Administrative divisions of India

(Redirected from List of regions in India)

The administrative divisions of India are subnational administrative units of India; they are composed of a nested hierarchy of administrative divisions.

Indian states and territories frequently use different local titles for the same level of subdivision (e.g., the mandals of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana correspond to tehsils of Uttar Pradesh and other Hindi-speaking states but to talukas of Gujarat, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu).[1]

The smaller subdivisions (villages and blocks) exist only in rural areas. In urban areas, urban local bodies exist instead of these rural subdivisions.

Tiers of India edit

The diagram below outlines the six tiers of administrative divisions:

Country
(India)
State
(e.g. West Bengal State)
Division
(e.g. Presidency Division)
District
(e.g. North 24 Parganas District)
Sub-district
(Subdivision, Tehsil)
(e.g. Basirhat Subdivision)
Block
(e.g. Basirhat II Block)
Village
(e.g. Champapukur village)

Zones and regions edit

Zones edit

The six zones of India

The states of India have been grouped into six zones having an Advisory Council "to develop the habit of cooperative working" among these States. Zonal Councils were set up vide Part-III of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. The North Eastern States' special problems are addressed by another statutory body - The North Eastern Council, created by the North Eastern Council Act, 1971.[2] The present composition of each of these Zonal Councils is as under:[3]

Cultural zones edit

Each zone has a zonal headquarters where a zonal cultural center has been established.[7] Several states have membership in multiple zones, but no state subdivisions are utilized in the zonal divisions. In addition to promoting the culture of the zones they are responsible for, each zonal center also works to cross-promote and create exposure to other cultural zones of India by organizing functions and inviting artistes from other zones.

Location of the headquarters of each cultural zone
ZoneZonal CentreExtent
South Culture ZoneSouth Zone Cultural Centre, Thanjavur, Tamil NaduAndaman and Nicobar Islands, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Lakshadweep, Puducherry, Tamil Nadu, Telangana[8]
South Central Culture ZoneSouth-Central Zone Cultural Centre, Nagpur, MaharashtraAndhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Telangana[9]
North Culture ZoneNorth Zone Cultural Centre, Patiala, PunjabChandigarh, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand[10]
North Central Culture ZoneNorth-Central Zone Cultural Centre, Prayagraj, Uttar PradeshBihar, Delhi, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand[11]
East Culture ZoneEast Zone Cultural Centre, ZoneKolkata, West BengalAndaman and Nicobar Islands, Assam, Bihar, Jharkhand, Manipur, Odisha, Sikkim, Tripura, West Bengal[12]
North East Culture ZoneNorth East Zone Cultural Centre, Dimapur, NagalandArunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura[13]
West Culture ZoneWest Zone Cultural Centre, Udaipur, RajasthanDadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, Goa, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan[14]

States and union territories edit

India is composed of 28 states and eight union territories (including a national capital territory).[15]

