Senapati district explained

Senapati district
Settlement Type:District of Manipur
Total Type:Total
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: India
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Manipur
Established Title:Established
Seat Type:Headquarters
Seat:Senapati (Tahamzam)
Parts Type:Tehsils
Parts Style:para
P1:1. Purul, 2. Paomata, 3. Mao-Maram,[1]
Area Total Km2:1,573
Population As Of:2011
Area Rank:8
Population Total:285,404
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Demographics
Demographics1 Title1:Literacy
Demographics1 Info1:74.13%
Demographics1 Title2:Sex ratio
Demographics1 Info2:923
Demographics Type2:Language(s)
Demographics2 Title1:Official
Demographics2 Info1:English
Demographics2 Title2:Regional
Demographics2 Info2:Mao
Leader Title2:Vidhan Sabha constituencies
Leader Name2:6: Saikul, Karong, Mao, Tadubi, Kangpokpi and Saitu
Timezone1:IST
Utc Offset1:+05:30
Registration Plate:MN03[2]

Senapati district (Meitei pronunciation:/se.na.pə.ti/), is one of the 16 districts of the Indian state of Manipur. The present Senapati district was formed in December 2016, after spawning off the Sadar Hills region in the south into a separate Kangpokpi district.[3] The district headquarter is located in the town of Senapati, also known as Tahamzam.

History

The Senapati district began as the Mao Subdivision of the Manipur State after its merger with the Republic of India. By 1961, it was enlarged into the "Mao and Sadar Hills" subdivision, by combining the sadar hills (central hills) adjoining the Imphal region.

In 1969, Manipur was divided into five districts, with Mao and Sadar Hills becoming one of them. It was also called the "Manipur North" district, with a headquarters at Karong. It had three subdivisions: Mao West, Mao East and Sadar Hills.

During the late 1950s and 1960s, the Kuki tribes living in the northern hills of Manipur faced large-scale displacement, as a result of the activism of the Naga National Council attempting to homogenise the population in those areas. The displaced Kuki tribes moved inwards into the state and occupied regions in the Sadar Hills subdivision. This gave the Sadar Hills subdivision a distinct character.

The Sadar Hills Kuki Chiefs' Zonal Council resolved in 1970 to demand a separate district for Sadar Hills, and submitted a memorandum to the Union Home Minister K. C. Pant. In 1971, shortly before Manipur became a full-fledged state, the Government of India enacted the Manipur (Hill Areas) District Council Act, 1971, granting autonomous district councils (ADCs) for the hill regions. Two separate ADCs, for Sadar Hills and Manipur North, were established in 1972. However, due to opposition from the Nagas, Sadar Hills was not made into a separate district, and continued as part of Manipur North.

In 1976, the district headquarters was shifted to the town of Senapati.In 1981, there were three subdivisions in Manipur North: Mao-Maram, based at Tadubi, Sadar Hills West, based at Kangpokpi and Sadar Hills East, based at Saikul. Efforts made by successive governments of Manipur to separate the Sadar Hills subdivisions into an independent district failed. During the Kuki–Naga clashes of the 1990s, further displacement of Kukis occurred into the Sadar Hills region and perhaps also displacement of Nagas out of the region.

Finally, in 2016, the Okram Ibobi Singh government, in one of its last acts before the election, formed seven new districts by bifurcating existing districts, with Sadar Hills being one of them. It was named the Kangpokpi district with a headquarters at Kangpokpi.[4] The United Naga Council conducted a five-month blockade in the Naga districts of Manipur to protest the creation of the new districts and continues its opposition as of 2024.[5]

The remaining Naga-dominated district continues under the name Senapati district.

Geography

Senapati District is located between 93.29° and 94.15° East Longitude and 24.37° and 25.37° North Latitude and is in the northern part of Manipur state. The District is bounded on the south by Kangpokpi District, on the east by Ukhrul district, on the west by Tamenglong district and on the north by Kohima District and Phek district of Nagaland state. The district lies at an altitude between 1061 meter to 1788 meters above sea level.

