| Nalgonda district | |
| — district — | |
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| Coordinates | 17°06′N 79°18′E / 17.1°N 79.3°ECoordinates: 17°06′N 79°18′E / 17.1°N 79.3°E |
| Country | India |
| Region | Telangana |
| State | Andhra Pradesh |
| Time zone | IST (UTC+05:30) |
| Area • Coastline |
• 0 kilometres (0 mi) |
Nalgonda / Nallagonda District (Telugu: నల్లగొండ) is a district in Andhra Pradesh. It has a population of 3,483,648 of which 13.32% is urban as of 2001.[1]
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Its name is derived from two Telugu words Nalla (Black) & Konda (Hills) i.e. Black Hills.[2]
Nalgonda was earlier referred to as Neelagiri, the name given by some Rajput rulers and the name was changed to Nallagonda only after its conquest by Allauddin Bahaman Shah, a Bahamani king.
Nalgonda District is currently a part of the Red Corridor.[3]
Nalgonda district occupies an area of approximately 14,200 square kilometres (5,500 sq mi),[4] comparatively equivalent to Indonesia's Flores.[5]
Towns in the district include: Nalgonda, Suryapet, Miryalaguda, Bhongir, Kodada, Chityal, Ramannapet, Kattangur, Nakrekal, Bhoodhan Pochampally, Aleru, Narkatpalli, Huzurnagar, Devarakonda, Yadagirigutta, Rajapet, Mothkur, and Kanegal.
The rivers Krishna, Musi River, Aleru, Peddavagu, Dindi and Paleru flow through the Nalgonda district.
Minerals in the district include Limestone, Black & Color Granites.
Clean drinking water, water supply for irrigation and educational facilities for all are perhaps the most important problems Nalgonda faces right now.
Nearly 500 villages in Nalgonda district are affected by the high fluorine content in water. It is estimated that nearly 1 million people are affected by Fluorosis in Nalgonda district.
Parada village under Kattangur Mandal was suffering due to drinking water; almost all the villages were supplied with water from Krishna except this village.
In 2006 the Indian government named Nalgonda one of the country's 250 poorest districts (out of a total of 640).[6] It is one of the thirteen districts in Andhra Pradesh currently receiving funds from the Backward Regions Grant Fund Programme (BRGF).[6]
Major crops include Paddy, Pulses, mousambi/Lime (fruit), Millets & Oil Seeds.
Industries in the Nalgonda district are Silk, Jaggery, Leather, Cement factories, Pipes manufacturing & Cotton,Rice Business(Rice Mills).
| 1 Bommala Ramaram | 2 Turkapally | 3 Rajapet |
| 4 Yadagirigutta | 5 Alair | 6 Gundala |
| 7 Tirumalagiri | 8 Thungathurthy | 9 Noothankal |
| 10 Atmakur (S) | 11 Jajireddigudem | 12 Saligowraram |
| 13 Mothkur | 14 Atmakur (M) | 15 Valigonda |
| 16 Bhongir | 17 Bibinagar | 18 Pochampally |
| 19 Choutuppal | 20 Ramannapeta | 21 Chityal |
| 22 Narketpally | 23 Kattangur | 24 Nakrekal |
| 25 Kethepally | 26 Suryapet | 27 Chivemla |
| 28 Mothey | 29 Nadigudem | 30 Munagala |
| 31 Penpahad | 32 Vemulapally | 33 Thipparthy |
| 34 Nalgonda | 35 Munugode | 36 Narayanapur |
| 37 Marriguda | 38 Chandur | 39 Kanagal |
| 40 Nidamanoor | 41 Tripuraram | 42 Miryalaguda |
| 43 Garidepally | 44 Chilkur | 45 Kodad |
| 46 Mellachervu | 47 Huzurnagar | 48 Mattampally |
| 49 Neredcherla | 50 Damercherla | 51 Anumula |
| 52 Peddavoora | 53 P.A.Pally | 54 Gurrampode |
| 55 Nampally | 56 Chintapally | 57 Devarakonda |
| 58 Gundlapally | 59 Chandampet |
60Tangutoor( Nalgonda )
In 2007–2008 the International Institute for Population Sciences interviewed 1236 households in 43 villages across the district.[8] They found that 90.4% had access to electricity, 97% had drinking water, 29.1% toilet facilities, and 45.1% lived in a pucca (permanent) home.[8] 37.5% of girls wed before the legal age of 18[9] and 87% of interviewees carried a BPL card.[8]
According to the 2011 census Nalgonda district has a population of 3,483,648 ,[10] roughly equal to the nation of Panama[11] or the US state of Connecticut.[12] This gives it a ranking of 88th in India (out of a total of 640).[10] The district has a population density of 245 inhabitants per square kilometre (630 /sq mi) .[10] Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 7.26 %.[10] Nalgonda has a sex ratio of 982 females for every 1000 males,[10] and a literacy rate of 65.05 %.[10]
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