States edit

StateISOVehicle
code
ZoneCapitalLargest cityStatehoodPopulation
(2011)[16][17]
Area
(km2)
Official
languages[18]
Additional official
languages[18]
Andhra PradeshIN-APAPSouthernAmaravatiVisakhapatnam1 November 195649,506,799162,975TeluguUrdu[19]
Arunachal PradeshIN-ARARNorth-EasternItanagar20 February 19871,383,72783,743English
AssamIN-ASASNorth-EasternDispurGuwahati26 January 195031,205,57678,438Assamese, BoroBengali
BiharIN-BRBREasternPatna26 January 1950104,099,45294,163HindiUrdu
ChhattisgarhIN-CGCGCentralRaipur[a]1 November 200025,545,198135,194HindiChhattisgarhi
GoaIN-GAGAWesternPanajiVasco da Gama30 May 19871,458,5453,702KonkaniMarathi
GujaratIN-GJGJWesternGandhinagarAhmedabad1 May 196060,439,692196,024Gujarati, Hindi
HaryanaIN-HRHRNorthernChandigarhFaridabad1 November 196625,351,46244,212HindiPunjabi[20]
Himachal PradeshIN-HPHPNorthernShimla (Summer)
Dharamshala (Winter)[21]
Shimla25 January 19716,864,60255,673HindiSanskrit[22]
JharkhandIN-JHJHEasternRanchiJamshedpur15 November 200032,988,13479,714HindiAngika, Bengali, Bhojpuri, Bhumij, Ho, Kharia, Khortha, Kurmali, Kurukh, Magahi, Maithili, Mundari, Nagpuri, Odia, Santali, Urdu[23][24]
KarnatakaIN-KAKASouthernBangalore1 November 195661,095,297191,791Kannada
KeralaIN-KLKLSouthernThiruvananthapuram1 November 195633,406,06138,863MalayalamEnglish[25]
Madhya PradeshIN-MPMPCentralBhopalIndore1 November 195672,626,809308,252Hindi
MaharashtraIN-MHMHWesternMumbai (Summer)
Nagpur (Winter)[26][27]
Mumbai1 May 1960112,374,333307,713Marathi
ManipurIN-MNMNNorth-EasternImphal21 January 19722,855,79422,327MeiteiEnglish
MeghalayaIN-MLMLNorth-EasternShillong21 January 19722,966,88922,429English
MizoramIN-MZMZNorth-EasternAizawl20 February 19871,097,20621,081Mizo, English
NagalandIN-NLNLNorth-EasternKohimaDimapur1 December 19631,978,50216,579English
OdishaIN-ODODEasternBhubaneswar26 January 195041,974,218155,707Odia
PunjabIN-PBPBNorthernChandigarhLudhiana1 November 196627,743,33850,362Punjabi
RajasthanIN-RJRJNorthernJaipur26 January 195068,548,437342,239HindiEnglish
SikkimIN-SKSKNorth-EasternGangtok16 May 1975610,5777,096Nepali, Sikkimese, Lepcha, English[28]Gurung, Limbu, Magar, Mukhia, Newari, Rai, Sherpa, Tamang
Tamil NaduIN-TNTNSouthernChennai1 November 195672,147,030130,058TamilEnglish
TelanganaIN-TSTG[29]SouthernHyderabad[b]2 June 201435,193,978[34]112,077[34]TeluguUrdu[35]
TripuraIN-TRTRNorth-EasternAgartala21 January 19723,673,91710,491Bengali, English, Kokborok
Uttar PradeshIN-UPUPCentralLucknow26 January 1950199,812,341240,928HindiUrdu
UttarakhandIN-UKUKCentralBhararisain (Summer)
Dehradun (Winter)[36]
Dehradun9 November 200010,086,29253,483HindiSanskrit[37]
West BengalIN-WBWBEasternKolkata26 January 195091,276,11588,752Bengali, EnglishNepali,[c] Hindi, Odia, Punjabi, Santali, Telugu, Urdu, Kamatapuri, Rajbanshi, Kurmali, Kurukh
  1. ^ Nava Raipur is planned to replace Raipur as the capital city of Chhattisgarh.
  2. ^ Andhra Pradesh was divided into two states, Telangana and a residual Andhra Pradesh on 2 June 2014.[30][31] Hyderabad, located entirely within the borders of Telangana, is to serve as the capital for both states for a period of time not exceeding ten years.[32] The Government of Andhra Pradesh and the Andhra Pradesh Legislature completed the process of relocating to temporary facilities in the envisaged new capital city Amaravati in early 2017.[33]
  3. ^ Bengali and Nepali are the official languages in the Darjeeling and Kurseong sub-divisions of the Darjeeling district.

Union territories edit

State[38]ISO[39]Vehicle
code
[40]
Zone[41]Capital[38]Largest city[42]Established[43]Population
(2011)[44]
Area
(km2)[45]
Official
languages[46]
Additional official
languages[46]
Andaman and Nicobar IslandsIN-ANANSouthernPort Blair1 November 1956380,5818,249Hindi, English
ChandigarhIN-CHCHNorthernChandigarh1 November 19661,055,450114English
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and DiuIN-DHDDWesternDamanSilvassa26 January 2020587,106603Hindi, EnglishGujarati
DelhiIN-DLDLNorthernNew DelhiDelhi1 November 195616,787,9411,484Hindi, EnglishUrdu, Punjabi[47]
Jammu and KashmirIN-JKJKNorthernSrinagar (Summer)
Jammu (Winter)[48]
Srinagar31 October 201912,258,43342,241Dogri, English, Hindi, Kashmiri, Urdu
LadakhIN-LALANorthernLeh (Summer)
Kargil (Winter)[49]
Leh31 October 2019290,49259,146Hindi, English
LakshadweepIN-LDLDSouthernKavarattiAndrott1 November 195664,47332Hindi, EnglishMalayalam
PuducherryIN-PYPYSouthernPondicherry16 August 19621,247,953479Tamil, French, EnglishTelugu, Malayalam

