The Lumbini province is named after the holy pilgrimage site of Lumbini in Rupandehi district, the birthplace of Gautama Buddha – the founder of Buddhism. The Provincial Assembly adopted Lumbini Province as the permanent name by replacing its initial name Province No. 5 on 6 October 2020 and Deukhuri was declared the provincial capital.[2][3][4]
History
Pre-history
The Churiya range linked with the Dang valley of Lumbini province has been archaeologically considered very ancient with the existence of Sivapithecus, a link between man and ape. The pre-historic studies of the valley have been carried out extensively since the last century; by Tribhuvan University since 1966, American Museum of Natural History and the Department of Mines of then His Majesty's Government of Nepal from 1976, as well as the paleolithic study of Dang valley by University of Erlangen-Nuremberg of Germany in 1984, among others. These researches have pointed out that Dang valley was a lake approximately 2.5 to 1 million years ago.[5] In addition, Hand axes and other artefacts dated to early Paleolithic (1.8 million to 100,000 years ago) have been found in alluvial deposits along the Babai River in Dang Valley, which have been classified as Acheulean or second-generation tools that succeed the oldest Olduwan. Also along the Babai River, there have been discoveries of archeological sites dated to Upper Paleolithic/Late Pleistocene (about 50,000 to 10,000 years ago).
Shakya-era
As per the Buddhist tradition, Queen Maya Devi of Kapilavastu was traveling to her father's Koliya kingdom in Devdaha to give birth to her child as was the Shakya tradition. However, on the way she stopped near the garden of Lumbini to rest and went into labour thus giving birth to the future Buddha under a sal tree. Gautama Buddha was born in 623 BC in Lumbini, testified by the inscription on the pillar erected by the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka in 249 BC which marks the spot as the birthplace of Buddha Shakyamuni.[1] The inscription mentions, as translated by Paranavitana:[6]
When King Devanampriya Priyadarsin had been anointed twenty years, he came himself and worshipped (this spot) because the Buddha Shakyamuni was born here. (He) both caused to be made a stone bearing a horse and caused a stone pillar to be set up, (in order to show) that the Blessed One was born here. (He) made the village of Lumbini free of taxes, and paying (only) an eighth share (of the produce).
According to the Buddhist texts, Gautama Buddha was born as a prince in a royal Shakya clan reigning over the kingdom of Kapilavastu. This ancient city has been widely identified as Tilaurakot of present Kapilvastu district where ruins of the ancient fortified city have been found.[7] Gautama was a prince of Kapilavastu until the age of 29, after which he left the palace behind and wandered throughout the Ganges plain as an ascetic – learning yoga and related concepts from various teachers.[8] Gautama became the Buddha or the Enlightened One after several years of his wandering, one day under the Bodhi tree in Bodh Gaya. After enlightenment, he began his teachings and travelled extensively throughout the Ganges plain. The original teachings of Buddha later culminated into Buddhism, spreading through much of Asia then and the world at present.
After the death of Gautama Buddha, eight princes out of sixteen mahājanapadās received Buddha's relics, one of them a Koliyan king of Rāmagrāma (present Parasi district) who built a stupa enshrining the relic. Buddhist texts point out the princes constructed a stupa at or near their capital city and enshrined Buddha's relics.[9] The site has the only undisturbed original stupa containing the relic of Gautama Buddha in the world,[10] and was added to the World Heritage Tentative List by UNESCO on 23 May 1996.
Reign of Ashoka the Great
Emperor Ashoka The Great, having converted to Buddhism after being victorious in brutal wars, devoted himself to the spread of Buddha's teachings and erected monolithic columns known as Pillars of Ashoka at sites associated with the life of Gautama Buddha.
One such pillar was erected by Ashoka in Lumbini in 249 BC, commemorating the sacred site of Gautama Buddha's birth and declared the village free of taxation.[1][6]
During the medieval period after the 11th century, Khasa Kingdom dominated much of western Nepal and western Tibet which was initially oriented towards Buddhism and Shamanism, and at their peak encompassed Guge and Purang of Tibet and western Nepal up to Kaskikot. King Ripumalla, one of the initial Khasa rulers, left an inscription on the Ashoka pillar with six-syllable mantra of Buddhism and his wish "Om mani padme hum: May Prince Ripu Malla be long victorious", dated around 1312 CE.[12][13][14]
After the late 13th century, Khasa kingdom disintegrated into numerous principalities each with its own ruler. In the 18th century, King Prithvi Narayan Shah, born from the marriage of king Nara Bhupal Shah of the Gorkha Kingdom and Queen Kaushalyavati Devi, the princess of the Palpa kingdom; set out on a conquest to unify the region into modern Nepal.
