Ahore

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Ahore
City
India Rajasthan location map.svg
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Ahore
Location in Rajasthan, India
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Ahore
Ahore (India)
India location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Ahore
Ahore (India)
Coordinates: 25°22′01″N72°46′59″E / 25.367°N 72.783°E / 25.367; 72.783 [1]
CountryFlag of India.svg India
State Rajasthan
District Jalor
Founded byThakur Veridas
Named after Avri (आवरी)
Government
  TypeNagar palika
  BodyMunicipality
Area
  Total
1,887 km2 (729 sq mi)
Elevation
183 m (600 ft)
Population
 (2011)
  Total
239,642
  Density127.0/km2 (328.9/sq mi)
Languages
  Official Hindi, Marwari
Time zone UTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
307029
Telephone code+912978
ISO 3166 code RJ-IN
Vehicle registration RJ-16
Total Villages136
Sex ratio 963 / 947

Ahore or Ahor (Aavar) is a city in the Jalore District of the Indian state of Rajasthan at the intersection of Sanderao-Jalore and Jalore-Jodhpur Highway.

Contents

Ahore

Ahore was a Thikana of 10 villages of Rathore sub clan Champawat Rajputs. Thakur Jagannath Singh, the first Thakur of Ahore, was granted the Ahor estate in 1706 by Maharaja Ajit Singh of Marwar following the Battle of Dunada. [2]

Geography

It is located 18 KM east of Jalore on NH 325 between Jalore and Sanderao. It is the headquarters of the tehsil of the same name.

This town can be found at the intersection that connects Jalore, the District Headquarters, and Jodhpur, a major city.

The Ahor tehsil has 41 Gram Panchayats. The Gram Panchayats are: Agawari, Ahore, Aipura, Ajeetpura, Bala, Bankli, Badanwari, Bavadi, Bhadrajun, Bhawrani, Bhanswara, Bhooti, Bhorda, Bithuda, Chandra, Charali, Chavarcha, Chunda, Dayalpura, Dodiyali, Ghana, Guda Balotan, Harji, Kamdba, Kanwla, Kavarada, Nimbla, Norwa, Nosra, Padarali, Panchota, Paota, Raithal, Rama, Rodla, Sankarna, Sedria, Shankhwali, Sugalia Jodha, Thanwala, Umedpur, Valadara and Vediya. [3]

Demographics

Ahore tehsil has a population of 2,39,642 peoples, out of which urban population is 16,867 while rural population is 2,22,775 according to census in 2011. [4]

Bhata Gair

Ahor was the site of Bhata Gair, a ceremony which, until 2004, took place during the festival of Holi. As a rule, only those born in Ahor were allowed to participate. In this ritual, people were divided into two teams, one that consumed alcohol and the other that did not, and they were separated with a fence in between. The aim was to cross the fence, and the team who crossed the fence wins. When one player attempted to cross the fence, the members of the other team would throw stones and attack the player who the player which was crossing the fence with bamboo sticks. The ceremony was ended by the administration due to its dangerous nature. [5]

References

  1. "Falling Rain Genomics, Inc – Ahore". Archived from the original on 4 December 2008. Retrieved 3 September 2008.
  2. Rathore, Abhinay (1618). "Ahor (Thikana)". Rajput Provinces of India. Retrieved 13 April 2025.
  3. Village Panchayats of AHORE, JALORE, RAJASTHAN [ permanent dead link ]
  4. "Basic Population Figures of India, States, Districts, Sub-District and Village, 2011".
  5. "End of Bhata Gair". Patrika. patrika.com. 7 March 2020. Retrieved 20 February 2022.