List of districts of Tripura

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File:Tripura-district-map.svg

The Indian state of Tripura borders with Bangladesh and the Indian states of Assam and Mizoram. The third-smallest state in India and also a princely state till 1949, It covers an area of {{convert|10491|km2}}. The area of modern Tripura was ruled for several centuries by the Manikya dynasty of the Twipra kingdom. It was a princely state during British rule, and joined the newly independent India. Ethnic strife between the indigenous Tripuri people and refugees, illegal immigrants influx of Bengali population led to tension and scattered violence since its integration into the country, but the establishment of an autonomous tribal administrative agency and other strategies have led to peace for a short period. Tripura was divided into four districts but with effect from 21 January 2012 four more new districts was divided making a total of eight districts in the state.new districts of tipura

History

Dating back to the time of Mahabharata, the very helm of the Kingdom of Tripura encompassed the greater part of Eastern Bengal stretching from the Bay of Bengal in the South to the Brahmaputra in the North and west and Burma, now Myanmar in the East. The earliest trace of the ancient of Tripura can be found in the Ashokan pillar inscriptions.ashok pillar mahabharata

The 17th century is a major watershed in the history of Tripura when the administration of the region passed on the hands of the Mughals with some powers left with the Manikyas. In the Colonial era, the Britishers extended their control over Tripura granting some limited independence to the Manikya kings. The region was under the rule of the Twipra Kingdom for centuries, although when this dates from is not documented. The Rajmala, a chronicle of Tripuri kings which was first written in the 15th century,{{cite journal | title = Hill Tippera – history | journal = The Imperial Gazetteer of India | year = 1909 | volume = 13 | page = 118 | url =https://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/pager.html?objectid=DS405.1.I34_V13_124.gif | format = GIF | accessdate =27 October 2011}} provides a list of 179 kings, from antiquity up to Krishna Kishore Manikya (1830–1850),{{cite book| first=Gautam Kumar | last= Bera|title=The land of fourteen gods: ethno-cultural profile of Tripura|year=2010|publisher=Mittal Publications|isbn=978-81-8324-333-9}}{{rp|3}}{{cite book|url=http://www.tripura.org.in/rajmala4.htm|title=Sri rajmala volume – IV|editor-last=Sen|editor-first=Kali Prasanna|language=Bengali|publisher=Tribal Research Institute, Government of Tripura|year=2003|accessdate=10 May 2013}}{{cite book|last=Bhattacharyya|first=Apurba Chandra|title=Progressive Tripura|year=1930|publisher=Inter-India Publications|page=179|oclc=16845189}} but the reliability of the Rajmala has been doubted.{{cite book|last=Sircar|first=D.C.|title=Some epigraphical records of the mediaeval period from eastern India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-O18xhA_BXUC&pg=PA89|year= 1979|publisher=Abhinav Publications|isbn=978-81-7017-096-9|page=89}} The Royal history of Tripura ended when the princely state acceded to the Indian Union on 15 October 1949. After death of the last king Maharaja Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya on 17 May 1947, a Regency Council was formed headed by Maharani Kanchan Prabha Devi, for aid of the minor Prince, Kirit Bikram Kishore Manikya Bahadur. The regent signed the merger agreement with the Government of India. After merger Tripura became a Part ‘C’ State. On reorganization of the states, effected in November, 1956, Tripura became a Union Territory with an Advisory Committee to aid and advise the Chief Commissioner. Thereafter in place of the Advisory Committee, a Territorial Council was formed through the adult franchise on 15 August 1957. On 1 July 1963, the Tripura Territorial Council was dissolved and the Legislative Assembly with the existing members of the Territorial Council was formed. On 21 January 1972 Tripura became full-fledged State by the Act of Parliament called the North Eastern Areas (Reorganization) Act, 1971.end of king era of tripura

List of Districts after the reorganization

For administrative purposes, the state has been divided into 8 districts, 23 subdivisions and 58 development blocks—with effect from 21 January 2012, after a Government of Tripura Decision, out of which the newly created districts are 4, subdivisions 6, development blocks 5. The four new Districts are Gomati, Khowai, Sipahijala and Unakoti; the six new sub-divisions are Jirania, Mohanpur, Kumarghat, Panisagar, Jampuijala and Karbook; the five new development blocks are Yuvarajnagar, Durga Chawmuhani, Jolaibari, Silachari and Lefunga.

The information here are latest updated as of 25 May 2015.{{cite news | url=https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/agartala-turns-into-a-municipal-corporation-tomorrow/article5597581.ece | title= Agartala turns into a municipal corporation tomorrow | date=20 January 2014 | first=Syed Sajjad | last=Ali | newspaper=The Hindu | accessdate=31 December 2018 }}

class="wikitable sortable"

!District

HeadquartersDistrict MagistratPolice SuperSubdivisionsDevelopment BlocksMunicipalsPopulation
(2011)
Area (in km2)Map
Dhalai

| align="center" |Ambassa

Sri Saju Vaheed A, IASShri Kishore Debbarma,TPS Gr-11. Kamalpur
2. Ambassa
3. Longtarai Valley
4. Gandachera
1. a) Salema
1. b) Durga Chawmuhani
2. a) Ambassa
3. a) Manu
3. b) Chawmanu
4. a) Dumburnagar
4. b) Raishyabari
1. a) Kamalpur Nagar Panchayet
2. a) Ambassa Municipal Council
align="right"|378,0002426100px
Gomati