Modern history
Anglo-Nepalese War
The Anglo-Nepalese War (1814–1816) took place between the Gorkhali army of the Kingdom of Nepal and the British forces of the East India Company for two years leading to the Sugauli Treaty in 1816 which demarcated the boundary of the Kingdom of Nepal. Among the prominent battles during the Anglo-Nepalese War, the Battle of Jitgadhi - fought in January 1815 and again in April 1815 - was marked by the victory of the Gorkhali army. The Nepalese Colonel Ujir Singh Thapa, who led the kingdom of Nepal to victory in this battle, is revered as one of the national heroes in the military history of Nepal.[15]
Battle of Jit Gadhi
After the Kingdom of Nepal outright refused the proposal of British East India Company which wanted to claim its sovereignty in the territories of Butwal and Sheoraj, General John Sullivan Wood of the East India Company led an offensive column to the fort of Jit Gadhi in January 1815 AD. The frontier fort, which was surrounded by dense forest and situated on the west bank of the river Tinau on a primary route to Tansen, was being held by Nepalese Colonel Ujir Singh Thapa - the nephew of Nepalese Prime Minister MukhtiyarBhimsen Thapa.
Although low in number and acutely inferior in firepower, the strong resistance put forward by Colonel Ujir Singh Thapa thwarted the incursion of the British forces into Nepal twice in January 1815 and April 1815. The battle established Colonel Thapa as a national military hero and forced the English troops to withdraw.[15]
Historical Districts
During the Rana regime, the region was politically divided into administrative districts Butwal, Palpa, Deukhuri, Sallyana, Banke, Bardiya and Pyuthan.
Geography
Lumbini, with an area of 22,288 square kilometers (8,605.44 sq. mi) covers about 15.1% of the country's total area. Lumbini Province is almost the size of US state of New Jersey. The province extends 150 km (93 mi) north to south and about 300 km (186 mi) east to west at its maximum width. It shares 413.14 km (256 mi) of border with India (states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh).[16]
The Province is geographically bordered with Gandaki Province to the east and north, by Karnali province to the north and west, by Sudurpaschim Province to the west and by India to the south. There are three ecological regions of Mountains, Hills and Terai; each occupying 3.1%, 69.3% and 27.6% of the province respectively.[17]
Lumbini has a humid subtropical climate and experiences four seasons. The winter in January and February is followed by summer between March and May and the monsoon season between June and September.[18] In winter, it's sunny and mild, pleasantly warm during the day but cool at night, sometimes even cold. The average temperature in January is around 15 °C (59 °F). But the northern parts of the province get colder and can experience snowfall. By March, the temperature rises considerably and it begins to be hot, while from April to June it's scorching hot, and highs can reach or exceed 40 °C (104 °F) in southern plains.
In June, the summer monsoon arrives, characterized by heavy rains, in the form of downpours and thunderstorms. The monsoon arrives first in the east, in early June, while in the west it comes in the middle of the month or so. The temperature decreases, with the maximum dropping to around 32 °C (90 °F) in July and August, but the humidity increases, making the heat muggy. The rains are heavy, especially in July and August, when they exceed 300 millimeters (12 inches) per month, but in certain areas at the foot of the mountains, they can exceed 600 mm (23.5 in) per month.[19] The monsoon starts to withdraw by early October in the west, and about a week later in the east. The weather returns to be sunny, and even though October is still a hot month, the humidity decreases, and the night temperature becomes a bit cooler.
Average temperatures and precipitation for selected communities in Lumbini[20]
Dang and Deukhuri valleys, 10 km apart, are located in the Dang Deukhuri District. The Dang Valley lies between the Mahabharat Range in the north and the Churia Range in the south. It forms a nearly 1,000 km2 (390 sq mi) plain within a local drainage basin of less than 3,000 km2 (1,200 sq mi). It is drained by the Babai River, and is one of the largest Inner Terai valleys. Deukhuri Valley is southeast of the Dang Valley and extends about 60 km (37 mi) in WNW-ESE direction with a maximum width of 20 km (12 mi), and is surrounded by Sivalik Hills on all sides. It forms a nearly 600 km2 (230 sq mi) plain within a drainage basin of 6,100 km2 (2,400 sq mi). The valley is drained by the West Rapti River.
The elevations of Dang and Deukhuri valleys are 700 meters and 300 meters from sea level respectively. Late Cenozoic sedimentary sequences are well exposed along the southern part of Dang and all sides of Deukhuri valley, and mostly consist of deformed rocks resulting from the persistence of shortening between Indian Plate and Eurasian Plate.[21] The two valleys have been considered a vital location of Paleolithic archeology in South Asia due to the abundant presence of ancient Paleolithic tool sites.[22]
Other small valleys of the province are located in districts like Arghakhanchi (Rapti), Palpa (Rampur), Gulmi (Simaltari), Pyuthan (Darban and Bajipur).[23]
Forests
About 15% of the total land is covered in protected forest in the province.
