Kahnuwan
Kahnuwan | |
---|---|
Town | |
Coordinates: 31°54′N 75°27′E / 31.900°N 75.450°E | |
Country | India |
State | Punjab |
District | Gurdaspur |
Languages | |
• Official | Punjabi |
• Regional | Punjabi |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
Kahnuwan is a town, development block and sub-tehsil of Gurdaspur district in the Indian state of Punjab.[1][2]
History
[edit]The town was named after Rajput king Raja Kanva of Harchand Rajput Dynasty who came to this region to defeat Pathans.[citation needed] In recent history Kahnuwan village have also sikhs history known as kahnuwan shamb. A battle was fought here which is known in Sikh history as Chota Ghallughara. There are 8 hindu temples, 6 muslim dargahs, 3 churchs and 6 sikh Gurdwaras including historical gurdwara Ghallughara sahib. Vijay Dashmi fare of kahnuwan is very famous one, a large number of people come in Dushehra ground to celebrate Dushehra.
Demographics
[edit]According to Census 2011 information the location code or village code of Kahnuwan village is 028377. Kahnuwan village is located in Gurdaspur tehsil of Gurdaspur district in Punjab, India. It is situated 22km away from sub-district headquarter Gurdaspur (tehsildar office) and 22km away from district headquarter Gurdaspur. As per 2009 stats, Nawan Pind Abadi Kahnuwan is the gram panchayat of Kahnuwan village.
The total geographical area of village is 2515 hectares. Kahnuwan has a total population of 8,972 peoples, out of which male population is 4,623 while female population is 4,349. Literacy rate of kahnuwan village is 72.36% out of which 76.12% males and 68.36% females are literate. There are about 1,666 houses in kahnuwan village. Pincode of kahnuwan village locality is 143528.
Religion
[edit]Kahnuwan has about 5 Hindu temples, 16 gurudwaras, three churches and five dargahs.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "SAD to open three memorials commemorating holocaust". The Tribune. 1 November 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ "L&T to build historic monuments". The Tribune. 25 September 2010. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
- ^ "ਛੋਟਾ ਘੱਲੂਘਾਰਾ". Article in Punjabi. Jag Bani. 15 May 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2012.