Kushtia
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World / Bangladesh / Khulna / Kushtia / Kustia
draw only border, third-level administrative division, town district
Kushtia District (Khulna division) with an area of 1621.15 sq km is bounded by Rajshahi, Natore, Pabna districts on the north, Chuadanga, Jhenaidah districts on the south, Rajbari districts on the east, West Bengal of India and Meherpur district on the west. Main rivers are Ganges, Garai, Mathabhanga, Kaliganga and Kumar. Annual average highest temperature 37.8ºC and lowest 11.2ºC; annual rainfall 1467 mm.
The location of Kushtia town centre is 23.9021068N 89.120434E. Kushtia (Town) municipal town consists of 12 wards and 29 mahallas. The area of the town is 13.31 sq km. It has a population of 86066; male 51.34%, female 48.66%; density of population is 6466 per sq km. The literacy rate among the town people is 64.1%. Kushtia Municipality was established in 1969. Hamilton's Gazetteer has the mention of Kushtia (Kustee) town and local people call the town as Kushte. Kushtia is not an ancient town. It developed as a river port during the reign of Emperor Shahjahan. The East India Company made intensive use of the port but the growth of the town owes much to the settlement by the indigo planters and traders. The town was connected with Calcutta by rail in 1860; since then it experienced quick development and became a good location for mills and factories including those like the Renwick and Company (1904), Jagneshwar Engineering Works (1896) and the Mohini Mills (1919). The town got a new momentum for development with the establishment of the headquarters of the Ganges-Kobadak Project and a number of government offices in 1954.
Kushtia was once a part of the Nadia district of the undivided India. It became a new district in 1947 consisting of Kushtia Sadar, Chuadanga and Meherpur subdivisions. All these three subdivisions are now independent districts. Kushtia district consists of 6 upazilas, 4 municipalities, 39 wards, 70 mahallas, 61 union parishads, 710 mouzas and 978 villages. The upazilas are kushtia sadar, kumarkhali, daulatpur, mirpur, bheramara and khoksa.
Kushtia was a larger district consisting of three subdivisions, each of which has now become a district. However, the peoples of these three districts, Chuadanga, Meherpur and Kushtia, share more than just a common past. Most notably, the dwellers of these districts, as the past inhabitants of an undivided Nadia district, speak a dialect remarkably close to what is now considered "standard" Bengali in both West Bengal and Bangladesh. Because of the great commonality between the three districts, they are often referred to as the Greater Kushtia District.
Archeological relics and monuments: Shahi Mosque (Mughal period), tomb of Lalon Shah, Kuthibari Rabindranath Tagore at Shilaidaha, house of Mir Mosharraf Hossain at Lahinipara, tomb of Nafar Shah at Aruapara, tomb of Darvish Sonabandhu at Kumarkhali Bazaar, tomb of Jangli Shah at Safiyat Village and Mahishkundi Indigo Kuthi.
Historical events: indigo resistance movement spread in Bengal in 1860 and Shalghar Madhua organised the largest movement in the Kushtia district.
As of the 1991 Bangladesh census, Population 1713224; male 50.86% and female 49.14%; Muslim 95.72%, Hindu 4.22% and others 0.06%.
Religious institutions: Mosque 1582, temple 34, church 1, tomb 148.
Literacy and educational institutions: Average literacy 25.8%; male 30.9%, female 48.35%. Educational institutions: university 1, government college 3, private college 30, government high school 3, private high school 173, private junior school 38, government primary school 330, private primary school 275, kindergarten 39, madrasa 37 vocational training institute 2, law college 1, PTI 1, the mentally and physically retarded school 1, medical school 1, teachers training institutes 2, NGO operated school 456. Noted educational institutions are Mission Primary School (1898), Kushtia Government University College (1947), Kushtia Islamia College (1968), Kushtia High School and Kushtia Zila School (1960), Bagoan Khirad Chanda Bidya Niketan.
Cultural organisations: Public library 26, playground 115, club 204, sangit college 1, women's organisation 25, jatra party 2, theatre group 11, theatre stage 5, shilpakala academy 1, children's academy 1, cinema hall 16, literay society 34, community centre 3.
Main occupations: Agriculture 31.5%, agricultural labourer 13.9%, wage labourer 4.48%, handloom 3.58%, industry 1.14%, commerce 15.34%, transport 2.05%, construction 1.41%, service 7.15%, others 9.45%.