Being the only mountain district of Lumbini province, most of the prominent peaks of the province lie in Eastern Rukum District along the Dhaulagiri range.[25] The tallest mountain of Lumbini Province in Eastern Rukum, Putha Himchuli also known as Mount Dhaulagiri VII, has an altitude of 7,246 meters and is one of the popular trekking peak of the Dhaulagiri region.[citation needed] The mountain was first ascended jointly by British explorer J.O.M Roberts and Nepalese climber Ang Nyima Sherpa in 1954.[26] Mount Sisne I remained an unclimbed summit until 2013, and the first successful ascent was made by a mountaineering team led by Man Bahadur Khatri.[27]
A recent 2023 study in the highland community areas of the Himalayan region in Eastern Rukum has shown their disproportionate impact to climate change crisis, such as changes in rainfall patterns, droughts, unpredictable seasonal changes and absence of snow.[30] The direct impacts are being felt more severely by pastoral communities due to depleting grasslands. UN Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) is operational in eastern Rukum, and is a development partner in areas such as climate vulnerability, sustainable environmental and economical development, among others.[31]
With a multi-altitudinal variation in regional landscape stretching from high mountains in the north, to the hills in the middle and to the plains of the south; Lumbini province has 97 lakes with the plains of Terai constituting 92% of all the lakes of the province. The hilly and the mountain region constitute 6% and 2% of all the lakes respectively. District-wise, Rupandehi has 28 lakes making it the district with the largest number of lakes of the province; followed by Kapilvastu (24), Parasi (21), Dang (8), Banke (4), Bardiya (3), Arghakhanchi (2), Palpa (2),Pyuthan (2), Eastern Rukum (2) and Rolpa (2).[33] Some of the most popular lakes of the province are Bahrakune, Jakhera, Gajedi and Taalpokhara.
Another river called Babai River draining the inner Terai of Dang Valley, Salyan and Bardiya remains a river of particular international archeological interest. The discovery of ancient Hand axes and other artifacts on the deposits along the river in Dang Valley have marked the region as prehistoric. The artifacts have been dated to early Paleolithic (1.8 million to 100,000 years ago) and are classified as Acheulean or second-generation tools that succeed the oldest Olduwan.[5]
Demographics
In 2021 Lumbini had a census population of 5,122,078 with 1,141,902 households.[36]
Ethnicity
The province is very ethnically diverse. The largest group is the Magar with 14.58% of the population. The second largest is Tharu with 14.30%. The Khas/Chhetri (14.24%), Hill Brahmin (11.27%), Kami (6.01%), Damai (1.93%), Kurmi (1.73%), Musalman (6.93%), Yadav (4.01%), Chamar (2.01%), 1.[37]
The majority of population in the province practices Hinduism, followed by Islam, Buddhism and Christianity. Among these, almost 90% of the people identify themselves as Hindus and 7% identify themselves as Muslims, 3% as Buddhists and 1% as Christians. Often cited as an example of social harmony, the majority population of Hindus and Muslims of Lumbini and the surrounding villages have safeguarded and promoted the Buddhist heritage sites together in unison.[38]
Nepali is the most spoken language of the province, but is also a home to Tharu community and 'Tharu language' with 600,000 speakers. The province also has many speakers of Bhojpuri, Awadhi, and Magar languages.[39]
The Language Commission of Nepal has recommended Tharu and Awadhi as official languages in the province. The commission has also recommended Bhojpuri, Magar and Maithili to be additional official languages, for specific regions and purposes in the province.[40]
There is a total of 109 local administrative units in the province which include four sub-metropolitan cities, 32 urban municipalities, and 73 rural municipalities.[41]
Districts in Nepal are the second level of administrative divisions after provinces. Lumbini Province is divided into 12 districts, which are listed below. A district is administered by the head of the District Coordination Committee and the District Administration Officer. The districts are further divided into municipalities or rural municipalities.
The government of Nepal has set out a minimum criteria to meet city and towns. These criteria include a certain population, infrastructure and revenues.
The Governor acts as the head of the province, while the Chief Minister is the head of the provincial government. The Chief Judge of the Tulsipur High Court is the head of the judiciary.[44] The Speaker of the Assembly is Purna Bahadur Gharti.[45] Umakanta Jha is the first Governor of Lumbini Province.[46] Current Governor Dharma Nath Yadav was appointed on 4 November 2019 by the President of Nepal.[47]
Lumbini provincial assembly is the unicamerallegislative assembly consisting of 87 members. Candidates for each constituency are chosen by the political parties or stand as independents. Each constituency elects one member under the first past the post (FPTP) system of election. The current constitution specifies that sixty percent of the members should be elected from the first past the post system and forty percent through the party-list proportional representation (PR) system. Women should account for one-third of total members elected from each party. If one-third percentage are not elected, the party that fails to ensure so shall have to elect one-third of the total number as women through the party-list proportional representation.