The Dzuko Valley (mni|{{Script|Latn|Dzuko Tampak),[6] [7] is one of the tourist attractions in Manipur, renowned for natural sites, seasonal flowering plants and wild life,[8] including but not limited to the endemic Dzuko lily (Lilium chitrangadae), which is closely related to the Shirui lily (Lilium mackliniae) of the neighbouring Ukhrul district.[9] [10]

Demographics

According to the 2011 census Senapati district has a population of 479,148[11] roughly equal to the nation of Belize.[12] This gives it a ranking of 565th in India (out of a total of 640). The district has a population density of 109PD/sqkm. Its population growth rate over two decades 1991-2011 was 129.9 percent, which works out to an average decadal growth rate of 51.6 percent over these two decades. Senapati has a sex ratio of 939 females for every 1000 males and a literacy rate of 75%. Its population composition as per the 2011 census is as below:

!!Population!Percentageof Total Pop.
All Scheduled Tribes419,21087.5%
Kuki-Zo tribes110,31423.0%
Naga tribes282,00758.9%
Old Kuki/Naga19,2444.0%
After the separation of the Kangpokpi district in 2016, the residual district has a population of 285,404 as per 2011 census, all of which lives in rural areas. it has a sex ratio of 923 females per 1000 males. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 0.10% and 92.74% of the population respectively.

Religion

Christianity is the majority, religion, practised by 95.31% of the population. Hinduism is the second-largest religion, practised by 3.36% of the population. Small numbers practice other religions, such as Islam, Buddhism, and Heraka. Nearly all tribals are Christians, with only a small minority of the Zeliang practising Heraka.

Languages

At the time of the 2011 census, 46.99% of the population spoke Poumai, 29.89% Mao, 10.67% Maram, 2.84% Nepali, 2.65% Zemi, 1.75% Khezha, 1.55% Liangmai and 0.95% Zeliang as their first language.[13]

Villages

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Official Website of Senapati District Manipur-District Profile. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130715045231/http://senapati.nic.in/adminsetup.htm . 15 July 2013 .
  2. Web site: 娱乐是一种态度.
  3. News: 2016-12-09 . 7 new districts formed in Manipur amid opposition by Nagas . India Today . 2017-06-30.
  4. Esha Roy, Simply put: Seven new districts that set Manipur ablaze, The Indian Express, 20 December 2016.
  5. https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/manipur/call-off-shutdown-against-new-districts-manipur-govt-to-naga-apex-body/article68705928.ece Call off shutdown against new districts: Manipur govt to Naga apex body
  6. Web site: 2022-07-09 . Why Should There Be A Separate Land Law For The Hills of Manipur? » Imphal Review of Arts and Politics . 2023-03-23 . imphalreviews.in . en-GB . There are many well-known valleys which make the hills like Khoupum Tampak, (Tampak means valley in Manipuri), Khuga Tampak, Sajik Tampak, Dzuko Tampak, Moreh and Jiribam besides other vast river basins like Barak River basin in the north..
  7. Web site: Sharma . H. Surmangol . 2006 . Learners' Manipuri-English dictionary . 2023-03-23 . dsal.uchicago.edu . . 75 . mni, en . tampāk ꯇꯝꯄꯥꯛ /təm.pak/ n. valley. Morph: tam‑pāk [valley‑to be broad]..
  8. Book: Nimai, R. K. . NE Scholar : Emerging The Lost Civilization of The Manipur Valley . 2019-07-10 . NE Brothers Pvt Limited . 40 . en . The Dzükou/Dzüko Valley is a valley located at the border of the states of Manipur and Nagaland in northeast India. This valley is well known for its natural environment, seasonal flowers and flora and fauna..
  9. Web site: Dzukou Lily . 2023-03-24 . www.flowersofindia.net.
  10. Web site: Lilium mackliniae - Shirui Lily . 2023-03-24 . www.flowersofindia.net.
  11. Web site: District Census Hand Book - Senapati . . Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  12. Web site: US Directorate of Intelligence . Country Comparison:Population . https://web.archive.org/web/20070613004507/https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2119rank.html . dead . 13 June 2007 . 2011-10-01 . Belize 321,115 July 2011 est..
  13. Web site: 2011. Table C-16 Population by mother tongue: Manipur . . Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.