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Barakot

Coordinates: 29°33′07″N 80°22′20″E / 29.55194°N 80.37222°E / 29.55194; 80.37222
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Barakot
बाराकोट
Barakot is located in Nepal
Barakot
Barakot
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 29°33′07″N 80°22′20″E / 29.55194°N 80.37222°E / 29.55194; 80.37222
CountryNepal
ProvinceSudurpashchim Province
DistrictBaitadi District
MunicipalityDasharathchanda
Population
 (1991)
 • Total
2,389
 • Religions
Hindu
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (Nepal Time)

Barakot is a ward (ward number 10) in Dasharathchanda municipality, in Baitadi District in Sudurpashchim Province of western Nepal. Earlier it was a village development committee (VDC). At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2,389 and had 462 houses in the village.

Indo-Nepal border in Barakot village

The ward consist of villages Harsau, Guinada, Salaani, Chauda, Jhaka, Barakot, and Bhatala with Bhatala being the largest village with over 50 households. Majority of the dwellers are Hindu Rajputs (Bisht), known as Hadasai Bisht Dynasty, Egarya Bisht (11 son) family is well known in Pithoragarh district Uttarakhand and Baitadi/Dadeldhura/darchula district of Nepal . Other casts include Brahmins (Bhatt), Rajputs (Chand, Budal) and some deprived classes (Dalits—Damayee, Chunara etc.).

There is a temple in Barakot named Nagarjun Daneswar temple in Satpali in the bank side of river Mahakali.

Tripura sundari temple

There is a 10+2 school—Shree Daneshwar Higher Secondary School at Barakot. Barakot also has a primary level school at Bhatala named Shree Gyaneshwar Primary School. Barakot is also one of the major cultural hotspots connecting the vibrant culture of both Uttarakhand[India] and Western Nepal. Being one of the Indian border connecting village(through Jhulaghat) of western Nepal, it has been a major trade route too. It's also the starting spot of puspalal(mid-hill) highway from the western side of the route.

Suspension bridge at Jhulaghat
Jhulaghat bridge connecting Nepal and India

[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Nepal Census 2001". Nepal's Village Development Committees. Digital Himalaya. Archived from the original on October 12, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-25.