Ranking 2nd in the number of banks and financial institutions in Nepal after Bagmati Province;[52] several projects have been launched in the province to boost economic growth. Construction of the Gautam Buddha International Airport, upgrade of the Nepalgunj Airport into an international airport as per the 20-years master plan, establishment of industrial units in Special economic zone, and the opening of new hotels are expected to spur further economic growth in the province.[53][54] The national pride projects which have been initiated in the province include:[52]
The province has both temperate and tropical climates and is diverse in terms of agriculture crop production potentialities. The province is best suited for agriculture production with five core terai districts, one inner terai, and 6 other hill districts. The land is very fertile and a good source of irrigation prevails. Sikta Irrigation Project and Babai Diversion and Irrigation project have benefited the agricultural production. The major crops are paddy, mustard, wheat, maize, sugarcane, vegetables, potato, lentils and cotton.[55] Lumbini is self-sufficient in milk, cereal crops and pulses.
The total land used for agriculture in Lumbini is 889,219 hectares. Land Holding for agriculture in the province is 484,678 hectares.
Lumbini province ranks 2nd in the country after Bagmati Province in the share of small, cottage and micro-level industries numbering 81,164 that create an estimated 493,686 employment.[49] The province also ranks 2nd nationally, after Bagmati, in the share of manufacturing industry output.[57] By 2021, there were 16,549 registered companies in the province. In 2022, Samsung Electronics inaugurated a television assembly plant in Nawalparasi.[58] Making the country self-sufficient in cement, Lumbini has the largest number of cement industries and constitutes 75% of total national production.[59]
Two of the prime industrial estates of Nepal in Lumbini Province - Nepalgunj industrial estate (district), the oldest industrial estate of the province, was established in 1973 AD and Butwal industrial estate was established in 1975 AD. Combined, the two industrial estates have about a hundred industries in the zone and are a significant source of revenue of the country. Post-promulgation of the Constitution of Nepal in 2015, further industrial estates were declared in the province by the Council of Ministers of the Government of Nepal: Motipur industrial estate in Rupandehi and Naubasta industrial estate in Banke districts.[60] Similarly, Dang industrial estate has been declared in Dang district.[61]
In addition, tourism industry is a massively growing industry in Lumbini province, welcoming the largest numbers of tourists in Nepal from about 113 countries worldwide.[62][63]
Lumbini, considered one of the holiest place in Buddhism associated with the Buddha's birth, is a World Heritage Site and the most visited place in Nepal with 1.5 million tourist arriving annually.[62] Lumbini has a number of older temples, including the Mayadevi Temple - a site traditionally considered to be the birthplace of the Buddha, and various new temples funded by Buddhist organizations from various countries that have been completed or are still under construction.
The ancient ruins of complex structures have been conserved in the area including the Shakya tank – the remains within the Mayadevi Temple with brick structures and cross-wall system that have been dated from the 3rd century BC, Ashoka pillar, excavated remains of Buddhist monasteries of the 3rd century BC to the 5th century AD and the remains of Buddhist stupas (memorial shrines) dated between the 3rd century BC to the 15th century AD.[64] In addition to the ruins of ancient monasteries, there is a sacred Bodhi tree and an ancient bathing pond.
Royal Thai monastery
South Korean Stupa
Sri Lankan Temple
German monastery
Austrian monastery
Chinese Monastery
Lumbini complex is divided into three areas: Sacred garden, Monastic zone, Cultural center and new Lumbini village. The sacred garden is the epicenter of the complex which is centered around the birthplace of Buddha and consists of the Mayadevi Temple, the Asoka Pillar, the Marker Stone, the Nativity Sculpture, Sacred Pond (Puskarini), and many structural ruins including Buddhist Viharas & Stupas.[65] The monastic zone is divided into east and west each reflecting two different schools of Buddhism. As a centre of pilgrimage, many countries have established their monasteries in the complex reflecting their own cultural design and spirituality. In the large monastic zone only monasteries can be built; no shops, hotels or restaurants are allowed. The zone is divided into an eastern and western monastic zone, the eastern having the Theravadin monasteries, the western having the Mahayana and Vajrayana monasteries. The Cultural Center consists of museums, Lumbini International Research Institute (LIRI), administration complex etc. and the New Lumbini Village has the World Peace Pagoda and the Lumbini Crane Sanctuary. World Peace Pagoda lies at the northern end of the Lumbini complex and was designed by Japanese buddhists to represent universal peace.