Autonomous administrative divisions edit

Autonomous councils in India

The Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India allows for the formation of autonomous administrative divisions which have been given autonomy within their respective states.[50]

Presently, 10 Autonomous Councils in Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Tripura are formed by virtue of the Sixth Schedule[51] with the rest being formed as a result of other legislation.

Constitutional autonomous councils edit

Autonomous District Councils operating under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India:

StateAutonomous District CouncilHeadquartersFormationChief Executive Member
AssamBodoland Territorial CouncilKokrajhar2003Pramod Boro
North Cachar Hills Autonomous CouncilHaflong1951Debolal Gorlosa
Karbi Anglong Autonomous CouncilDiphu1952Tuliram Ronghang
MeghalayaGaro Hills Autonomous District CouncilTura1973Benedick R Marak
Jaintia Hills Autonomous District CouncilJowai1973T Shiwat
Khasi Hills Autonomous District CouncilShillong1973Titosstarwell Chyne
MizoramChakma Autonomous District CouncilKamalanagar1972Rasik Mohan Chakma
Lai Autonomous District CouncilLawngtlai1972V. Zirsanga
Mara Autonomous District CouncilSiaha1972M Laikaw
TripuraTripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District CouncilKhumulwng1982Purna Chandra Jamatia

Statutory autonomous councils edit

States has also created autonomous councils by the Act of state legislation. The two autonomous councils in the Union Territory of Ladakh was created by the state of Jammu and Kashmir before it was split into UTs.

State/UTAutonomous CouncilHeadquartersFormationChief Executive Member
AssamTiwa Autonomous CouncilMorigaon1995Jiban Chandra Konwar
Mising Autonomous CouncilDhemaji1995Ranoj Pegu
Rabha Hasong Autonomous CouncilDudhnoi1995Tankeswar Rabha
Sonowal Kachari Autonomous CouncilDibrugarh2005Dipu ranjan Markari
Thengal Kachari Autonomous CouncilTitabar2005Kumud Ch Kachari
Deori Autonomous CouncilNarayanpur2005Madhav Deori
Moran Autonomous CouncilTinsukia2020Dipon Moran
Matak Autonomous CouncilChring Gaon2020
Bodo Kachari Welfare Autonomous CouncilSimen Chapori2020Mihiniswar Basumatary
Kamatapur Autonomous CouncilAbhayapuri2020Gokul Barman
ManipurChandel Autonomous District CouncilChandel1971[52]Ksh. Siddharth, MCS
Churachandpur Autonomous District CouncilChurachandpur1971[52]Lalthazam, MCS
Sadar Hills Kangpokpi1971[52]James Doujapao Haokip, MCS
Manipur North Autonomous District CouncilSenapati1971[52]H L Jain, MCS
Tamenglong Autonomous District CouncilTamenglong1971[52]Ningreingam Leisan[53]
Ukhrul Autonomous District CouncilUkhrul1971[52]David Kashungnao, MCS
LadakhLadakh Autonomous Hill Development Council, KargilKargil2003Mohammad Jaffer Akhone
Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council, LehLeh1995Tashi Gyalson
West BengalGorkhaland Territorial AdministrationDarjeeling2012Anit Thapa

Divisions edit

Many of the Indian states are subdivided into divisions, which have official administrative governmental status, and each division is headed by a senior IAS officer called Divisional Commissioner.

States like Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Goa, etc. don't have separate divisions or regions. Instead, they're directly split into districts for administrative purposes.

