of Engineering Sir Parashurambhau College Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University SNDT Women s University Pune campus Symbiosis International University Pune Vishwakarma Institute of Management Vishwakarma Institute of Technology Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Nowrosjee Wadia College Pune affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune University Pune Institute of Computer Technology affiliated with Savitribai Phule Pune UniversityEconomy EditAlthough the district is an industrial center its economy also has a significant agricultural component Pune is also considered an educational hub of the state of Maharashtra with students coming from all over India to attend the numerous colleges and institutes Manufacturing Edit Industrial development began during the 1950s in Pune s outlying areas such as Hadapsar Bhosari and Pimpri The government run Hindustan Antibiotics was founded in Pimpri in 1954 111 Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation MIDC the state government owned corporation tasked with industrial development in the state has over many decades earmarked specific areas in the district for industrial development The first MIDC set up in the district was around Bhosari in the early 1960s MIDC provides land and infrastructure for manufacturing companies to set up business in the area 112 So far MIDC has set up Industrial parks indifferent areas of the district at Pimpri Chinchwad Bhosari Ranjangaon Kurkumbh Jejuri Baramati Chakan Indapur Hinjawadi and Talawade 113 Telco now Tata Motors began operations in 1961 around Chinchwad By 1970s Pune emerged as India s leading engineering region with the expansion of Telco Bajaj Kinetic Bharat Forge Alfa Laval Atlas Copco Sandvik and Thermax The district vies with Chennai as the Detroit of India 114 Growth in the villages of Pimpri Chinchwad and Bhosari allowed them and their surrounding areas to incorporate as separate governing body knows as the Pimpri Chinchawad Municipal Corporation Pune The Pune metropolitan area was defined in 1967 as the city the three cantonment areas and the villages on its outskirts Some of these villages such as Kothrud Katraj Hadapsar Hinjawadi and Baner have become suburbs of Pune 115 In 2008 General Motors Volkswagen and Fiat built plants near Pune Information technology Edit nbsp Infosys in HinjawadiAfter India s 1991 economic liberalization Pune began attracting foreign capital from the information technology and engineering industries Between 1997 and 2000 IT parks were developed in Aundh and Hinjawadi 116 Other IT parks have been set up at Baner Magarpatta in hadapsar EON IT Park Kharadi and viman nagar Agriculture Edit Although the region around Pune is industrialized agriculture continues to be important elsewhere in the district Since most arable land is still rain fed the southwest monsoon season between June and September is crucial to the district s food sufficiency and quality of life Fluctuations in time distribution or quantity of monsoon rains may lead to floods or droughts The eastern part of the district has been historically drought prone but irrigation provided by dams canals and wells have made agriculture less dependent on rainfall 117 The overtapping of aquifers has led to increased water salinity in the talukas of Purandhar Baramati Daund Indapur and Shirur in the eastern part of the district threatening agriculture and the drinking water supply 118 Monsoon crops include rice jwari and bajri Other crops include wheat pulses vegetables and onions Ambemohar a mango scented rice grown in Bhor taluka and areas near the Western Ghats is popular throughout Maharashtra Since it has a low yield many farmers in the region grow the crossbred Indrayani rice instead 119 nbsp Barrels at the Narayangaon WineryMajor cash crops include sugarcane and oil seeds including groundnut and sunflower The district has significant fruit orchards particularly mango grape and orange A winery in Narayangaon produces sparkling wine from locally grown Thompson seedless grapes 120 Most growers of cash crops including cotton in the district belong to agricultural cooperatives and sugar is produced in mills owned by local cooperative societies whose members of supply sugarcane to the mills 121 During the last fifty years the local sugar mills have played an important role in encouraging political participation and have been a stepping stone for aspiring politicians 122 Transport EditHighways Edit nbsp Mumbai Pune ExpresswayPune district has 13 642 kilometres 8 477 mi of