Ruins within Maya Devi Temple complex
Sacred Pond adjacent to Temple
Little Buddha Statue
World Peace Stupa gate
Kapilvastu
Widely attributed as the hometown of Gautama Buddha, the Kapilvastu District of present-day Nepal has more than 130 archaeological sites, primarily concentrated in Tilaurakot, Kudan, Gotihawa, Niglihawa, Araurakot, Sagarhawa and Sisaniya. The region is also considered the hometown of two previous Buddhas before Gautama: Kakusandha Buddha who was born in Gotihawa and Koṇāgamana Buddha who was born in Niglihawa.[11] Among three Ashoka pillars in Nepal, two are situated in Gotihawa and Niglihawa erected during King Ashoka's visit to ancient Kapilvastu. Tilaurakot, considered the cardinal point of the ancient Shakyan city of Kapilavastu where Gautama Buddha spent 29 years of his lifetime, was added to the World Heritage Tentative List by UNESCO in 1996.[66]
After the death of Gautama Buddha, his relics were divided among eight princes out of sixteen mahājanapadās.
A Koliyan king of Rāmagrāma (present Parasi district), built a stupa enshrining one relic.[9]
Known as the only undisturbed original relic of Buddha in the world,[10] the site of stupa was added to the World Heritage Tentative List by UNESCO on 23 May 1996.
Dhaulagiri circuit
The Dhaulagiri circuit in Eastern Rukum encompasses the Dhaulagiri mountain range of the northern Lumbini Province. The Dhaulagiri mountain range extends from the northwest to the northeast of Eastern Rukum district and then continues eastward to its tallest peak at Dhaulagiri I. Putha Hiunchuli (Dhaulagiri VII), one of the most popular 7,000-metre mountains, was first climbed by British explorer J. O. M. Roberts and Sherpa Ang Nyima in 1954.[26]
The West Dhaulagiri circuit is a tourist trekking circuit close to the Dhaulagiri mountain range and Magar-majority villages, with a distinct preserved Kham Magar culture of the northern Lumbini province.The circuit's eastern portion is situated along the Dhorpatan reserve of Eastern Rukum, which was designated to preserve high-altitude ecosystems in western Nepal in 1983.[67] The reserve harbours alpine, sub-alpine and high temperate vegetation and 137 species of birds. Endangered animals in the reserve include the musk deer, wolf, red panda, cheer pheasant and danphe.
National Parks
Bardiya National Park is the largest national park in the lowland Terai, covering 968 square kilometres.
It was established in 1976 to protect the representative ecosystem, habitats of tigers and their prey species.
As a beautiful, unspoiled wilderness of sal forest, grassland, and alluvial washes cut by the many fingers of the Karnali River, it is a popular tourist destination, offering elephant rides and wilderness sight-seeing of Gangetic dolphins, tigers, rhinos and elephants.
In 1997, a buffer zone of 327 square kilometres surrounding the park was declared, consisting of forests and private lands.
The buffer zone is jointly managed by the local communities and the park and community development and resource management is carried out jointly.[68]
The Babai valley, which is rich in biodiversity, was added to the park in 1984.
The zone has wooded grassland and riverine forest and its water is home to Gharial crocodile.
More than 30 different mammals, 513 species of birds and several species of snakes, lizard and fishes have been recorded in the park area.[69]
A tiger monitoring study conducted (July 2016) in Bardiya National Park in Nepal's Terai Arc Landscape has estimated 56 wild tigers, an increase of six from the 2013 estimate for the national park. —WWF
Forest trees of Bardiya National Park
Banke National Park
Deers at Bardiya National Park
Banke National Park, adjacent to the Bardiya National Park with the coherent protected area of 1,518 km2 (586 sq mi), represents the Tiger Conservation Unit (TCU).
The national park was established in 2010 and is a protected area of tiger and four-horned antelopes. The park extends over 550 square kilometers in Banke district of the province. Banke National Park is connected with Bardiya National Park in the west and wildlife sanctuary and forests of India in the south. The protected zone is an important component of Terai Arc Landscape (TAL) that provides habitat for tigers.
