Mallawan
Town
Map of Mallawan CD block
Map of Mallawan CD block
Mallawan is located in Uttar Pradesh
Mallawan
Mallawan
Location in Uttar Pradesh, India
Mallawan is located in India
Mallawan
Mallawan
Mallawan (India)
Coordinates: 27°02′32″N 80°08′54″E / 27.0421°N 80.1483°E / 27.0421; 80.1483
Country India
StateUttar Pradesh
DivisionLucknow
DistrictHardoi
Government
  TypeMunicipal Council
  BodyMallanwan Municipal Council
  Municipal ChairpersonTabassum (IND)[1]
  Lok Sabha MPAshok Kumar Rawat (BJP)
  MLAAshish Kumar Singh (BJP)
Area
  Total11.43 km2 (4.41 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[2]
  Total36,915
  Density3,200/km2 (8,400/sq mi)
Time zoneIST
Area code05851
Vehicle registrationUP-30

Mallawan, also spelled Mallanwan is a town and Nagar Palika Parishad in Hardoi district of Uttar Pradesh, India.[2] It served as the original district headquarters from 1856 to 1858.[3] It is located south of Bilgram, on the road to Unnao.[4] Mallawan is a major centre of handloom weaving, with handloom cloth being a major export.[3] As of 2011, the population of Mallawan is 36,915, in 6,086 households.[2] It is included in the legislative assembly constituency of Bilgram-Mallanwan.

Geography

It is located at 27°2'8"N 80°9'6"E[5] and its average elevation is 142 metres. River Ganga passes, touching its border to Kannauj. Mallawan is located 47 km south-east of Hardoi and 92 km from state capital Lucknow.

Demography

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1901 11,158    
1911 10,757−3.6%
1921 9,605−10.7%
1931 10,150+5.7%
1941 11,084+9.2%
1951 11,508+3.8%
1961 Not given    
1971 Not given    
1981 20,323    
1991 26,922+32.5%
2001 31,860+18.3%
2011 36,915+15.9%
Source: 2011 Census of India[2]

Per 2011 census Mallawan had a total population of 36,915, out of which 19,404 (53%) were male and 17,511 (47%) female.[6] It had a literacy rate of 68.71% & present literacy rate is 78.6%. It is divided into 25 wards. 57% of the population were Hindus, 42.5% were Muslims, and the remaining 0.5% belonged to other religions.

History

It's possible that Mallawan was a Buddhist site at the same time that Kannauj was, given the short distance between them, but this is uncertain.[4] An image of Asa Devi found in a temple here is "probably of Buddhist origin."[4]

In early times, the Mallawan area was ruled by the Thatheras until they were driven out by the Chandelas (in the west) and the Kurmis (in the east).[4] Then, in 1033, it was invaded by Ghazi Sayyid Salar Masud; the tomb of one of his companions is found in Mallawan, in the neighbourhood of Uncha Tola.[4] According to tradition, Mallawan was once called "Ghazipur" in Masud's honour. Mallawan's Sheikh community claims to have originally come to the town at this time.[4] Later, in 1544, three of the Sheikhs were given a grant in the neighbouring village of Mohiuddinpur by Sher Shah Suri, on the condition that they reside there, recite prayers five times daily in the mosque, and shooting ten arrows after reading the afternoon prayers.[4]

The wandering saint Makhdum Shah, also called Misbah-ul-Ashiqin, came to Mallawan in 1415.[4] His dargah is located here.[4] Similar in style to that of Sadr Jahan in Pihani, it is clad with large kankar blocks, along with some sandstone, and it is crowned by a plain dome supported by 8 "richly ornamented" Hindu-style pillars.[4] According to a book written in 1529 by one of his descendants, Makhdum Shah was invited to the imperial court at Delhi by Sikandar Lodi, but he declined and instead sent two of his followers.[4] As a result, his follower Misbah-ul-Islam, aka Qazi Bhikari, was appointed qazi of Mallawan Pargana.[4]

Mallawan is listed in the Ain-i-Akbari as the seat of a pargana.[4] The town's jama masjid was built during Akbar's reign out of kankar blocks taken from an older building.[4] By the turn of the 20th century, however, the mosque was described as being in ruins.[4]

In 1726, Shitab Rai was made chakladar of Mallawan.[4] He became infamous for acquiring property by burying landowners alive and then making their heirs sell it to him.[4] According to the first British settlement report in the mid-19th century, the landowners' bones were still sometimes dug up by farmers around the old chakladar compound.[4]

In 1765, Jesuit missionary and traveller Joseph Tiefenthaler visited Mallawan.[4] He described it as a small but densely populated town surrounded by trees, with most buildings being made out of brick.[4] There was a fort with towers, of mixed brick and mud construction, but by the early 1900s it had disappeared and the site had become farmland.[4]

The 1773 treaty between the Nawab of Awadh and the British East India Company designated Mallawan as the site of a cantonment of British troops.[4] The cantonment was by the road to Bilgram, in the village of Faizpur Kampu.[4] It was in use until 1777, when it was moved to Kanpur, leading to Kanpur becoming a major city.[4] Meanwhile, the Nawab had a military garrison in Mallawan itself until the 1850s.[4]

With the advent of British Rule, followed by the annexation of Oudh in 1856, Mallawan was made district headquarter and possessed considerable political importance.[7] During the struggle of 1857 the Raikawars, independence fighters from nearby village Rudamau, burned Mallawan's court house. Conditions worsened, leading to the move of the district headquarter to Hardoi.