roads National and state highways crossing the district include NH 48 from Mumbai to Bangalore The western Dehu Road Katraj bypass was completed in 1989 reducing traffic congestion in Pune and leading to industrial and housing growth along the bypass NH 60 the Pune Nashik National Highway NH 65 the Pune Solapur Hyderabad Suryapet Vijayawada National Highway Yashwantrao Chavan Mumbai Pune Expressway Work on the six lane toll road began in 1998 and was completed in 2001 State highways include Pune Ahmednagar Aurangabad State Highway Pune Alandi State Highway Pune Saswad Pandharpur State Highway Pune Paud Road State Highway Talegaon Chakan State HighwayPublic transport Edit Bus service by private companies was introduced in Pune shortly before the independence The city took over the service after the independence in 1947 as Poona Municipal Transport PMT which later became Pune Municipal Transport During the 1990s PMT and Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Transport PCMT the bus service provider in Pimpri Chinchwad had a combined fleet of over 1 000 buses Because municipal transport coverage was patchy a number of employers in the industrial belt near Pimpri Chinchwad and Hadapsar offered bus service to their employees 123 The companies used many more private buses than the municipal providers used 123 The Pune Municipal Corporation began a bus rapid transit system India s first in 2006 but it encountered a number of difficulties The two municipal bus companies merged in 2007 to form Pune Mahanagar Parivahan Mahamandal Limited PMPML The Commonwealth Youth Games were held the following year which encouraged additional development in north western Pune and added a fleet of buses running on compressed natural gas CNG to the city s streets Maharashtra State Transport buses began operating in 1951 throughout the state During the 1960s motorized three wheeled auto rickshaws began replacing horse drawn tangas in the district s urban areas their number grew from 200 in 1960 to over 20 000 in 1996 Although Pune was known as the bicycle city of India in the 1930s motorcycles began replacing bicycles in the 1970s the number of motorcycles increased from five per 1 000 people in 1965 to 118 per 1 000 in 1995 123 Air Edit Pune Airport IATA PNQ is a civil enclave at Lohegaon Air Base northeast of the city with service to a number of domestic and international destinations Since Pune s air traffic is controlled by the Indian Air Force IAF 124 there is occasional conflict between the Airports Authority of India and the IAF over flight schedules or night landings The airport apron is becoming inadequate to handle the growing number of flights into Pune since the airport s upgrade to international status with flights to Dubai Singapore and Frankfurt 125 126 Pune Airport handled about 165 passengers a day in 2004 05 increasing to 250 passengers a day in 2005 06 There was a sharp rise in 2006 2007 when the number of daily passengers reached 4 309 In 2010 2011 the number of passengers was about 8 000 a day 127 The government of Maharashtra has entrusted responsibility to Maharashtra Airport Development Company MADC for the greenfield Chhatrapati Sambhaji Raje International Airport project 128 in the Purandar area Baramati Airport 12 kilometres 7 5 mi from Baramati and 100 kilometres 62 mi from Pune and used for pilot training and charter flights was being planned in 2011 as a private jet hub by Reliance Infrastructure 129 Rail Edit nbsp Lonavla EMU at Pune s platform 6 nbsp Bhima river and bridge near DaundThe district s two major rail junctions are Pune Junction and Daund Junction All rail lines through Pune are broad gauge double track and are part of Indian Railways Central Railway zone The Pune Mumbai line the district s most important rail route was built during the British Raj Khandala and Lonavala are on this route which has a number of daily high speed trains The Mumbai Kolhapur line also passes through the district and other major Indian cities are connected to Pune by rail The district s rail lines are Pune Kalyan towards Mumbai Pune Daund Daund Kurduwadi Daund Manmad Daund Baramati branch line single track Pune Miraj single track from Pune to Miraj towards Bangalore Although express trains on these routes skip many smaller stations local passenger trains stop at each station A suburban rail system operated by Central Railway connects Pune to its suburbs and neighboring villages west of the city The system has two routes from Pune Junction to Lonavala and to Talegaon Five trains operate on the Pune