As of September 2022, divisions exist in 18 of the 28 states and 3 of the 8 union territories. As of September 2022, there are a total of 102 divisions in India.

No. of divisions in each state or UT
State/union territoryNo. of divisionsPopulation[54]Population per division
Andhra Pradesh-49,386,799-
Arunachal Pradesh31,383,727461,242
Assam531,169,2726,233,854
Bihar9104,099,45211,566,606
Chhattisgarh525,545,1985,109,040
Goa-1,458,545-
Gujarat-60,439,692-
Haryana625,351,4624,225,244
Himachal Pradesh36,864,6022,288,201
Telangana-35,193,978-
Jharkhand532,988,1346,597,627
Karnataka461,095,29715,273,824
Kerala-33,406,061-
Madhya Pradesh1072,626,8097,262,681
Maharashtra6112,374,33318,729,056
Manipur-2,721,756-
Meghalaya22,966,8891,483,445
Mizoram-1,097,206-
Nagaland11,978,5021,978,502
Odisha341,974,21813,991,406
Punjab527,743,3385,548,668
Rajasthan768,548,4379,792,634
Sikkim-610,577-
Tamil Nadu-72,147,030-
Tripura-3,673,917-
Uttar Pradesh18199,812,34111,100,686
Uttarakhand210,086,2925,043,146
West Bengal591,276,11518,255,223
Andaman and Nicobar Islands-380,581-
Chandigarh-1,055,450-
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu-586,956-
Jammu and Kashmir212,258,4336,129,217
Ladakh1290,492290,492
Lakshadweep-64,473-
Delhi116,787,94116,787,941
Puducherry-1,247,953-
Total 1031,210,854,97711,755,874

Regions within states edit

Some states consist of regions, which have no official administrative governmental status. They are purely geographic regions; some correspond to historic countries, states or provinces. A region may comprise one or more divisions, averaging about three divisions per region. However, the boundaries of the regions and the boundaries of the divisions do not always coincide exactly. So far there has been no movement to give the regions official administrative status. If this was to be done, it would presumably require that the boundaries of the regions be slightly modified so that they correspond exactly with their constituent districts.

Districts edit

States and territories (or divisions) are further subdivided into districts (zilla), of which there are 797 (as of Nov 2023). A district in India, officially referred to as a revenue district, is a basic administrative unit under a state or union territory. Each District is headed by an IAS officer called District Magistrate.

Number of districts & population (as per 2011) in administrative divisions
Administrative divisionsNo. of districtsTotal populationPopulation per district
States
Andhra Pradesh2649,577,1031,906,812
Arunachal Pradesh261,383,72753,220
Assam3531,205,576891,588
Bihar38104,099,4522,739,459
Chhattisgarh3325,545,198774,097
Goa21,458,545729,273
Gujarat3360,439,6921,831,506
Haryana2225,351,4621,152,339
Himachal Pradesh126,864,602528,046
Jharkhand2432,988,1341,374,506
Karnataka3161,095,2971,970,816
Kerala1433,406,0612,386,147
Madhya Pradesh5572,626,8091,274,155
Maharashtra36112,374,3333,121,509
Manipur162,570,390160,649
Meghalaya122,966,889247,241
Mizoram111,097,20699,746
Nagaland161,978,502123,656
Odisha3041,974,2181,399,141
Punjab2327,743,3381,206,232
Rajasthan5068,548,4371,246,335
Sikkim6610,577101,763
Tamil Nadu3872,147,0301,898,606
Telangana3335,003,6741,060,717
Tripura83,673,917459,240
Uttar Pradesh75199,812,3412,664,165
Uttarakhand1310,086,292593,311
West Bengal2391,276,1153,042,537
Union Territory
Andaman and Nicobar Islands3380,581126,860
Chandigarh11,055,4501,055,450
Dadra Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu3586,956195,652
Jammu and Kashmir2012,258,093612,905
Ladakh2290,49272,623
Lakshadweep164,47364,473
Delhi1116,787,9411,526,176
Puducherry41,247,953311,988
Total7861,210,576,8561,501,956

Subdistricts edit

In some instances, tehsils (sub-districts) overlap with "blocks" (panchayat union blocks or community development blocks) and come under the land and revenue department, headed by tehsildar; and blocks come under the rural development department, headed by the block development officer and serve different government administrative functions over the same or similar geographical area.

