Dungeshwor Rural Municipality

Rural municipality in Karnali, Nepal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dungeshwar (Nepali: डुङ्गेश्वर) is a rural municipality located in Dailekh District of Karnali Province of Nepal.[1]

Country   Nepal
Established10 March 2017
HeadquartersDanda Parajul
Quick facts डुङ्गेश्वर, Country ...
Dungeshwor
डुङ्गेश्वर
डुङ्गेश्वर
Dungeshwor is located in Nepal
Dungeshwor
Dungeshwor
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 28°44′24″N 81°41′24″E
Country   Nepal
ProvinceKarnali
DistrictDailekh
No. of wards6
Established10 March 2017
Government
  TypeRural council
  ChairpersonMr. Sundar K.C (CPNUML)
  Vice-chairpersonMrs. Kalawati Neupane (CPNUML)
Area
  Total
105.19 km2 (40.61 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
  Total
15,883
  Density150.99/km2 (391.07/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (NST)
HeadquartersDanda Parajul
Websitedungeshwormun.gov.np
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The total area of the rural municipality is 105.19 square kilometres (40.61 sq mi) and the total population of the rural municipality as of 2011 Nepal census is 15,883 individuals. The rural municipality is divided into total 6 wards.[2]

The rural municipality was established on 10 March 2017, when Government of Nepal restricted all old administrative structure and announced 744 local level units (although the number increased to 753 later) as per the new constitution of Nepal 2015.[3][4]

Danda Parajul, Awal Parajul, Belpata and Lakuri Village Development Committees were incorporated to form this new rural municipality. The headquarters of the municipality is situated at Danda Parajul.[2]

Demographics

At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, Dungeshwor Rural municipality had a population of 15,883. Of these, 94.6% spoke Nepali, 4.9% Magar, 0.1% Gurung, 0.1% Urdu, 0.1% Maithili and 0.1% other languages as their first language.[5]

In terms of ethnicity/caste, 40.7% were Chhetri, 15.9% Magar, 15.3% Kami, 7.5% Thakuri, 7.2% Hill Brahmin, 5.1% Damai/Dholi, 3.5% Gurung, 2.8% Sarki, 0.5% Sanyasi/Dasnami, 0.4% Musalman, 0.3% Gaine, 0.1% Badi, 0.1% Baraee, 0.1% Newar, 0.1% Rai, 0.1% Tamang and 0.2% others.[6]

In terms of religion, 91.9% were Hindu, 6.7% Buddhist, 1.1% Christian and 0.4% Muslim.[7]

In terms of literacy, 68.2% could read and write, 4.0% could only read and 27.6% could neither read nor write.[8]

References

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