The park has eight ecosystem types: Sal forest, deciduous Riverine forest, savannahs and grasslands, mixed hardwood forest, flood plain community, Bhabar and foothills of Chure range. It is home to 124 plants, 34 mammals, more than 300 birds, 24 reptiles, 7 amphibians and 58 fish species. Under the National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1973, 3 species of mammals (tiger, striped hyaena, four-horned antelope), 4 species of birds (giant hornbill, black stork, Bengal florican, and lesser florican) and 2 species of reptiles (gharial crocodile and python) are protected in the park.[70]
Cultural Heritage
Religious sites
The culture of the province has been shaped by multi-religious and multi-ethnic demography as well as the historical development of the Indian sub-continent. Hinduism, the dominant religion of the province and the cultural sacred sites related to it, are prevalent throughout the province. Hinduism flourished overwhelmingly in Dang valley where the cultural centers of the Hindu Nath tradition connected to Yogi Gorakhnath were established long before the creation of modern Nepal. A prominent Gorakhnath temple in Dang district, also known as Ratnanath temple, remained an ancient temple which was respected and protected by the ruling kings of the region throughout - including the later kings of the Shah dynasty.[71]
Islam, the second-most followed religion of the province, is mostly distributed in the southern districts bordering India. Kapilvastu and Banke districts have one of the largest Muslim population of Nepal and along with Rupandehi, constitute almost half of all the Muslims in Nepal.[75] One of the oldest mosque of Nepal established in 1950 AD, Jama Masjid Rahmaniya, is situated in Rupandehi District.
Within and around Lumbini, sacred sites related to the birth and childhood of Gautama Buddha are pilgrimage centers for Buddhists throughout the world. Lumbini Development Trust, an autonomous and non-profit organization manages the Buddhist sites in Lumbini and the master plan is initiated together with the United Nations to ensure long-term safeguarding of the archeological sites of global importance.[76]
Rani Mahal
After being forced to drop his royal titles, General Khadga Shumsher was sent to Palpa as a Commander in Chief of Nepal where his beloved youngest wife, Rani Tej Kumari Devi, died. The General constructed a grand palace and named it after his wife as Rani Mahal ("Queen's Palace") in 1893 AD. He also named the nearby forest around the palace as Rani ban ("Queen's forest").[77] The palace is at the banks of the Kali Gandaki River.
Supa Deurali Temple
Supa Deurali Temple is a Hindu temple located in Sandhikharka municipality, Arghakhanchi district of Nepal.[78] It lies at an altitude of about 4,500 feet. Supadevi is considered to fulfill the wishes of devotees.[79][80] In addition to goddess Bhagavati, there are idols of Ganesh, Mahakali, Mahalaxmi and Shiva in the temple.[81] The donation received from the devotee is used to run two local schools.
Infrastructure
Education
As per the 2021 census, Lumbini's literacy rate was above the national average at 78.1%, the national average being 76.2%.[82] The breakdown of the data showed that the male literacy stood at 85.2% while female literacy stood at 71.7% in the province. District-wise, Palpa and Dang were the best performers with literacy rate of 83.7% and 81.4% respectively, followed by Rupandehi at 81.2%. Nationally, Palpa was also among the top five districts of Nepal with highest literacy rate alongside Kathmandu, Lalitpur, Bhaktapur and Kaski.[83]
According to the National Demographic Health Survey (NDHS) 2016, the Province's Neonatal Mortality (per 1000 live births) stands at 30 and Infant mortality rate (per 1000 live births) stands at 42, both of which are higher than the national average of 21 and 32 respectively. The province has 670 public health facilities, including four hub hospitals, 18 hospitals, two regional medical stores, 31 primary health care centers, 570 health posts, 27 urban health centers, 15 community health units and 9 other health facilities.[87]
Communication
In Lumbini province, 49.2% of the population have radio access and followed by 30.4% have access to TV, and only 1.3% have access to the internet. Similarly, 4.4% of the population have access to landline telephone, while 65.8% have access to mobile phone. There are three major cell phone providers in Lumbini Province. They are Nepal Doorsanchar Company Limited (NTC), Ncell Axiata Limited (NCELL) and Smart Cell. The coverage of Smart Cell providers is only in 5 districts.
There are 66 newspaper channels in Lumbini Province with national, provincial, and local outreach. As per the classification, some of the top-ranking newspapers are Gorachya Dainik, Dainik Nepalgunj, and Mechikali Sandesh Dainik. There are a total of 63 radio stations in the province, such as Radio Lumbini, Radio Tulsipur, Bheri F.M., etc.[88]
Energy
91% of the population has access to electricity in the province. Of the 12 districts in Lumbini Province, Parasi, Kapilvastu and Bardiya have been electrified by more than 99 percent. Gulmi, Arghakhanchi and Rupandehi have more than 95 percent electrification and Rukum East has the lowest electrification of 11.25 percent.[89] Lumbini generates 21.2 MW of electricity from hydropower.[90] Total number of electricity consumers in the province is 457992, consuming 370.8 Million MWh of energy annually. According to NEA, Distribution and Consumer Service Directorate 93% of consumers are domestic users; loss of electricity in the province is 12.17% for the year 2076/77 (2020 AD). Out of the total loss in distribution provincial office, Gularia contributes the highest loss percentage of 25.02%.
