Nyotini
Nyotini is a town and nagar panchayat in Hasanganj tehsil of Unnao district, Uttar Pradesh, India.[1] Located 3 km southeast of Hasanganj[2] on the right bank of the Sai river,[3] Nyotini was historically one of the main centres of Muslim settlement in the district and it has several mosques and shrines.[3] As of 2011, its population is 7,577, in 1,212 households.[1] HistoryNyotini is traditionally said to have been founded by the Raja Ram, a descendant of Raja Balbhaddar of Jhalotar.[3] Raja Ram was supposedly on a hunting expedition when he came across the spot now occupied by the town, and he was struck by the beauty of the place.[3] He cut away some of the "tin" grass which grew here and founded the town, which he called "Nyotini".[3] His fort was supposedly on the site now occupied by an old dih.[3] Nyotini was ruled by Raja Ram's family until the time of one Raja Apre, who is said to have mistreated and robbed an influential merchant; the merchant complained to Mahmud of Ghazni, who then sent a force led by Miran Muhammad Zahir-ud-Din "Aftab" to conquer the place.[3] This is associated with a chronogram, "Khuda Dad", which gives the year 614 AH or 1197 CE, which would have been during the reign of Shams-ud-Din Iltutmish.[3] Ever since then, Nyotini has served as a major centre of Muslim settlement in what is now Unnao district.[3] At the turn of the 20th century, Nyotani was described as having "an air of prosperity".[3] Several members of the local Muslim community held high government posts (one was also a professor of Arabic at Queen's College in Benares) and they had nice houses in the town.[3] The surrounding farmland was "extraordinarily rich and well cultivated", and the main crops were poppies, vegetables, spices, medicinal herbs, and paan.[3] The town, which was in the revenue mauza of Pura Bhar, had an upper primary school, and its population in 1901 was 3,957, including 1,314 Muslims.[3] Nyotini was first classified as a town for the 1981 census.[4] At that time, its main item of manufacture was listed as cotton cloth.[4] Demographics
As of 2001[update] India census,[5] Nyotini had a population of 7,120. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Nyotini has an average literacy rate of 43%, lower than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 52%, and female literacy is 34%. In Nyotini, 18% of the population is under 6 years of age. According to the 2011 census, Nyotini has a population of 7,577 people, in 1,212 households.[1] The town's sex ratio is 917 females to every 1000 males; 3,952 of Nyotini's residents are male (52.2%) and 3,625 are female (47.8%).[1] The 0-6 age group makes up about 13.9% of the town's population; among this group, the sex ratio is 916, which is higher than the district urban average of 903.[1] Members of Scheduled Castes make up 27.91% of the town's population, while no members of Scheduled Tribes were recorded.[1] The town's literacy rate was 59.5% (counting only people age 7 and up); literacy was higher among men and boys (67.7%) than among women and girls (50.6%).[1] The scheduled castes literacy rate is 50.8% (60.3% among men and boys, and 40.3% among women and girls).[1] In terms of employment, 21.1% of Nyotini residents were classified as main workers (i.e. people employed for at least 6 months per year) in 2011.[1] Marginal workers (i.e. people employed for less than 6 months per year) made up 15.9% (the highest proportion in the district), and the remaining 63.0% were non-workers.[1] Employment status varied significantly according to gender, with 57.0% of men being either main or marginal workers, compared to 15.2% of women.[1] The 2011 census recorded 100.2% of Kursath residents as living in slum conditions.[1] There are 10 slum areas in Nyotini: Dayanand Nagar, Shastri Nagar, Ambedkar Nagar, Adarsh Nagar, Jawahar Nagar, Valmikinagar, Indira Nagar, Gandhi Nagar, Keshav Nagar, and Azad Nagar (the largest).[1] These range in size from 121 to 166 households and have between 2 and 5 tap water access points.[1] The number of flush toilets installed in people's homes ranges from 4 in Valmikinagar to 65 in Indira Nagar.[1] 8 of the 10 areas are served by open sewers, while the remaining 2 (Keshav Nagar and Azad Nagar) have a mix of open and closed drainage.[1] References
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