Social,
Environmental & Economic Sustainability
Our analysis of the rank of the district
Backwardness : Does not figure in list of 447 backward
districts
Sex Ratio Rank : 7
(Rank one is least sex ratio - Cenus 2001)
HIV Category District : D
(HIV Sentinel Surveillance 2004 -2006)
Disability : 592 (Census 2001)
Literacy Ratio : 153 (Census 2001)
Minority : Does not figure in MCD
Brief About Lahaul
& Spiti District
Lahaul & Spiti is a small district having international
boundary with Tibet. It attained the status of a district
in the year 1960. Till then it was merely a tehsil of Kullu Sub-division.
The valleys. mountains, glaciers, rivers, forests, pastures, gompas
(monastries) and ancient buildings of the former ruling dynasty
are the principal objects of study.
The rugged awe-inspiring snow clad mountains
are standing invitation to the hikers, mountaineers and adventurers.
The entire district is full of natural scenery exorting the
tourists and visitors to explore and imbibe its hidden grandeur.
The customs, myths, beliefs and conventions of the simple unsophisticated
people are the unique features of this border highland. Every
village or a hamlet has a prayer flag fluttering over the Buddhist
monastery. These shrines are the centers of the cultural life
of the people that have influenced their religious beliefs for
centuries and round which their social life revolves.
Origin of the Name of the District
Lahaul & Spiti, which now
form, a district of Himachal Pradesh, bordering Tibet, were at
one time separate Himalayan waziries or cantons of the Kullu sub-divisions,
and Kullu itself formed a part of Kangra district of Punjab.
As is clear from the name ‘Lahaul
& Spiti’, the district comprises two different mountains tracts,
one known as Lahaul and the other as Spiti. Hence the name of
the district came into being with the formation of these two parts
into a revenue district. The names, Lahaul & Spiti, have different
origins.
Hiuen
Tsiang stated Lahaul to be 1800 or 1900 li (575 or 610 Km) distant
by road from the middle of Kiu-lu-to (Kulu). It is a gross overestimate
as the first village in Lahaul is only about 70 kms from Sultanpur.
Despite this error, whatever its source may be, Lahaul is clearly
the country referred to here. But the Tibetan Li-yul has also
ben identified by Rockhill with Khotan. If this is correct Hiuen
Tsiang's placing Lo-u-lo at 1800 or 1900 li north of Kulu might
be intelligible though an under-estimate. Probably Hiuen Tsiang
confused the two countries as Li-yul (Khotan) and Lo-u-lo (Lahaul)
in his estimate of distances, admittedly derived from hearsay.
In
ancient Buddhist scripures, 'Padma thangyiang' and 'Mam-kambum'
there is mention of a country named Khasa or Hasha to the south
of Ladakh and Zangskar. It is possible also that 'Garzha' may
be corruption of Khasa or Hasha. Between the 6th century B.C.
and the 5th century A.D., the Saka and Khasa tribes, after having
been driven out from Central Asia by the Huns, crossed over into
India. many of these settled down in the valleys of Mid-Himalayas
between Garhwal and Ladakh. This is borne out by the numerous
remains of their graves found in these valleys. There is a nullah
near Keylong known as Shaks, which seems to have taken its name
after the Saka tribe settled in the Bhaga valley.
The Histroy of the District as an Administrative
Unit
The two units of the district
i.e. Lahaul & Spiti, have separate historical backgrounds.
In the distant past Lahaul had been changing hands between the
rulers of Ladakh and Kulu. In the second half of the seventeenth
century with the disintegration of Ladakh kingdom, Lahaul passed
into the hands of the Kulu chief. In 1840, Maharaja Ranjit Singh
took over Lahaul along with Kulu and ruled over it till 1846 when
the area came under the sway of the British. From 1846 to 1940,
Lahaul formed part of the Kulu sub-division of Kangra district
and was administered through the local jagirdars/thakurs. One
of the thakurs was designated as Wizier of Lahaul &
was invested with judicial and executive powers. Another
thakur was given the powers of a Revenue Officer. These functionaries
exercised traditional as well as other power conferred by the
Government. The Assistant Commissioner. Kulu used to visit the
area once a year for a month or so. In the late thirties the unprecedented
prosperity of the people through growing kuth and
their consequent awakening created a formidable challenge to the
power and influence of the Wizier of Lahaul, which gradually
started declining. The inadequacy was soon noticed by the Government
which considered the extension of the regular system of administration.
Accordingly in 1941, a separate sub-tehsil comprising Lahaul &
Spiti was formed and a naib-tehsildar was posted at Keylong thereby
divesting the thakurs of their powers. The system remained in
vogue till June, 1960 when Lahaul & Spiti district came into
being. Simultaneously, Lahaul was constituted into a separate
tehsil, and, later on it was formed into a sub-division.
The East India Company took
over the possession of the Spiti portion in the year 1846 after
the cessation of cis-Satluj States as a result of the Anglo-Sikh
War. Before that it formed a part of Ladakh, a subsidiary of Jammu
& Kashmir. Because of its remoteness and poverty of natural
resources, the British following the example of the Ladakhi rulers,
did not introduce any substantial changes in the administrative
set up of the territory. The Nono of Kyuling was recognized as
the hereditary Wizier of Spiti (re-affirmed by the Spiti Frontier
Regulations of 1883) and was suppose to represent the British
India Government. He collected the land revenue for the Government,
his judicial jurisdiction included trial of all criminal cases,
except cases of murder; and he performed all functions and enjoyed
all necessary powers for the fulfillment of his tasks and duties,
as laid down in the regulations of 1883.
In 1941, Spiti,with Lahaul,
was constituted into a separate sub-tehsil of Kullu sub-division
which had its headquarters at Keylong. Later on, after the formation
of Lahaul & Spiti into a district, in 1960, Spiti was formed
into a sub-division with its headquarter at Kaza.