At the turn of the 20th century, Mallawan was described as a very spread-out town, consisting of several villages agglomerated together.[4] They were Mohiuddinpur in the north; Gangarampur, Mirzapur, Gobardhanpur, and Mallawan itself in the middle, and Bhagwantnagar in the south.[4] Mallawan had seven muhallas at the time: Bhagwantnagar, Gurdasganj, Pathan Tola, Uncha Tola, Nasratnagar, Qazi Tola, and Chauhatta.[4] The town had a police station, a post office, a cattle pound, an inspection bungalow, and a middle school, along with a Sanskrit patshala in Bajiganj.[4] There was also a military encampment to the south of the road.[4] Markets were held at Gurdasganj on Mondays and Fridays, and at Bhagwantnagar on Sundays and Wednesdays.[4] Mallawan was not a major commercial centre at the time, although Bhagwantnagar was renowned for its dishes and brass spoons.[4] The Man Devi fair, held in Kuar and Chait, then had an average attendance of about 4,000 people.[4]

Education

Mallawan is home to one of the oldest high schools in India, founded in 1857 by Ram Sahai Bajpai as Adarsh Shri Prasad Mahavidyalaya at Bajiganj. B.N.Inter College is also one of the oldest colleges, Its full name is Bhagwant Nagar Inter College. It is in Bhagwant Nagar.[8]

Villages

Mallawan CD block has the following 83 villages:[2]

Village name Total land area (hectares) Population (in 2011)
Khangheria6103,694
Manjhgaon638.73,219
Bansa1,452.35,062
Kanthari506.32,777
Nayagaon304.62,180
Tarhatiya123.6702
Maghiyaee Zaferpur369.21,550
Daroo Kuinya344.71,994
Herwal370.51,335
Visheshwarpur173.4666
Santapur66.90
Bhasoorha81.2585
Bakhaura416.32,490
Newada Paras421.81,674
Nasrat Nagar68.10
Bandipur327.30
Shyampur178.60
Bhagwant Nagar160.10
Govardhanpur78.10
Mirzapur84.10
Tendua374.52,686
Goswa248.42,137
Purwawan813.34,435
Bikapur262.71,966
Newada Mahmood162.2575
Ganga Rampur181.60
Darapur281.61,485
Bharhwal Salempur393.72,118
Barauna284.23,077
Raghorampur159.5806
Bhagtoopur108.2861
Nasirpur148.8434
Ishwarpur Saee375.33,577
Munwarpur107.4528
Islampur Jagai436.83,054
Manimau128.6789
Daudpur136.2467
Menhdipur185.51,059
Sumerpur162880
Mahneypur123919
Mirnagar144.1617
Lachhipur181.61,378
Bhool Bhawanipur96.6941
Sadipur41.40
Mustafabad101.31,030
Sukroula128.6798
Ausanpur96.8578
Harraiya422.21,923
Hazratpur73.61,051
Dasraichmau118.8458
Puranmau352.72,129
Beria Nazirpur452.93,247
Sahimpur25.8370
Murtaza Kullipur109.2986
Shahpur Pawanr Sisala429.73,836
Shahpur Pawanr Pansala767.8962
Rampur126.6920
Mansoor Nagar211.81,771
Mahmoodpur132.4379
Kodarmau136.11,104
Nekpur60.6222
Kokatmau250.31,314
Khairuddinpur182757
Kalyanpur129.11,402
Sunasi258.71,188
Tejipur645.63,606
Musepur63.20
Barhuwan338.82,966
Akbarpur1882,209
Sarai Gauri69.8985
Rajaypur165.7997
Shahabuddinpur184.91,083
Shahpur Ganga354.53,864
Teria Bhawanipur409.72,035
Fulai541.52,188
Ibrahimpur376.42,901
Sarai Sultan160.21,757
Parmi206.71,423
Atwara Chak Kola376.52,076
Jalalabad159.43,848
Bjikharipur Katiya3161,380
Sultanpur Kot243.31,389
Alapur127.71,119

References

  1. "2023 UP Municipal Election results". ECI Uttar Pradesh. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Census of India 2011: Uttar Pradesh District Census Handbook - Hardoi, Part A (Village and Town Directory)" (PDF). Census 2011 India. pp. 300–16, 578–81. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  3. 1 2 Census 1981 Uttar Pradesh: District Census Handbook Part XIII-A: Village & Town Directory, District Hardoi (PDF). 1982. pp. 1, 6, 12, 16. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Nevill, H.R. (1904). Hardoi - A Gazetteer. Allahabad: Government Press. pp. 219–26. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  5. "MALLAWAN - Wikimapia". wikimapia.org. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  6. "Mallawan City Population Census 2011 - Uttar Pradesh". www.census2011.co.in. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  7. "Hardoi district Gazette" (PDF).
  8. Gazetteer of Hardoi District. 1970. p. 217 via open.
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