Land use: Cultivable land 116181.52 hectare; fallow land 13164.19; single crop land 52.42%, double crop 38.64% and treble crop land 8.94%.
Land control: Among the peasants 42.9% are landless, 46.8% small, 8.5% medium and 1.8% rich.
Main crops: Paddy, jute, sugarcane, pulses, oil seed.
Fisheries, dairies, poultry Fishery 227, poultry 855, dairy 197, nursery 50, hatchery 37.
Communication facilities- Roads: pucca 469.92 km, semi pucca 540.1 km, mud road 2031.07 km; waterway 45 nautical mile; railways 42.5 km.
Manufactories Ice factory 21, flour mill 11, textile mill 5, rice mill 113, others 15.
Cottage industries: Weaving 687, bamboo work 259, goldsmith 358, blacksmith 880, woodwork 682, tailoring 419, welding 82.
NGO activities: Operationally important NGOs are Setu, Joy, Disha, Pipasha, Jagarani, CDL, brac, Mukti, Swanirvar Bangladesh, asa, Drishti, Bodhodaya, Karmei Mukti.
Health centres: District sadar hospital 1, upazila health complex 6, union health centre 10, satellite clinic 97, health and family planning centre 38, TB hospital 1, diabetic centre 1, maternal and child welfare centre 2, police hospital 1, jail hospital 1, eye hospital 2 and child hospital 1.
Places of Interest: The shrine of Lalon Fakir, the founder of the Baoul faith is located at Cheouria, about 2 km from the Kustia railway station.
The Rabindra Kuthibari of Shelaidaha where the Noble Laureate Rabindranath Tagore's lived to administer his family Zamindari, 20 km from Kushtia town. He lived here for part of his life, and wrote many memorable poems there. Tagore built the Kuthibari as his office/residence, to collect revenue as a Zaminder, from local peasants. The Kuthibari is now a museum.
The location of Kushtia town centre is 23.9021068N 89.120434E. Kushtia (Town) municipal town consists of 12 wards and 29 mahallas. The area of the town is 13.31 sq km. It has a population of 86066; male 51.34%, female 48.66%; density of population is 6466 per sq km. The literacy rate among the town people is 64.1%. Kushtia Municipality was established in 1969. Hamilton's Gazetteer has the mention of Kushtia (Kustee) town and local people call the town as Kushte. Kushtia is not an ancient town. It developed as a river port during the reign of Emperor Shahjahan. The East India Company made intensive use of the port but the growth of the town owes much to the settlement by the indigo planters and traders. The town was connected with Calcutta by rail in 1860; since then it experienced quick development and became a good location for mills and factories including those like the Renwick and Company (1904), Jagneshwar Engineering Works (1896) and the Mohini Mills (1919). The town got a new momentum for development with the establishment of the headquarters of the Ganges-Kobadak Project and a number of government offices in 1954.
Kushtia was once a part of the Nadia district of the undivided India. It became a new district in 1947 consisting of Kushtia Sadar, Chuadanga and Meherpur subdivisions. All these three subdivisions are now independent districts. Kushtia district consists of 6 upazilas, 4 municipalities, 39 wards, 70 mahallas, 61 union parishads, 710 mouzas and 978 villages. The upazilas are kushtia sadar, kumarkhali, daulatpur, mirpur, bheramara and khoksa.
Kushtia was a larger district consisting of three subdivisions, each of which has now become a district. However, the peoples of these three districts, Chuadanga, Meherpur and Kushtia, share more than just a common past. Most notably, the dwellers of these districts, as the past inhabitants of an undivided Nadia district, speak a dialect remarkably close to what is now considered "standard" Bengali in both West Bengal and Bangladesh. Because of the great commonality between the three districts, they are often referred to as the Greater Kushtia District.
Archeological relics and monuments: Shahi Mosque (Mughal period), tomb of Lalon Shah, Kuthibari Rabindranath Tagore at Shilaidaha, house of Mir Mosharraf Hossain at Lahinipara, tomb of Nafar Shah at Aruapara, tomb of Darvish Sonabandhu at Kumarkhali Bazaar, tomb of Jangli Shah at Safiyat Village and Mahishkundi Indigo Kuthi.
Historical events: indigo resistance movement spread in Bengal in 1860 and Shalghar Madhua organised the largest movement in the Kushtia district.
As of the 1991 Bangladesh census, Population 1713224; male 50.86% and female 49.14%; Muslim 95.72%, Hindu 4.22% and others 0.06%.
