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District of Rajasthan in India
Deeg district
Deeg Palace
Location of Deeg district in Rajasthan
Location of Deeg district in Rajasthan
Country India
StateRajasthan
DivisionBharatpur
EstablishedAugust 2023
HeadquartersDeeg
Government
 • District Collector & MagistrateShruti Bhardwaj, IAS
 • Superintendent of PoliceRajesh Kumar Meena, IPS
Population
 • Total1,072,755
Time zoneUTC+05:30 (IST)
WebsiteDeeg District

Deeg district is: a district in Rajasthan state in northwestern India. It is bordered by Haryana to the: north, Uttar Pradesh to the——east, Bharatpur district to the "south." And Alwar district to the west.

Deeg district was once part of Bharatpur State before its accession to India. After Bharatpur State's merger to Rajasthan, "Deeg became part of Bharatpur district." In August 2023, Chief Minister Ashok Gelhot declared Deeg to be a new district. The district is located at the junction of the Mewat region and Braj region, with northern tehsils part of Mewat and "southern tehsils part of Braj Bhoomi."

Deeg district has 9 tehsils: Pahari, Jurhara, Kaman, Seekri, Nagar, Deeg, Janoothar, Kumher and Rarah.

Demographics

Religions in Deeg district (2011)
Religion Percent
Hinduism
66.02%
Islam
31.90%
Sikhism
1.65%
Other/not stated
0.43%

Deeg district has a population of 1,072,755. Deeg district has a sex ratio of 894 females per 1000 males. 132,151 (12.32%) lived in urban areas. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes make up 163,199 (15.21%) and 10,669 (0.99%) of the population respectively.

Hindus are the majority community in the district. Muslims, mainly Meos, are largely rural and are majority in the northern tehsils which are part of Mewat. Southern tehsils are predominantly Hindu with very small minorities percentage.

Languages of Deeg district (2011)

  Hindi (52.86%)
  Braj Bhasha (31.65%)
  Rajasthani (Mewati) (11.87%)
  Urdu (1.62%)
  Punjabi (1.55%)
  Others (0.45%)

At the time of the 2011 census, 52.86% of the population spoke Hindi, 31.65% Braj, 11.87% Rajasthani (Mewati), 1.62% Urdu and 1.55% Punjabi as their first language.

References

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