| align="center" |Udaipur

Shri Tarit Kanti Chakma, IASShri Lucky Chauhan, IPS1. Udaipur
2. Amarpur
3. Karbook
1. a) Matabari
1. b) Kakraban
1. c) Killa
2. a) Amarpur
2. b) Ompi
3. a) Karbook
3. b) Silachari
1. a) Udaipur Municipal Council
2. a) Amarpur Nagar Panchayet
align="right"|441,5381,522.8100px
Khowai

| align="center" |Khowai

Mr. Rajat Pant, IASDr Ramesh Kumar Yadav, IPS1. Khowai
2. Teliamura
1. a) Khowai
1. b) Tulashikhar
1. c) Padmabil
2. a) Teliamura
2. b) Kalyanpur
2. c) Mungiakami
1. a) Khowai Municipal Council
2. a) Teliamura Municipal Council
align="right"|327,5641,377.28100px
Sipahijala

| align="center" |Bishramganj

Dr. Siddharth Shiv Jaiswal, IASShri.Krishnendu Chakraborty, IPS1. Bishalgarh
2. Sonamura
3. Jampuijala
1. a) Bishalgarh
1. b) Charilam
2. a) Mohanbhog
2. b) Kathalia
2. c) Boxanagar
2. d) Nalchar
3. a) Jampuijala
1. a) Bishalgarh Municipal Council
2. a) Sonamura Nagar Panchayet
2. b) Melaghar Municipal Council
align="right"|479,9751,043.04
Unakoti

| align="center" |Kailashahar

Shri D.K.Chakma, IASShri Rathiranjan Debanth, IPS1. Kumarghat
2. Kailashahar
1. a) Kumarghat
1. b) Pecharthal
2. a) Gournagar
1. a) Kumarghat Municipal Council
2. a) Kailashahar Municipal Council
align="right"|298,574686.97100px
North Tripura

| align="center" |Dharmanagar

Ms. Chandni Chandran, IASShri Bhanupada Chakraborty, TPS Gr-11. Dharmanagar
2. Kanchanpur
3. Panisagar
1. a) Kadamtala
1. b) Yuvarajnagar
2. a) Dasda
2. b) Jampuihill
2. c) Laljuri
3. a) Panisagar
3. b) Damchara
1. a) Dharmanagar Municipal Councilalign="right"|415,9461,422.19100px
South Tripura

| align="center" |Belonia

Shri Muhammad Sajad, IAS.Dr.Kulwant Singh, IPS1. Santirbazar
2. Belonia
3. Sabroom
1. a) Bakafa
1. b) Jolaibari
2. a) Hrishyamukh
2. b) Rajnagar
2. c) Bharat Chandra Nagar
3. a) Satchand
3. b) Rupaichari
3. c) Poangbari
1. a) Santirbazar Municipal Council
2. a) Belonia Municipal Council
3. a) Sabroom Nagar Panchayet
align="right"|453,0791,514.3100px
West Tripura

| align="center" |Agartala

Dr. Vishal Kumar, IAS.Sri Manik Das, TPS Gr-11. Sadar
2. Mohanpur
3. Jirania
1. a) Dukli
2. a) Mohanpur
2. b) Hezamara
2. c) Lefunga
3. a) Jirania
3. b) Mandai
1. a) Agartala Municipal Corporation
2. a) Mohanpur municipal council
3. a) Ranirbazar Municipal Council
align="right"|918,200983.63100px

Former administrative districts

class="wikitable sortable" width=98% style="border:1px solid black"
bgcolor=#99ccff

| width="10%" | Code

| width="20%" | District

| width="20%" | Headquarters

| width="10%" | Population (2011){{cite web

|url = http://censusindia.gov.in/2011-prov-results/data_files/tripura/3.1table1.xls

|format=XLS

|title = Distribution of Population, Decadal growth rate, Sex ratio and Population density for State and District

|publisher = The Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India, New Delhi-110011

|date = 2010–2011

|accessdate = 2011-09-18

}}

| width="10%" | Area (km²)

| width="10%" | Density (/km²)

| width="20%" | Official website

bgcolor=#F4F9FF

| DH

DhalaiAmbassaalign="right"| 377,988align="right"| 2,523align="right"| 157http://dhalai.gov.in/
bgcolor=#F4F9FF

| NT

North TripuraKailashaharalign="right" | 693,281align="right"| 2,821align="right"| 341http://northtripura.nic.in/
bgcolor=#F4F9FF

| ST

South TripuraUdaipuralign="right"| 875,144align="right"| 2,152align="right"| 286http://southtripura.nic.in/
bgcolor=#F4F9FF

| WT

West TripuraAgartalaalign="right"| 1,724,619align="right"| 2,997align="right"| 576http://westtripura.nic.in/

Demographics

The following is a list of the basic demographic data for the districts of Tripura based on the size of the district's area, arranged in descending order{{Cite web|url=http://www.census2011.co.in/census/state/districtlist/tripura.html|title=List of districts of Tripura}} (The data input here is taken from 2011 Census; however, the new four districts were formed in 2012 so information on those are of 2012.)

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style="background:#ccc; text-align:center;"

! District !! Area in km2 !! Population !! Growth Rate !! Sex Ratio !! Literacy !! Density/km2

style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| Dhalai

2,400377,98812.5794586.82157
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| Gomati

1,522.8436,86814.1595986.19287
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| Khowai

1,005.67327,39114.1596188.37326
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| Sipahijala

1,044.78484,23314.1595284.14463
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| Unakoti

591.93277,33510.8596687.58469
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| North Tripura

1,444.5415,94617.4496888.77288
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| South Tripura

1,534.2433,73714.1595685.09283
style="vertical-align: middle; text-align: center;"

| West Tripura

942.551,017,53412.5797291.69973

References

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