Religious institutions: Mosque 1582, temple 34, church 1, tomb 148.
Literacy and educational institutions: Average literacy 25.8%; male 30.9%, female 48.35%. Educational institutions: university 1, government college 3, private college 30, government high school 3, private high school 173, private junior school 38, government primary school 330, private primary school 275, kindergarten 39, madrasa 37 vocational training institute 2, law college 1, PTI 1, the mentally and physically retarded school 1, medical school 1, teachers training institutes 2, NGO operated school 456. Noted educational institutions are Mission Primary School (1898), Kushtia Government University College (1947), Kushtia Islamia College (1968), Kushtia High School and Kushtia Zila School (1960), Bagoan Khirad Chanda Bidya Niketan.
Cultural organisations: Public library 26, playground 115, club 204, sangit college 1, women's organisation 25, jatra party 2, theatre group 11, theatre stage 5, shilpakala academy 1, children's academy 1, cinema hall 16, literay society 34, community centre 3.
Main occupations: Agriculture 31.5%, agricultural labourer 13.9%, wage labourer 4.48%, handloom 3.58%, industry 1.14%, commerce 15.34%, transport 2.05%, construction 1.41%, service 7.15%, others 9.45%.
Land use: Cultivable land 116181.52 hectare; fallow land 13164.19; single crop land 52.42%, double crop 38.64% and treble crop land 8.94%.
Land control: Among the peasants 42.9% are landless, 46.8% small, 8.5% medium and 1.8% rich.
Main crops: Paddy, jute, sugarcane, pulses, oil seed.
Fisheries, dairies, poultry Fishery 227, poultry 855, dairy 197, nursery 50, hatchery 37.
Communication facilities- Roads: pucca 469.92 km, semi pucca 540.1 km, mud road 2031.07 km; waterway 45 nautical mile; railways 42.5 km.
Manufactories Ice factory 21, flour mill 11, textile mill 5, rice mill 113, others 15.
Cottage industries: Weaving 687, bamboo work 259, goldsmith 358, blacksmith 880, woodwork 682, tailoring 419, welding 82.
NGO activities: Operationally important NGOs are Setu, Joy, Disha, Pipasha, Jagarani, CDL, brac, Mukti, Swanirvar Bangladesh, asa, Drishti, Bodhodaya, Karmei Mukti.
Health centres: District sadar hospital 1, upazila health complex 6, union health centre 10, satellite clinic 97, health and family planning centre 38, TB hospital 1, diabetic centre 1, maternal and child welfare centre 2, police hospital 1, jail hospital 1, eye hospital 2 and child hospital 1.
Places of Interest: The shrine of Lalon Fakir, the founder of the Baoul faith is located at Cheouria, about 2 km from the Kustia railway station.
The Rabindra Kuthibari of Shelaidaha where the Noble Laureate Rabindranath Tagore's lived to administer his family Zamindari, 20 km from Kushtia town. He lived here for part of his life, and wrote many memorable poems there. Tagore built the Kuthibari as his office/residence, to collect revenue as a Zaminder, from local peasants. The Kuthibari is now a museum.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kushtia_District
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 23°54'4"N 89°7'54"E
- Chuadanga District 51 km
- Meherpur District 59 km
- Patran Tehsil 1479 km
- Bicholim Taluka 1837 km
- Pedne Taluka 1849 km
- Bardez Taluka 1852 km
- Tehsil Kallar Syedan 1881 km
- Garadagh district 4138 km
- Tegh Region 4369 km
- Meghri Municipality 4375 km
- Kushtia Medical College (Under Construction) 1.8 km
- Origin of river GORAI from the river PADMA 6.4 km
- Hasimpur Bazar, Kumarkhali, Kushtia 13 km
- Pabna Mental Hospital 14 km
- Govt. Edward College and University 17 km
- Pabna Medical College and 250 bed Hospital Complex 17 km
- Arifpur, Pabna 17 km
- Pabna Monsurabad Housing 17 km
- Khulna Division 113 km
- Rajshahi Division 148 km
Kushtia Medical College (Under Construction)
Origin of river GORAI from the river PADMA
Hasimpur Bazar, Kumarkhali, Kushtia
Pabna Mental Hospital
Govt. Edward College and University
Pabna Medical College and 250 bed Hospital Complex
Arifpur, Pabna
Pabna Monsurabad Housing
Khulna Division
Rajshahi Division
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