Kalhang

Village in Manipur, India
25°14′23″N 94°27′09″E / 25.23972°N 94.45250°E / 25.23972; 94.45250Country IndiaStateManipurDistrictUkhrulPopulation
 • Total1,181Languages
 • OfficialTangkhul (Kansang tu)Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)PIN
795142
Vehicle registrationMNNearest cityUkhrul KohimaLiteracy41.61%Lok Sabha constituencyOuter ManipurVidhan Sabha constituencyChingaiWebsitemanipur.gov.in

Kalhang is a village located north of Ukhrul in Ukhrul district, Manipur state, India. The village is approximately 39 kilometers from Ukhrul. National Highway 150 Imphal-Kohima via Jessami passes through the village. Kalhang is one of the villages that used to make indigenous salt from natural salt springs and supply to other Tangkhul villages before the introduction of common salt.[citation needed] The village is flanked by Phungcham and Peh in the west, Khamasom in the east, Longpi in the south and Kuirei in the North. Locally inhabitants speak Kansang dialect which belongs to the Tibeto-Burman language family.

Total population

According to 2011 census,[1] Kalhang has 215 households with the total of 1,181 people of which 599 are male and 582 are female. Of the total population, 222 were in the age group of 0–6 years. The average sex ratio of Kalhang village is 972 female to 1000 male which is lower than the state average of 985. The literacy rate of the village stands at 41.61%. Male literacy rate stands at 44.44% while female literacy rate was 38.69%.

People and occupation

The village is home to people of Tangkhul Naga tribe. Majority of the inhabitants are Christians. Agriculture is the primary occupation of the inhabitants. Kalhang is also famous for pork cuisine prepared mainly during Luira festival, seed sowing festival of the Tangkhuls.[2] The village has a history of bearing inhuman treatment under the Indian army during insurgency operations.[3]

References

  1. ^ "Kalhang Population". Census 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  2. ^ "Pork Cuisine of Kalhang". Book:THE SEVEN SISTERS: KITCHEN TALES FROM THE NORTH EAST. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  3. ^ "Excesses of Indian army". India Today. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
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