Tiruvallur district

Tiruvallur district
Thiruvallur district
District
Barrier Islands separating Pulicat lake from Bay of Bengal

Location in Tiruvallur district in Tamil Nadu
Coordinates: 13°8′26.16″N 79°54′21.6″E / 13.1406000°N 79.906000°E / 13.1406000; 79.906000Coordinates: 13°8′26.16″N 79°54′21.6″E / 13.1406000°N 79.906000°E / 13.1406000; 79.906000
Country  India
State Tamil Nadu
Named for Thiruvalluvar
Headquarters Tiruvallur
Talukas Avadi
Ponneri
Gummidipoondi
Uthukottai
Tiruvallur
Poonamallee
Tiruttani
Pallipattu
Government
  District Collector Tmt. Mageswari Ravikumar, IAS
  Superintendent of Police R Ponni, IPS
  Member of Parliament P. Venugopal (AIADMK)
Area
  Total 3,423 km2 (1,322 sq mi)
Population (2011)
  Total 3,728,104
  Rank 4
  Density 1,100/km2 (2,800/sq mi)
Languages
  Official Tamil
Time zone UTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN 602001[1]
Telephone code 044
Vehicle registration TN-20
Largest metro Avadi (Chennai)
Sex ratio 983 /
Literacy 83.33%
Central location: 13°8′N 79°54′E / 13.133°N 79.900°E / 13.133; 79.900
Avg. summer temperature 37.9 °C (100.2 °F)
Avg. winter temperature 18.5 °C (65.3 °F)
Website www.tiruvallur.tn.nic.in

Tiruvallur district also known as Thiruvallur District, (Tamil: திருவள்ளூர் மாவட்டம்[2]) is an administrative district in the South India One of districts in Chennai in the state of Tamil Nadu.The town of Tiruvallur is the district headquarters. The district has a mixture of urban and rural characteristics. The Eastern part of Tiruvallur district is dominated by urban characteristics while the Northern part of the district has influence of Andhra culture due to its position. As of 2011, the district had a population of 3,728,104 with a sex-ratio of 987 females for every 1,000 males

The district has been divided into three revenue divisions viz, Tiruvallur, Tiruttani and Ponneri. There are four taluks under Tiruvallur division, two taluks under Tiruttani divisions and two taluks under Ponneri division. There are 46 firkas and 820 revenue villages. Likewise there are 12 blocks, 5 Municipalities and 10 town panchayats which implement rural development activities.

Etymology

The word "Tiruvallur" is supposedly derived from the Tamil sentence "tiru evvull?" meaning, "Tiru" - Highness (a common prefix in South India for temple towns or cities), "evvull" - where do I sleep. So, Tiruvallur means, a place/town where, the god, Veera Raghavar asked a saint for a place to sleep for a night.[3]

History

Tiruvallur was originally known as Tiru-evallur which specifies the sleeping position of the holy lord "Perumal", in the Veeraragava temple of Tiruvallur. Later people began to refer it by names such as Trivellore and Tiruvallur. Today Tiruvallur is well known, one of the reason being the Veeraragava Temple, where Amavasya (the commencement of dark moon prior to the new moon) is considered an auspicious day for the lord and so for the people of the town.[4]

The district of Tiruvallur has been carved out by bifurcating erstwhile Chengalpattu district (which was renamed as Chengalpattu-MGR/Kancheepuram at the time of 1991 Census). According to the said bifurcation Tiruvallur revenue division which included Tiruvallur, Tiruttani taluks and Uthukkottai and Pallipattu sub-taluks separated from Chengalpattu district along with Ponneri and Gummindipoondi taluks of Saidapet revenue division and formed this new district. At present this district comprises 8 taluks, namely Avadi, Ponneri, Gummidipoondi, Uthukottai, Tiruvallur, Poonamallee, Tiruttani, and Pallipattu.

In the far past, this region was under a chain of regimes commencing from the Pallavas during the 7th century ending with the Nawab of Arcot during the early part of 19th century when it came under the British rule. In 1687, the Golkonda rulers were defeated and the region came under the Moghul emperors of Delhi. The towns and villages of this region were the scene of Carnatic wars. Battles are said to have been fought in this region during the struggle for supremacy between the English and French. The town of Pulicat was the earliest Dutch possession in India founded in 1609 which was ceded to the British in 1825. With this, the region came under the British rule which ended on 15 August 1947 with India becoming independent.[3]

Geography

It is bounded on the north by Andhra Pradesh state, on the east by the Bay of Bengal, on the southeast by Chennai district, on the south by Kanchipuram and on the west by Vellore district.The coastal region of the district is mostly flat and dreary; but in the other parts it is undulating and even hilly in some places.

The northern taluks of the district like Ponneri, Uttukkottai, Gummidipundi etc. do not have much to offer from the scenic point of view. In the Tiruttani taluk, a number of hillocks are found scattered. The soil of the district is mostly sandy, mixed with soda or other alkali or stony. Rocks found in and near the surface are in detached masses. Hence, the soil can't be termed as very fertile. The soil found nearer the sea coast is of the inferior erinaceous type which is most suited for raising casuarinas plants. No mineral of any importance is available in the district. There are not many hills of any considerable height in this district. A few conical hills or ridges of small elevation exist like the St. Thomas Mount. Certain hillocks are found in Tiruttani. Most of the hills and hillocks are rocky and no verdant vegetation is seen in the slopes of these hills. The area under forests in this district is quite meager.