Junction Talegaon route and eighteen trains operate on the Pune Junction Lonavla route 130 Eight passenger trains run between Pune Junction and Daund as suburban trains making the Pune Daund section a third suburban route Major stations on this route are at Loni Kalbhor and Urali Kanchan Healthcare Edit nbsp A Primary Healthcare center in the village of Amboli in Pune districtHealthcare in the district is provided by private and public facilities Primary care is provided by practitioners of Allopathic medicine as well as traditional and alternative medicine i e Ayurved Homeopathy and Unani For minor and chronic ailments people in the district often rely on practitioners of traditional medicine 131 Thedistrict is served by three government hospitals Sassoon Hospital Budhrani and Dr Ambedkar Hospital There are also a number of private hospitals in the city of Pune such as Ranka Hospital Sahyadri Jahangir Nursing Home Sancheti Hospital Aditya Birla Memorial Hospital KEM Hospital Ruby Hall Naidu Hospital 132 and Smile Inn Dental Clinic Pune 133 Tourism Edit nbsp Khandoba temple at Jejuri a kuldaiwat for a large percentage of Marathi Hindu families nbsp Alandi on the Indrayani River nbsp Bhimashankar temple is considered one of the twelve JyotirlingaPune district has been at the center of Maharashtraian and Marathi history for more than four hundred years beginning with the Deccan sultanates and followed by the Maratha Empire The district has a number of mountain forts and buildings from these eras in addition to shrines revered by Marathi Hindus including five of the eight Ashtavinayaka Ganesha temples Samadhis of the two most revered Marathi Bhakti saints Dnyaneshwar and Tukaram are in Alandi and Dehu respectively The main temple of Khandoba the family deity for most Marathi Hindus is in Jejuri 134 The British designated Pune as the monsoon capital of the Bombay Presidency and many buildings and parks from the era remain Hill stations such as Lonavla and Khandala also date back to the Raj and remain popular with residents of Pune and Mumbai for holidays 135 The district s mountains forests and reservoirs are popular for hiking and birdwatching Bhigwan a catchment area of the Ujjani Dam is about from Pune on NH 65 the Pune Solapur highway An area of about 18 000 hectares 69 sq mi has been proposed as a sanctuary for migratory birds Pilgrimage sites Edit See also Hindu temples in Pune Alandi The town attracts millions of devotees annually to the resting place or Samadhi of the 13th century Marathi Bhakti saint Sant Dnyaneshwar 136 Bhimashankar Bhimashankar is one of the twelve Jyotirlinga Shiva temples in India It is located high in the Sahyadri mountains 127 km from Pune Bhimashankar is also the source of the Bhima River the main tributary of the Krishna river Dehu The town on the banks of the indrayani river is associated with Tukaram 137 the 17th century poet saint of the Bhakti movement in Maharashtra 138 The town is visited by hundreds of thousands of people for the annual Pandharpur Wari when the paduka symbolic sandals of the saint are carried to Pandharpur in a palkhi Nira Narsingpur The town has an historic temple dedicated to Lord Narasimha an Avatar of Vishnu The temple is located close to the ghat at the confluence of Bhima river and Nira river at the south eastern tip of Pune district in Indapur taluka Shri Narsimha of Nira Narsingpur is the family deity of many families from Maharashtra and Karnataka Jejuri The town is foremost center of worship of the regional deity of Khandoba 139 It is situated 48 km from Pune Maharashtra Khandoba at Jejuri is the family deity of a large number of families from different MarathiHindu communities There are two temples the first is an ancient temple known as Kadepathar Kadepathar is difficult to climb The second one is the newer and more famous Gad kot temple which is easy to climb Both temples are fort like structures 140 Bhuleshwar temple A 13th century Shiva temple on top of a hill It is 45 kilometres from city of Pune and 10 km from Pune Solapur highway from Yawat The temple is unique as its architecture is Islamic from outside and appears more as a mosque than a temple due to its resemblance of a circular tomb and minarets Morya Gosavi Ganesh temple and tomb of Morya Gosavi at Chinchwad 141 Ashtavinayak temples Edit nbsp Lenyadri temple in a former Buddhist cave on a hilltop near JunnarAshtavinayak refers to eight historic Ganesh temples in Pune district and adjacent areas Each of these temples have its own individual legend and history Five of these