States use varying names for their sub-districts. Detailed information is as follows (as of 2018):[55]

State/ Union territorySubdistrict titleNo. of
subdistricts
Andhra PradeshMandal (circle)679
Arunachal PradeshCircle149
AssamSubdivision155
BiharSubdivision101
ChhattisgarhTehsil228
GoaTaluka12
GujaratTaluka248[56]
HaryanaTehsil67
Himachal PradeshTehsil109
JharkhandSubdivision210
KarnatakaTaluk240
KeralaTaluk78
Madhya PradeshTehsil412
MaharashtraTaluka353
ManipurSubdivision38
MeghalayaSubdivision39
MizoramSubdivision22
NagalandCircle93
OdishaTehsil485
PunjabTehsil172
RajasthanTehsil268
SikkimSubdivision9
Tamil NaduTaluk215[57]
TelanganaMandal

(Circle)

74
TripuraSubdivision38
Uttar PradeshTehsil350
UttarakhandTehsil113
West BengalSubdivision69
Andaman and Nicobar IslandsTehsil7
ChandigarhTehsil1
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and DiuTehsil3
DelhiTehsil33
Jammu and KashmirTehsil55
LadakhTehsil4
LakshadweepSubdivision4
PuducherryTehsil8
Total6057

Rural level edit

Blocks edit

The Community Development Block also known as CD Block or just block, is often the next level of administrative division (for development purposes, whereas tehsil is next to the district for revenue purposes).

StateCD BlockNumber of
CD Blocks
Andaman and Nicobar IslandsCD Block9[58]
Andhra PradeshMandal685
Arunachal PradeshBlock or Circle112[59]
AssamBlock219[60]
BiharBlock342
ChandigarhBlock3
ChhattisgarhCD Block342
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and DiuCD Block342
DelhiCD Block342
GoaCD Block342
GujaratCD Block342
HaryanaBlock142
Himachal PradeshCD Block342
Jammu and KashmirCD Block342
JharkhandBlock263
KarnatakaCD Block342
KeralaBlock152
LadakhCD Block342
LakshadweepCD Block342
Madhya PradeshCD Block342
MaharashtraCD Block342
ManipurCD Block342
MeghalayaCD Block342
MizoramCD Block342
NagalandCD Block342
OdishaCD Block314
PuducherryCD Block342
PunjabCD Block342
RajasthanCD Block342
SikkimCD Block342
TamilnaduTaluk220
TelanganaMandal342
TripuraCD Block58
Uttar PradeshCD Block822[61]
UttarakhandCD Block95
West BengalCD Block342[62][63]

Villages edit

Villages are often the lowest level of subdivisions in India. The governmental bodies at the village level are called Gram Panchayat, of which there were an estimated 256,000 in 2002.Each Gram Panchayat covers a large village or a cluster of smaller villages with a combined population exceeding 500 Gram Sabha. Clusters of villages are also sometimes called Hobli or Patti.

Habitations edit

Certain governmental functions and activities - including clean water availability, rural development, and education - are tracked at a sub-village level.[64] These hamlets are termed "habitations". India is composed of 1,714,556 habitations [65] In some states, most villages have a single habitation; in others (notably Kerala and Tripura) there is a high ratio of habitations to villages.[66]

Metropolitan area edit

A metro area usually comprises multiple jurisdictions and municipalities: neighbourhoods, townships, cities, exurbs, suburbs, counties, districts, states, and even nations like the eurodistricts. As social, economic, and political institutions have changed, metropolitan areas have become key economic and political regions.Metropolitan areas include one or more urban areas, as well as satellite cities, towns, and intervening rural areas that are socio-economically tied to the urban core, typically measured by commuting patterns.

The metropolitan cities of India are: Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad & Ahmedabad.

Historical administrative divisions edit

See also edit

References edit

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  6. ^ "Present Composition Of The Southern Zonal Council" (PDF). Interstatecouncil.nic.in. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
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