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Mahi Bajaj Sagar Dam is a dam across the Mahi River. It is situated 16 kilometres from Banswara town in Banswara district Rajasthan, India. [1] The dam was constructed between 1972 and 1983 for the purposes of hydroelectric power generation and water supply. It is the longest dam and second largest dam in Rajasthan. It is named after Jamnalal ...
Mahi Dam is one of the major attractions of Banswara. It is situated 16 kilometres from Banswara town. The dam was constructed between 1972 and 1983 under the Mahi Bajaj Sagar project, for the purposes of hydroelectric power generation and water supply.
Mahi Bajaj Sagar Dam is a dam across the Mahi River. It is situated 16 kilometres from Banswara town in Banswara district Rajasthan, India. The dam was constructed between 1972 and 1983 for the purposes of hydroelectric power generation and water supply. It is the second-largest dam in Rajasthan. It is named after Shri Jamnala Bajaj.
Pages in category "Tourist attractions in Banswara district" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. ... Mahi Bajaj Sagar Dam; P. Paraheda Shiv Mandir
Mahi Banswara Rajasthan Atomic Power Plant (MBRAPP) Country: India: Location: Banswara, Rajasthan Coordinates: 1]: Construction began: 2024: Construction cost: ₹ 50,000 crore (US$5.8 billion): Owners: ASHVINI JV - Anushakti Vidhyut Nigam (NPCIL - 51% and NTPC - 49%): Operator: ASHVINI: Nuclear power station ; Reactor type: IPHWR-700: Reactor supplier: NPCIL/BARC: Cooling source: Mahi Bajaj ...
Jakham dam is also inside this sanctuary. Baneshwar – 120 km from Udaipur on Banswara road near Sabla, Jakham, Som and Mahi river are merged here, every year Kumbh for Aadiwasi's in January month organised. Galiakot – Mazar-e-Seyadi Fakhruddun Shaheed; Dungarpur – Gap sagar, city palace; Banswara – Mahi dam and Tripura Sundari temple
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Govindgiri Banjara was a social and religious reformer among the tribes of the Rajasthan and Gujarat areas of India. [4]He had run afoul of the local princely state rulers, notably Sunth, Banswara, Idar, and Dungarpur because of his critique of the Indian hierarchy and its exploitation of the adivasi, and the subsequent social disruptions by his followers that his doctrines caused.