Gaighat is an Indian village in the town of Zamania within the Ghazipur district of Uttar Pradesh.[2]
Gaighat | |
---|---|
Village | |
Coordinates: 25°34′50″N 83°34′50″E / 25.58052°N 83.58058°E | |
Country | India |
State | Uttar Pradesh |
District | Ghazipur |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 2,281 |
PIN | 232331[1] |
Geography
editGaighat is located 35 km south of the district headquarters Ghazipur, 12 km from Zamania, and 363 km from the state capital Lucknow.
Nearby villages include Dhuska (3 km), Deorhi (5 km), Baruin Rural (8 km), Baresar (9 km), and Burhadih (9 km). Gaighat is surrounded by Ramgarh Tehsil and Nuaon Tehsil to the east, Zamania Tehsil to the north, and Durgawati Tehsil to the south.
Gaighat is on the border of the Ghazipur, Kaimur, and Chandauli districts.[3] It is also near the Karamnasha and Ganga rivers, which sometimes causes flooding.[4][5]
Demographics
editAs of the 2011 Census of India, there were 2,281 people and 294 houses in the village, including 1,210 males and 1,071 females. There were 326 children aged 0–6, including 186 males and 140 females, making up 14.29% of the total population.
In 2011, the literacy rate among the population was 76.01%, which was above the state-wide rate of 67.68%. The male literacy rate was 88.57% while the female literacy rate was 52.19%.[6]
Education
editThe main college in Gaigaht is Baudh Sukhnanadan Inter College. Colleges near Gaighat include Hindu Inter College and Hindu P.G. College.
There is also a government-run primary school which teaches through 8th grade.
Transportation
editZamania Railway Station and Bahora Chandil Railway Station are the nearest railway stations to Gaighat. Mughalsarai Junction railway station is a major railway station, located 49 km from Gaighat. [citation needed]
References
edit- ^ "Pincode of Gaighat Zamania Ghazipur_". GetPincode. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
- ^ Wilton Oldham (1870). Historical and Statistical Memoir of the Ghazeepoor District. Government Press, North-Western Provinces. pp. 173–.
- ^ Ram Kirti Singh Kushwaha (1990). Impact of development programmes on agriculture. Friends Publications. p. 24.
- ^ The Geographer. Aligarh Muslim University Geographical Society. 1979. p. 69.
- ^ Minati Singh (1983). Lower Ganga-Ghaghra Doab: A Study in Rural Settlements. Tara Book Agency. pp. 10–11.
- ^ "ArcGIS Hub".
Further reading
edit- Saiyad Hasan Ansari (1986). Evolution and Spatial Organization of Clan Settlements: A Case Study of Middle Ganga Valley. Concept Publishing Company. p. 61.