The average normal rainfall of the District is 1104 mm. Out of which 52% has been received during North East Monsoon period and 41% has been received during South West Monsoon period.

Demographics

According to 2011 census, Thiruvallur district had a population of 3,728,104 with a sex-ratio of 987 females for every 1,000 males, much above the national average of 929.[5] A total of 405,669 were under the age of six, constituting 208,449 males and 197,220 females. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes accounted for 22.04% and 1.27% of the population respectively. The average literacy of the district was 74.88%, compared to the national average of 72.99%.[5] The district had a total of 946,949 households. There were a total of 1,538,054 workers, comprising 60,436 cultivators, 173,150 main agricultural labourers, 41,742 in house hold industries, 972,590 other workers, 290,136 marginal workers, 13,008 marginal cultivators, 97,436 marginal agricultural labourers, 16,498 marginal workers in household industries and 163,194 other marginal workers.[6]

Economy

Tiruvallur district is one of the fastest developing districts in Tamil Nadu in terms of Industrial Development. The district has many leading industries like Kamarajar Port, North Chennai Thermal Power Station, National Thermal Power Corporation, L&T Ship Build, NIOT, ITC, IOCL, HPCL, BPCL, and Hindustan Motors. It also boasts of the Ennore Thermal Power Station and the Avadi Tank Factory.

The District has 9 Industrial Estates, all in operation : 6 developed by the Government and 3 by Private Organisation.

Government Industrial Estates

  • Electrical Industrial Estate, Kakalur.
  • SIDCO Industrial Estate, Kakalur
  • Petrochemical Industrial Estate, Vichoor
  • SIDCO Industrial Estate, R.K. Pet
  • SIDCO Industrial Estate, Gummidipoondi
  • SIDCO Industrial Estate, Thirumazhisai

Private Industrial Estates

  • M.M.Industrial Estate, Alapakkam
  • Moccaram Industries, Velappan Chavadi
  • Ekambara Naicker Industrial Estate, Alapakkam

This district has 16940 Small Scale Industries, notable among them being food, wood, textile, chemical, engineering, non-metallic and leather industries.

Governance

Revenue Divisions and Taluks

Tiruvallur District consists of 3 Revenue Divisions and 8 taluks:

Below Taluks are part Of Chennai city region:

Avadi, Poonamallee, Ponneri and Tiruvallur taluks lie within the Chennai Metropolitan Area.

Revenue Blocks and Municipalities

The following are the Revenue blocks of the district.

There are 5 municipalities:[7]

  • Avadi (special grade)
  • Thiruverkadu (selection grade)
  • Poonamallee (grade I)
  • Tiruvallur (grade I)
  • Thiruthani (grade II)

Administration and Politics

Constituency Political
Party
Elected
Representative
Gummidipoondi AIADMK Vijayakumar K S
Ponneri AIADMK Balaraman P
Avadi AIADMK Pandia Rajan K
Poonamallee AIADMK Elumalai T A
Tiruvallur DMK Raajendran V G
Tiruttani AIADMK Narasimhan P M
Thiruvallur AIADMK P. Venugopal
Source: Indian Elections / Election Commission of India.[8][9]

Tiruvallur assembly constituency is part of Tiruvallur (Lok Sabha constituency).[10]

Tiruvallur Assembly Constituency Elected member - Mr.Ramana of AIADMK
Mr. Ramana sworn in as Minister for Handlooms and Textiles after AIADMK washed out Ex-ruling party DMK in the elections.
Currently Mr. Ramana is Minister for Commercial Taxes and Registration which has been revoked from Mr Agri S.S.Krishnamoorthy.
Tiruvallur Municipality Chairman - Mr Commando A Baskaran alias A Baskaran of AIADMK.
[11] Currently Mr Commando A Baskaran alias A Baskaran is the AIADMK candidate for Tiruvallur constituency in the Tamil Nadu May 2016 Assembly Elections.
[12]

Updated the MLA's as per May 2016 elections

Economy

In retail spending, the Thiruvallur district emerges third in India, only after Noida and SW Delhi surpassing Bangalore and Mumbai by a clear margin.[13]

References

  1. "Tamilnadu Postal Circle - Pincode". www.tamilnadupost.nic.in. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  2. "Also known as Thiruvallur". Villagemap.in. Retrieved 20 June 2015.
  3. 1 2 tiruvallur official website
  4. "Sri Vaidya Veeraraghava Swami temple - Events". www.svdtiruvallur.com.
  5. 1 2 "Census Info 2011 Final population totals". Office of The Registrar General and Census Commissioner, Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  6. "Census Info 2011 Final population totals - Thiruvallur district". Office of The Registrar General and Census Commissioner, Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of the India. 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  7. "List of Municipalities in Tamil Nadu Gradewise". Commissionerate of Municipal Administration, Govt. of Tamil Nadu. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  8. "Election results". Indian Elections. Archived from the original on 8 December 2012.
  9. "Parties Statistics". Election Commission of India. Archived from the original on 18 December 2008.
  10. "List of Parliamentary and Assembly Constituencies" (PDF). Tamil Nadu. Election Commission of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 May 2006. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
  11. Tiruvallur, District Administrator, Collectorate,. "Elected Members - Town Panchayats - Tiruvallur District". www.tiruvallur.tn.nic.in. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  12. Ramakrishnan, Deepa H.; Amp; Kolappan, B. (4 April 2016). "AIADMK releases list of candidates for 2016 Assembly polls". Retrieved 21 March 2018 via www.thehindu.com.
  13. "Noida is highest spender". epaper.timesofindia.com. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.