Butwal Solar PV Project, Nepal's first private grid-connected solar power plant, was connected to national transmission line in October 2020. Ridi Hydropower Company has constructed the power plant in Tilottama of Rupendehi District. With over 32,000 solar panels of 330 watts each, the plant can generate 8.5 MW of electricity.[91]
Transportation
Roadways
Transportation routes in Lumbini evolved since H01. Lumbini has two major routes, H01 and H10 both intersecting in Butwal. 8,931 km of road is constructed in the Province. Out of which 5,293 km is blacktopped.
All 12 districts of the province are connected via blacktopped roads. Major highways of the province are as follows:
Mahendra Highway: Mahendra Highway(H01) traverses districts of Bardiya, Banke, Dang, Kapilvastu, Rupandehi, Parasi latitudinally. It connects to Bagmati to east and Sudurpaschim to the west.
Ratna Highway: Ratna Highway (H12) to Karnali Province. It starts at Nepal- India border in Nepalgunj and terminates at Birendranagar, Surkhet. The highway transition into the Karnali Highway system from the point it terminates.
Rapti Highway: Rapti Highway (H11) starts from Ameliya, Dang and terminates at Musikot West Rukum. This highway makes hilly regions of Rolpa, Salyan West Rukum and east Rukum accessible.
Siddhartha Highway: Siddhartha Highway(H10) highway starts at Nepal-India Border in Siddharthanagar and terminates at Prithivi chowk, Pokhara. The major settlements on the highway are Siddharthanagar, Butwal, Tansen, Waling, Putalibazar, Syangja and Pokhara.
^ abParanavitana, S. (1962). "Rupandehi Pillar Inscription of Asoka". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 82 (2): 163–167. doi:10.2307/597919. JSTOR597919.
^Shrestha, Surendra; Shah, Surendra. Inventory of Valleys in Nepal (Report). Minister of Irrigation Groundwater Resources Development Board, Nepal. Archived from the original on 17 November 2021. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
^Singh, P. (2016). "Flood and its relationship to developmental activities in Rapti river basin, Gorakhpur". International Journal of Scientific & Innovative Research Studies: 26–35.
Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Oktober 2022. Blue Flame Assault (Hanzi: 藍焰突擊) adalah sebuah seri drama Tiongkok tahun 2022 yang disutradarai oleh Lin Ke dan Zhang Ke. Seri tersebut dibintangi oleh Ren Jia Lun, Chen Xiao Yun, Han Yu Chen, Xie Lin Tong, Song Wen Zuo, dan Li Yu Xuan.[...
Bupati PangandaranPetahanaJeje Wiradinatasejak 26 Februari 2021KediamanRumah Jabatan Bupati Pangandaran, Jawa BaratMasa jabatan5 tahunDibentuk22 April 2013Pejabat pertamaEndjang NaffandySitus webdev.pangandarankab.go.id/public/profile Kabupaten Pangandaran merupakan sebuah kabupaten yang dipimpin oleh Bupati. Sebelum menjadi sebuah kota, Pangandaran merupakan bagian dari Kabupaten Ciamis. Bupati Pangandaran dipilih melalui pemilihan umum yang dilaksanakan 5 tahun sekali dan Bupati terpil...
Maria Anna di SavoiaMaria Anna di Savoia, imperatrice d'Austria, ritratta da Anton Einsle nel 1845 circaImperatrice consorte d'AustriaRegina apostolica d'UngheriaRegina consorte di BoemiaStemma In carica2 marzo 1835 –2 dicembre 1848 PredecessoreCarolina Augusta di Baviera SuccessoreElisabetta in Baviera Nome completoMaria Anna Carolina Pia NascitaRoma, 19 settembre 1803 MortePraga, 4 maggio 1884 Luogo di sepolturaCripta Imperiale Casa realeSavoia per nascitaAsburgo-Lorena per mat...
Commune in Occitania, FranceLoudervielleCommuneThe church of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine Coat of armsLocation of Loudervielle LoudervielleShow map of FranceLoudervielleShow map of OccitanieCoordinates: 42°48′35″N 0°25′19″E / 42.8097°N 0.4219°E / 42.8097; 0.4219CountryFranceRegionOccitaniaDepartmentHautes-PyrénéesArrondissementBagnères-de-BigorreCantonNeste, Aure et LouronGovernment • Mayor (2020–2026) Évelyne Bertranuc[1]Area15.39...
Special administrative region of China HK redirects here. For other uses, see Hong Kong (disambiguation) and HK (disambiguation). Special administrative region in ChinaHong Kong香港Special administrative regionHong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China Other official names Chinese:中華人民共和國香港特別行政區Cantonese Yale romanisation:Jūng'wàh Yàhnmàhn Guhng'wòhgwok Hēunggóng Dahkbiht HàhngjingkēuiCantonese Jyutping romanisation:zung1 w...
