Kaimur district is one of the 38 districts of Bihar, India. The district headquarters are at Bhabua. Before 1991, it was part of Rohtas District. Until 1764 the region was a part of Ghazipur District and Kamsaar Raj and later it was a part of Chainpur Estate till 1837.

Located in southwestern Bihar in the Patna division, the district occupies an area of 3363 km2 and has a population of 1,626,384 (as of 2011[update]) with the rank of 307th in the country. The district has a Literacy rate of 69.34% (392nd in the country). The district has 18 colleges, 58 high schools, 146 middle schools, and 763 primary schools. The district has a total of 1699 villages. The district also has 120 post offices and 151 panchayat, and is well connected with NH-2 (Grand Trunk Road). It is served by Bhabua Road railway station (BBU) and is located on the main route which connects Sealdah to Mumbai via Gaya Junction.

The most spoken languages are Hindi and Bhojpuri. Due to its close proximity to eastern Uttar Pradesh, people here have a Purvanchali tinge in their language.

History

Kaimur district was established on 17 March 1991 when it was split off from Rohtas district. It was called Bhabua district until 1994, when it was renamed to its current name.

The earliest evidence of human habitation in the district consists of rock paintings in the Lehda forest that date to around 20,000 years ago. In June 2012, erotic Pala sculptures were excavated in the village of Baidyanath.

It is currently a part of the Red Corridor. In the other side it is associated with belief of Hindus it is Penitential of Atri (Sanskrit: अत्रि) or Attri Rishi & one of the oldest temple in India of Maa Mundeshwari Temple which is the part of attraction of tourism.

Geography

Kaimur district occupies an area of 3,362 square kilometres (1,298 sq mi), comparatively equivalent to Russia's Vaygach Island. Geographically, the district can be divided into two parts: a hilly area and a plains area. The hilly area is known as the Kaimur plateau (also known as Rohtas plateau). The plain area on the western side is flanked by the rivers Karmanasa and the Durgavati. The Kudra river lies on it eastern side. Buxar district of Bihar State and Ghazipur district of Uttar Pradesh bound it on the north. On the south is Rohtas district of Bihar and on the west is Chandauli district and Mirzapur district of Uttar Pradesh. On the east is Rohtas district of Bihar.

Kaimur district has a large forest cover, measuring roughly 106,300 hectares which contains the Kaimur Wildlife Sanctuary, home to tigers, leopards and chinkaras. Waterfalls like Karkat Waterfall and Telhar are present here.

Place to Interest

Politics

DistrictNo.ConstituencyNamePartyAllianceRemarks
Kaimur203RamgarhSatish Kumar Singh YadavBSPNone
204Mohania (SC)Sangita KumariBJPNDA
205BhabuaBharat Bind
206ChainpurMohammad Zama KhanJD(U)

Economy

Agriculture is the main component of the economy in the district. Rice, wheat, telhan, dalhan and maize are the main crops. Industries located in the district include Vanaspati Oil Ltd., ACC Limited and the Power Grid Corporation of India's high voltage direct current (HVDC) grid station at Pusauli.

In 2006 Kaimur was named as one of the country's 250 most backward districts (out of a total of 640). It is one of the 36 districts in Bihar currently receiving funds from the Backward Regions Grant Fund Programme (BRGF).The Mudeshwari Mata Temple have a very huge potential to be developed into a religious tourism hub.

Divisions

Kaimur district is divided into 11 community development blocks, grouped together into 2 subdivisions, based at Bhabua and Mohania:

  1. Adhaura
  2. Bhabua
  3. Bhagwanpur
  4. Chainpur
  5. Chand
  6. Rampur
  1. Durgawati
  2. Kudra
  3. Mohania
  4. Nuaon
  5. Ramgarh

Villages

  • Sarangpur

Transport

Road

National Highway 19 (G.T. Road) crosses through Mohania Town, Pusauli and Kudra.

National Highway 319 (India) originates from Mohania and connects with the capital Patna via Arrah. Apart from these, there are also a few state highways in the city. Mohania is connected to Bauxar via Ramgarh from the south and with Bhabua (district capital, Adhaura, Bhagwanpur) from the south. The State Highway 14 connects Bhabua to Mohania.

Bhabua Road Railway Station is (Mohania Town) situated on Gaya–Mughalsarai section of Grand Chord Railway line. Bhabua (the district headquarters) is 14 km southward from the Bhabua Road railway station.

The famous Mundeshawari Devi Temple (the 'oldest functional' temple of world) is about 10 km south to Bhabua and about 25 km south to the railway station. If someone wants to visit the temple then he should arrive at Bhabua Road station first then he may take a direct bus to Mundeshawari Devi temple or may first take bus to Bhabua and then an auto/tempo to the temple.

The nearest airport is Lal Bahadur Shastri International Airport (VNS) (Babatpur, Varanasi).

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1901317,384
1911301,646−0.51%
1921293,753−0.26%
1931322,778+0.95%
1941377,028+1.57%
1951435,283+1.45%
1961526,251+1.92%
1971656,905+2.24%
1981783,045+1.77%
1991972,949+2.20%
20011,275,579+2.75%
20111,626,384+2.46%
source:
Religions in Kaimur district (2011)
ReligionPercent
Hinduism89.54%
Islam9.55%
Buddhism0.47%
Other or not stated0.44%

According to the 2011 census Kaimur district has a population of 1,626,384, roughly equal to the nation of Guinea-Bissau or the US state of Idaho. This gives it a ranking of 307th in India (out of a total of 640). The district has a population density of 488 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,260/sq mi) . Its population growth rate over the decade 2001–2011 was 27.54%. Kaimur has a sex ratio of 919 females for every 1000 males, and a literacy rate of 71.01%. 4.03% of the population lives in urban areas. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 22.69% and 3.57% of the population respectively.

Languages

  1. Bhojpuri (90.5%)
  2. Hindi (7.11%)
  3. Urdu (2.13%)
  4. Others (0.21%)

At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 90.55% of the population in the district spoke Bhojpuri, 7.11% Hindi and 2.13% Urdu as their first language.

Notable people

National Awardee

Politician

Bureaucrats

  • Ashutosh Tiwari, Civil Servant and Writer
  • Kanish Kumar, Civil Servant (2025 Batch), Resident of Akhlaspur, Bhabhua
  • Noor Alam, Civil Servant (2025 Batch), resident of Mohania
  • Nitesh Kumar, Civil Servant (2024 Batch)

Artist

See also

External links

25°02′26″N 83°36′45″E/25.040591°N 83.612409°E/ 25.040591; 83.612409