Sahanpur

Sahanpur is a town and a nagar panchayat in Bijnor district in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.

Sahanpur
City
Sahanpur
Location in Uttar Pradesh, India
Sahanpur
Sahanpur (India)
Coordinates: 29.633°N 78.323°E / 29.633; 78.323
Country India
StateUttar Pradesh
DistrictBijnor
Founded byPadarath Singh
Population
 (2001)
  Total18,349
Languages
  OfficialHindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Vehicle registrationUP 20

Demographics

As of 2001, the India census[1] showed Sahanpur had a population of 18,349. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Sahanpur has an average literacy rate of 37%, lower than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 42%, and female literacy is 32%. In Sahanpur, 21% of the population is under 6 years of age.

History

The Sahanpur was a Jat state of Kakran clan of Hindu Jat which claim its descent from lord Rama.

To quote the 1908 District Gazetteer's report, "The Sahanpur family is said to-have been founded by one Nahra Singh, a Jat of Ramraipur, near Jhind, in the Punjab. His son, Basru Singh, left the ancestral home in 1600 and settled at Bahadurgarh in the neighbourhood of Dehli. Tegh Singh or Padarath, the youngest son of Basru Singh, gained the favour of Jahangir, and obtained in 1603 the grant of 660 villages in the parganas of Jalalabad, Kiratpur and Mandawar, together with the title of Rai, which is to this day held by the family as an hereditary distinction. Proceeding to his jagir, with several members of his family, he founded Nagal in 1604, and two years later built the fort of Sahanpur. Another version of the story is that the Jats migrated hither on the overthrow of the Suris by Humayun, and that Padarath won his estate as a reward. for his services to Jahangir during a hunting expedition in the vicinity of Hardwar. Padarath died in 1631, and was succeeded by Rai Bhim Chand, the second of his five sons. This man died without issue, and the estate passed to Nathai Singh, the son of his youngest brother. He was followed by his brother, Rai Sabal Singh, who gave his name to the fortress of Sabalgarh, and left three sons; the first two predeceased their father, and the property passed to Rajaram Mahabali. The latter had two sons, of whom Tara Chand succeeded, but on his death in 1753, the estate was taken by his brother, Sabba Chand, instead of devolving on his son Jaswant Singh, who had no children, and was succeeded by Rai Ram Das, the eldest,son of Sabba Chand. He again left no issue, having been killed in the year of his accession in a fight with the Pathans while defending Sahanpur. The next incumbent was his brother, Rai Basu Chand, who held the estate for eleven years and died in 1796. His elder son, Khem Chand, was murdered two years later, and the younger, Tapraj Singh, came into possession, holding the estate when Bijnor was ceded to the British, and retaining it till his death in 1817. Once again the eldest son, Rai Jahan Singh, met with a violent death, being killed in an affray with dacoits in 1828, and the property passed to the youngest brother, Rai Himmat Singh, who continued to hold Sahanpur for 45 years, dying in 1873. The elder son of Himmat Singh was Rai Umrao Singh, who died in 1882, and then the property was taken under the Court of Wards during the incumbency of his brother, Rai Dal Chand. It was released on his death in 1897, and made over to his eldest son, Rai Partab Singh who died in 1902, leaving a minor son, Rai Datt Prasad Singh, otherwise known as Aftab Jang. The property is managed by his uncle, Kunwar Bharat Singh, the present actual head of the family. It consists of 90 villages in pargana Najibabad, 35 in Kiratpur, 18 in Akbarabad, 20 shares in Mandawar and one in Bashta, with a total revenue demand of Rs. 51,935. "[2][3]

Kunwar Bharat Singh had three sons, including Kunwar Charat Singh and Kunwar Giriraj Singh.[4] Kunwar Charat Singh had a son, Kunwar Devendra Singh, and a daughter, Pushp Lata Kumari, who married Raja Bhalender Singh of Patiala.[5][6] Kunwar Giriraj Singh had two sons, Kunwar Shashi Raj Singh and Kunwar Ravi Raj Singh.[7] Kunwar Devendra Singh had a son, Kunwar Bhartendra Singh, who was a member of parliament from Bijnor district.

Educational institutes

1. Raja Charat Singh Inter College.
2. Peace Model Junior High School.
3. Chacha Nehru School. 4. Vedh Ghasi Ram . 5. Rifa e Aam Public School . 6. Mahar Public School . 7. Arya Samaj Shishu MAndir . 8. Bal Shishu Mandir . 9. sadaf Public School . 10. P.V.Sahanpur 1 . 11. P.V.Sahanpur 2 . 12. Kanya Junior High School . 13. kundan singh high school sahanpur Madaris (मदरसे)
1. Farook-UL—Uloom High School.
2. Farook-UL—Uloom Girls High School.
3. Siraj-ul-uloom . 4. Ansari-Ul-Uloom . 5. Ashraf Ul Uloom .

References

  1. "Census of India 2001: Data from the 2001 Census, including cities, villages and towns (Provisional)". Census Commission of India. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004. Retrieved 1 November 2008.
  2. Nevill, H. R. (1908). "Bijnor: A Gazetteer being Vol. XIV of the District Gazetteers of the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. Oudh (India), United Provinces of Agra and; Drake-Brockman, D. L. (1928). District Gazetteers of the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh: Bijnor. Supdt., Government Press, United Provinces.
  4. Pradesh (India), Uttar (October 1962). Government Gazette.
  5. "Raja Devendra Singh - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  6. Brentnall, Mark (2004). The Princely and Noble Families of the Former Indian Empire: Himachal Pradesh. Indus Publishing. ISBN 9788173871634.
  7. "Security Code Check for Accessing Judgment/Order". elegalix.allahabadhighcourt.in. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
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