Virginio Canzi Virginio Canzi con la maglia del Napoli nel 1969 Nazionalità Italia Altezza 175 cm Peso 72 kg Calcio Ruolo Centrocampista, attaccante Carriera Giovanili 1961-1965 Monza Squadre di club1 1964-1965 Monza2 (0)1965-1966 Rapallo34 (5)1966-1967 Monza19 (8)1967-1968 Biellese31 (10)1968-1969 Lecco36 (11)1969-1970 Napoli17 (1)1970-1971 Brescia13 (2)1971-1972 Cesena48 (6)1973-1979 Seregno212 (59)1979-1980 Rigamonti4 (8) 1 I due nu...
Football tournament season 2019–20 Moldovan CupThe Zimbru Stadium in Chișinău hosted the finalTournament detailsCountryMoldovaDates20 April 2019 – 30 June 2020Teams49Final positionsChampionsPetrocub-HînceștiRunner-upSfîntul GheorgheTournament statisticsMatches played62Goals scored253 (4.08 per match)← 2018–192020–21 → The 2019–20 Moldovan Cup (Romanian: Cupa Moldovei) was the 29th season of the annual Moldovan football cup competition. The c...
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: The ULULU Company – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Matt Groening's owned production company The ULULU CompanyFormerlyThe Curiosity Company (1997–2018; 2023–present)Company typePrivateIndust...
GBW redirects here. For other uses, see GBW (disambiguation). Green Bay and Western RailroadEx-LS&I #2407 at the Illinois Railway MuseumOverviewHeadquartersGreen Bay, WisconsinReporting markGBWLocaleWisconsinDates of operation1896–1993SuccessorWisconsin Central Ltd.TechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge Route map Legend 213.9 mi344.2 km Winona Mississippi River MNWI 211.9 mi341 km ...
Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento partiti politici slovacchi non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. Partito Comunista di SlovacchiaKomunistická strana Slovenska Stato Slovacchia Fondazionemarzo 1939 Derivato daPartito Comunista di Cecoslovacchia Dissoluzione1990 Confluito inPartito della Sinistra Democratica IdeologiaComunismo...
‹ 1838 und 1839 • • 1842 und 1843 › Wahlen zum Senat 1840 und 1841 Siegel des Senats der Vereinigten Staaten 18 Senatoren der Klasse II (sowie außerordentliche Wahlen) Whigs Davor 23 Danach 29 57 % der Sitze Demokraten Davor 29 Danach 22 43 % der Sitze Wahlergebnisse nach Bundesstaat 19 Sitze Whigs 6 Sitze Demok...
Railway station in Itoigawa, Niigata Prefecture, Japan Itoigawa Station糸魚川駅Itoigawa Station in December 2013Japanese nameShinjitai糸魚川駅Kyūjitai絲魚川驛Hiraganaいといがわえき General informationLocation1-7-10 Ōmachi, Itoigawa City, Niigata Prefecture 941-0061JapanCoordinates37°2′38″N 137°51′45″E / 37.04389°N 137.86250°E / 37.04389; 137.86250Operated by JR West Echigo Tokimeki Railway JR Freight Line(s) Hokuriku Shinkansen ...
Parque nacional de Jim Corbett Categoría UICN II (parque nacional) SituaciónPaís IndiaUbicación Uttarakhand (India)División NainitalCiudad cercana RamnagarCoordenadas 29°32′00″N 78°56′00″E / 29.53333333, 78.93333333Datos generalesFecha de creación 1936Visitantes (1999) 50.000Superficie 521 km Parque nacional de Jim Corbett Ubicación en India.Sitio web oficial[editar datos en Wikidata] Elefante asiático en el parque nacional Corbett. E...
Obhour Al-Janobia ابحر الجنوبيةLingkunganNegaraArab SaudiProvinsiProvinsi MakkahPemerintahan • Wali kotaHani Abu Ras[1] • Gubernur kotaMish'al Al-SaudKetinggian12 m (39 ft)Zona waktuUTC+3 (AST) • Musim panas (DST)ASTKode pos(5 kode digit dimulai dari 23; e.g. 23434)Kode area telepon+966-12Situs webwww.jeddah.gov.sa/english/index.php Obhour Al-Janobia (bahasa Arab: ابحر الجنوبية) adalah sebuah permukiman padat pe...
Digital advocacy non-profit organization Algorithmic Justice LeagueAbbreviationAJLFormation2016FounderJoy BuolamwiniPurposeAI activismLocationCambridge, MassachusettsWebsitewww.ajl.org The Algorithmic Justice League (AJL) is a digital advocacy non-profit organization based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 2016 by computer scientist Joy Buolamwini, the AJL uses research, artwork, and policy advocacy to increase societal awareness regarding the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in soci...