Saturday, June 25, 2011

Bihar


Bihar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bihar
बिहार
—  State  —

Seal
Location of Bihar in India
Map of Bihar
Coordinates (Patna): 25.37°N 85.13°ECoordinates25.37°N 85.13°E
Country India
RegionAngika RegionBhojpuri RegionMagadh Region,Mithila Region
DivisionPatnaTirhutSaran,DarbhangaKosiPurnia,BhagalpurMunger,Magadha
Established1912 (as Bihar)
CapitalPatna
Largest cityPatna
Districts38 total
Government
 - BodyGovernment of India,Government of Bihar
 - GovernorDevanand Konwar
 - Chief MinisterNitish Kumar
Sushil Kumar Modi (Deputy)
 - LegislatureBicameral (243 + 75 seats)
 - Parliamentary constituencyBihar
 - High CourtPatna High Court
Area
 - Total94,163 km2 (36,356.5 sq mi)
Area rank12th
Population (2011)[1]
 - Total103,804,637
 - Rank3rd
 - Density1,102.4/km2 (2,855.2/sq mi)
Time zoneIST (UTC+05:30)
UN/LOCODEINBR
ISO 3166 codeIN-BR
Vehicle registrationBR
HDIincrease 0.449 (low)
HDI rank28th (2005)
Literacy63.82% (28th)
73.4% (male)
53.3% (female)
Official languagesHindiUrduMaithili,[2]Magahi.
Websitegov.bih.nic.in
Bihar (Hindiबिहारpronounced [bɪˈɦaːr] ( listen)) is a state in eastern India.[3][4] It is the 12th largest state in terms of geographical size at 38,202 sq mi (94,163 km²) and 3rd largest by population. Close to 85% of the population lives in villages. Almost 58% ofBiharis are below the age of 25,[5] which is the highest proportion in India.
Bihar lies mid-way between West Bengal in the east and Uttar Pradesh in the west. It is bounded by the country of Nepal to the north and by Jharkhand to the south. The Bihar plain is divided into two parts by the river Ganges which flows through the middle from west to east. Bihar has notified forest area of 6,764.14 km²,[6] which is 6.8% of its geographical area. Hindi and Urdu are the official languages of the state, while the majority of the people speak AngikaBhojpuriMagadhiMaithili and Bajjika. A total of 16.5% of Bihar's people are Muslims and another 12.7% belong to the Yadavcaste,Scheduled castes that comprise 14% of the people. Other castes include theKayasthas (12%), Kurmis and Koeris (7.7%) and Brahmins (4.7%).[7]
Ancient Bihar (which consisted of AngaVideha/MithilaMagadha and Vajji/Vrijji) was a centre of power, learning and culture in ancient and classical India.[8] From Magadha arose India's first great empire, the Maurya empire as well as one of the world's most widely adhered-to religions, Buddhism.[9] Magadha empires, notably under the Mauryaand Gupta dynasties, unified large parts of South Asia under a central rule.[10] Its capital Patna, earlier known as Pataliputra, was an important centre of Indian civilization. Nalanda was a centre of learning established by the 5th century CE in Bihar.
Today, Bihar lags behind the other Indian states in human, economic development terms.[11][12][13] Economists and social scientists claim that this is a direct result of the skewed policies of the central government, such as the freight equalization policy,[14][15] its apathy towards Bihar,[5][16][17] lack of Bihari sub-nationalism (resulting in no spokesperson for the state),[15][18][19] and the Permanent Settlement of 1793 by the British East India Company.[15] The current state government has however made significant strides in improving governance.[20]
The improved governance has led to an economic revival[21] in the state through increased investment in infrastructure, better health care facilities, greater emphasis on education, and an abatement in crime and corruption.[22][23] Indian[24] and global business and economic leaders feel that Bihar now has good opportunity to sustain its growth and thus have shown interest in investing in the state.[25][26] A recent New York Times article talks about the vastly improved law and order situation in the state and the phenomenal economic growth shown over the course of last 5 years.[27] Another BBC article titled "Where 'backward' Bihar leads India"[28] talked about how the state has made strides in the areas of women empowerment, judicial reforms, tax reforms, and public safety. Between 2003 and 2008, the inflow of foreign tourists saw a near-sixfold rise from 61,000 to 346,000.[29]

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