temples are situated in Pune district Girijatmak of Lenyadri a former Buddhist cave on a hilltop near Junnar Moreshwar of Morgaon Mahaganesh of Ranjangaon Chintamani Temple Theur the closest Ashtavinayak temple to Pune Vigneshwara of OzarForts Edit nbsp The medieval Purandar fortA number of historically important hill forts and castles in the district date back to the Deccan sultanates and Maratha Empire The forts and surrounding mountains are popular for trekking 142 Anaghaai Bhorgiri Chakan Fort or Sangramgad dates back to 15th century Bahamani rule Chavand Daulatmangal Hadsar Induri Jivdhan Kaawla Kailasgad Kenjalgad Korigad Korlai Lohagad Malhargad Sonori Morgiri Narayangad Nimgiri Purandar historically important during the Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and Peshwa eras Rajgad seat of government for Shivaji for major part of his career before his coronation in 1674 Rajmachi Rohida Shivneri birthplace of Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj in 1630 Sindola Sinhagad or Kondhana Nearest fort to Pune Tikona Torna Fort or Prachandagad the first fort captured by the teenage Shivaji in the 1640s Tung Fort or Kathingad Vajrangad Rudramal Visapur FortSports EditThe Maharashtra cricket team has its home ground in Pune playing at the new Maharashtra Cricket Association MCA Cricket Stadium in Gahunje The I League Pune Football Club plays in the league s First Division and finished third in the 2009 10 season FC Pune City played in the Indian Super League since the league s inception in 2014 until they folded in 2019 as did their women s and reserve and academy teams The 1993 National Games were held in Pune and the new Sports City hosted the Commonwealth Youth Games in 2008 Puneri Paltan one of ten teams in the professional kabaddi league has its home ground in Balewadi See also EditPune Station Bus Stand List of roads in Pune Chas Ghodegaon LavasaNotes Edit Some scholars interpret Hindavi Swarajya as meaning self rule of Hindu people 37 while others state that Shivaji s struggle was for gaining religious freedom for Hindus 38 However the term hindavi was in use by both Hindus and Muslims in the time period concerned 39 References Edit Pune District Population Census 2011 2019 Maharashtra literacy sex ratio and density census2011 co in PIN Codes of Pune District Maharashtra India Archived from the original on 23 January 2023 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Records Official Per capita income of Maharashtra 2019 20 economy Department Government of Maharashtra India Maharashtra Vidhanmanda Archived from the original on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Records Official nominal gross district Domestic Product of Maharashtra 2019 20 economy Department Government of Maharashtra India Maharashtra Vidhanmanda Archived from the original on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Sen Sailendra Nath 1999 Ancient Indian history and civilization Second ed New Delhi New Age International pp 24 25 ISBN 9788122411980 Margabandhu C Trade Contacts between Western India and the Graeco Roman World in the early centuries of the Christian era Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient Journal de l histoire economique et sociale de l Orient 1965 316 322 Rath Jayanti QUEENS AND COINS OF INDIA Deo S B The Genesis of Maharashtra History and Culture Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 43 1984 17 36 Later Andhra Period India Retrieved 24 January 2007 Keay John 2000 India A History New York US Grove Press pp 123 127 ISBN 0 8021 3797 0 Reddy K Krishna 2006 Indian History New Delhi ata McGraw Hill Education p A 264 ISBN 9780070635777 Gadgil D R 1945 Poona A Socio Economic Survey Part I Pune India Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics p 3 Retrieved 20 September 2016 Kantak M R 1991 92 Urbanization of Pune How Its Ground Was Prepared Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 51 52 489 495 JSTOR 42930432 Fisher Michael H ed 2007 Visions of Mughal India an anthology of European travel writing London I B Tauris pp 15 18 ISBN 978 1 84511 354 4 Retrieved 6 July 2016 Eaton Richard M 2007 A social history of the Deccan 1300 1761 1 pbk ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 69 71 ISBN 978 0521716277 a b Poona District Nizam Shahis 1490 1636 Maharashtra Government of Maharashtra Retrieved 12 July 2016 Eaton Richard M 2005 The new Cambridge history of India 1 publ ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 118 ISBN 0 521 25484 1 Retrieved 6 July 2016 Joseph G Da Cunha 1900 Origin of