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Government Medical College Gondia: Maharashtra University of Health Sciences: 2016 gmcgondia.in: Grant Medical College: Mumbai: Maharashtra University of Health Sciences: 1845 gmcjjh.org: Indira Gandhi Government Medical College: Nagpur: Maharashtra University of Health Sciences: 1968 iggmc.org: Lokmanya Tilak Municipal General Hospital: Mumbai
Priyadarshini Indira Gandhi College of Engineering [14] Rajiv Gandhi College of Engineering & Research [15] Shri Govindarao Wanjari College of Engineering and Technology [16] Smt. Bhagwati Chaturvedi College of Engineering [17] Smt. Rajshree Mulak College of Engineering for Women [18] Suryodaya College of Engineering and Technology [19]
Sophia College for Women alumni (32 P) Pages in category "Women's universities and colleges in Maharashtra" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
Mahila Maha Vidyalaya (MMV), also known as Women's College, Banaras Hindu University, is a women's college in the Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, [1] [2] India which offers undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral courses in various subjects to women. It was founded in 1929 by Mahamana Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya.
In the mid-1960s, Maharashtra government decided to establish agricultural universities. One such location was at Akola in Vidarbha, where there was already a functioning agriculture college since 1905. However, leaders from Western Maharashtra prevailed on the Maharashtra government to shift it Rahuri in Western Maharashtra.
Maharashtra has 24 universities with a turnout of 160,000 Graduates every year. [12] [13] Maharashtra has played a pioneering role in the development of the modern education system in India. The University of Mumbai, is the largest university in the world in terms of the number of graduates and has 141 affiliated colleges. [14]
In 1978, the Maharashtra Chief Minister, the state legislature and University administration approved renaming the university after B. R. Ambedkar. [2] This decision was strongly opposed by other communities [3] resulting in the anti-Dalit pogrom. [4]
The region occupies 31.6% of the total area and is home to 21.3% of the total population of Maharashtra. [22] According to the 2011 census, