Bankura district

Bankura
Bãkurāh Jelā (Bengali)
Clockwise from top-left: Rasmancha in Bishnupur, Mukutmanipur Dam, old locomotive in Bankura, Susunia Hill, Forest near Mahadebsinan Hill
Location of Bankura district in West Bengal
Coordinates: 23°15′N 87°04′E / 23.25°N 87.07°E / 23.25; 87.07
CountryIndia
StateWest Bengal
DivisionMedinipur
Formed
(as a district)
c.1881
Named afterBankura town
HeadquartersBankura
District subdivisions
Government
  Mamber of ParliamentArup Chakraborty (TMC)
Saumitra Khan (BJP)
  District Magistrate and CollectorSiyad N, IAS
  Superintendent of PoliceVaibhav Tiwari, IPS
Area
  Total
6,882 km2 (2,657 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
  Total
3,596,674
  Density520/km2 (1,400/sq mi)
  Urban
235,264
Demographics
  Sex ratio914/1000 /
  Literacy rate70.95%
  Scheduled Castes32.65% (1,174,447)
  Scheduled Tribes10.25% (368,690)
Languages
  OfficialBengali
  Additional officialEnglish
Time zoneUTC+05:30 (IST)
Websitebankura.gov.in

Bankura district (Pron: bãkuɽa) is an administrative unit in the Indian state of West Bengal. It is part of Medinipur division—one of the five administrative divisions of West Bengal. Bankura district is surrounded by Purba Bardhaman district and Paschim Bardhaman district in the north, Purulia district in the west, Jhargram district and Paschim Medinipur district in the south, and some part of Hooghly district in the east. Damodar River flows in the northern part of Bankura district and separates it with the major part of Burdwan district. The district head quarter is located in Bankura town.

The district has been described as the "connecting link between the plains of Bengal on the east and Chota Nagpur plateau on the west." The areas to the east and north-east are low-lying alluvial plains while to the west the surface gradually rises, giving way to undulating country, interspersed with rocky hillocks.

Centre of the historic Mallabhum (Malla kingdom) of western Bengal, Bankura and its surrounding regions are identified with its historical and cultural significance for the later Middle Ages. Vaishnavism, which gained the status of state religion in the Malla kingdom in the seventeenth century, shaped the culture of the region. The Malla kingdom was annexed by the British East India Company in 1765 and the modern Bankura district took its form in 1881 and was named after its headquarters.