Bombay Bombay Society s library etc etc Richard M Eaton 17 November 2005 A Social History of the Deccan 1300 1761 Eight Indian Lives Vol 1 Cambridge University Press pp 128 221 ISBN 978 0 521 25484 7 Siba Pada Sen 1973 Historians and historiography in modern India Institute of Historical Studies p 106 ISBN 9788120809000 N Jayapalan 2001 History of India Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors p 211 ISBN 978 81 7156 928 1 Sailendra Sen 2013 A Textbook of Medieval Indian History Primus Books pp 196 199 ISBN 978 9 38060 734 4 Public Holidays PDF maharashtra gov in Retrieved 19 May 2018 Sarkar Shivaji and His Times 1920 p 19 sfn error no target CITEREFSarkar Shivaji and His Times1920 help Arun Metha 2004 History of medieval India ABD Publishers p 278 ISBN 9788185771953 Kalyani Devaki Menon 6 July 2011 Everyday Nationalism Women of the Hindu Right in India University of Pennsylvania Press pp 44 ISBN 978 0 8122 0279 3 Sarkar Jadunath 1919 Shivaji and His Times Second ed London Longmans Green and Co a b Gadgil D R 1945 Poona a socio economic survey part I Economics Duff Esq Captain in the first or grenadier regiment of Bombay Native Infantry and late political resident at Satara In three volumes James Grant 1826 A History of the Mahrattas Volume 1 1921 ed London Oxford University Press pp 126 128 Retrieved 27 January 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Haig Wolseley 27 June 1930 The Maratha Nation Journal of the Royal Society of Arts 78 4049 873 JSTOR 41358538 Sarkar Shivaji and His Times 1920 pp 20 25 sfn error no target CITEREFSarkar Shivaji and His Times1920 help Shivaram Shankar Apte 1965 Samarth Ramdas Life amp Mission Vora p 105 Edwardes amp Garrett Mughal Rule in India 1995 p 128 sfn error no target CITEREFEdwardes amp Garrett Mughal Rule in India1995 help Sarkar History of Aurangzib 1920 pp 22 24 sfn error no target CITEREFSarkar History of Aurangzib1920 help Pagadi Shivaji 1983 p 98harvnb error no target CITEREFPagadi Shivaji1983 help It was a bid for Hindawi Swarajya Indian rule a term in use in Marathi sources of history Smith Wilfred C 1981 On Understanding Islam Selected Studies Walter de Gruyter p 195 ISBN 978 3 11 082580 0 The earliest relevant usage that I myself have found is Hindavi swarajya from 1645 in a letter of Shivaji This might mean Indian independence from foreign rule rather than Hindu raj in the modern sense William Joseph Jackson 2005 Vijayanagara voices exploring South Indian history and Hindu literature Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 38 ISBN 0 7546 3950 9 Probably the earliest use of a word like Hindu was in 1645 in a phrase in a letter of Shivaji Hindavi swarajya meaning independence from foreign rule self rule of Hindu people Brown C Mackenzie 1984 Svaraj the Indian Ideal of Freedom A Political or Religious Concept Religious Studies 20 3 429 441 doi 10 1017 s0034412500016292 S2CID 154403316 Husain Ali Akbar 2011 The Courtly Gardens of Abdul s Ibrahim Nama in Navina Najat Haiser Marika Sardar eds Sultans of the South Arts of India s Deccan Courts 1323 1687 Metropolitan Museum of Art pp 82 83 ISBN 978 1 58839 438 5 That an obscure Hindavi speaking poet should be elevated to the Persian influenced court of one of the Deccan s principal sultanates speaks both for Ibrahim Adil Shah II s patronage of the local idiom and for his encouragement of Abdul and other promising poets Harish Kapadia March 2004 Trek the Sahyadris Indus Publishing p 21 ISBN 978 81 7387 151 1 a b Stewart Gordon 16 September 1993 The Marathas 1600 1818 Cambridge University Press pp 59 80 ISBN 978 0 521 26883 7 Punediary Punediary Retrieved 15 January 2011 Stewart Gordon 16 September 1993 The Marathas 1600 1818 Cambridge University Press p 73 ISBN 978 0 521 26883 7 Kamal Shrikrishna Gokhale 1978 Chhatrapati Sambhaji Navakamal Publications p 365 Retrieved 2 October 2012 Organiser Bharat Prakashan January 1973 p 280 Retrieved 2 October 2012 J L Mehta 1 January 2005 Advanced Study in the History of Modern India Volume One 1707 1813 Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd p 50 ISBN 978 1 932705 54 6 Retrieved 7 April 2016 Gokhale Kamal Rajaram Chhatrapati in Marathi Vishwakosh Wai Maharashtra India Marathi Vishwakosh permanent dead link Feldhaus Anne ed 1996 Images of women in Maharashtrian literature and religion Albany State University of New York Press p 183 ISBN 978 0791428375 a b Porter Valeria Alderson Lawrence Hall Stephen J G Sponenburg D Phillip 2016 Mason s World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding CABI pp 460 461 ISBN 978 1845934668 Retrieved 13 November 2017 Bakshi G D 2010 The rise of Indian military power evolution of an Indian strategic culture New Delhi KW Publishers ISBN 978 8187966524 Duff J G 1990 History of the Marathas Vol I Cf MSG p 437 प ण ज ल ह ऐत ह स क महत त व च Manase org Archived from the original on 15 May 2014 Retrieved 14 May 2014 Kosambi Meera 1989 Glory of Peshwa Pune Economic and Political Weekly 24 5 247 Gokhale Balkrishna Govind 1985 The Religious Complex in Eighteenth Century Poona Journal of the American Oriental Society 105 4 720 doi 10 2307 602730 JSTOR 602730 Dikshit M G 1946 Early Life of Peshwa Savai Madhavrao Ii Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute 7 1 4 225 248 JSTOR 42929386 Review Glory of Peshwa Pune Reviewed Work Poona in the Eighteenth Century An Urban History by Balkrishna Govind Gokhale Review by Meera Kosambi Economic and Political Weekly Vol 24 No 5 4 Feb 1989 pp 247 250 Khare K C and M S Jadhav Water Quality Assessment of Katraj Lake Pune 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century Pune India Journal of Historical Geography 28 2 2002 203 215 Kumar Ravinder 2004 Western India in the Nineteenth century Repr ed London u a Routledge p 39 ISBN 978 0415330480 Adachi K 2001 Dakshina Rules of Bombay Presidency 1836 1851 Minamiajiakenkyu 2001 13 pp 24 51 Kyosuke Adachi Dakshina Rules of Bombay Presidency 183 1851 Its Constitution and Principles Journal of the Japanese Association for South Asian Studies 13 2001 Kosambi Meera 1989 Glory of Peshwa Pune Economic and Political Weekly 248 5 247 Gokhale Balkrishna Govind 1985 The Religious Complex in Eighteenth Century Poona Journal of the American Oriental Society 105 4 719 724 doi 10 2307 602730 JSTOR 602730 Shaniwarwada was centre of Indian politics Ninad Bedekar Mumbai DNA Dnaindia com Retrieved 17 October 2013 Rao Bahadur Dattatraya Balvanta Parasnis 1921 Poona in Bygone Days Times Press Bombay Maguire Joseph 2011 Sport across asia politics cultures and identities 7 1 publ ed New York and UK Routledge p 129 ISBN 978 0415884389 Retrieved 28 September 2016 Rege S 1995 The hegemonic appropriation of sexuality The case of the lavani performers of Maharashtra Contributions to Indian Sociology 29 1 pp 25 37 PDF Cashman Richard I 1975 The myth of the Lokamanya Tilak and mass politics in Maharashtra Berkeley University of California Press p 9 ISBN 978 0520024076 Retrieved 22 November 2016 peshwa dance SHIRGAONKAR1 VARSHA RAMAKRISHNAN K S 2015 LAVANI LITERATURE AS A SOURCE OF SOCIO CULTURAL HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL MAHARASHTRA International Journal of Humanities Arts Medicine and Sciences 3 6 41 48 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Abhang C J 2014 UNPUBLISHED DOCUMENTS OF EAST INDIA COMPANY REGARDING DESTRUCTION OF FORTS IN JUNNER REGION Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 75 448 454 http www jstor org stable 44158417 Martin Robert Montgomery Roberts Emma 20 February 2019 The Indian empire its history topography government finance commerce and staple products with a full account of the mutiny of the native 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promoting equity and sustainability through watershed developments in rural Maharashtra Doctoral dissertation Massachusetts Institute of Technology Decadal Variation In Population Since 1901 a b c d e f g District Census Hand Book Pune PDF Census of India Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India US Directorate of Intelligence Country Comparison Population Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 1 October 2011 Benin 9 325 032 a b Population by Religion Maharashtra censusindia gov in Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India 2011 a b Table C 16 Population by Mother Tongue Maharashtra censusindia gov in Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India Nallathiga Ramakrishna Khyati Tewari Anchal Saboo and Susan Varghese Evolution of Satellite township development in Pune A Case Study Evolution International Journal of Organic Evolution 2015 a b Joshi R Regulatory Requirements for Starting a School in Poona Centre for Civil Society CCS RESEARCH INTERNSHIP 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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pune district Official website 18 31 48 N 73 50 24 E 18 53000 N 73 84000 E 18 53000 73 84000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pune district amp oldid 1175636504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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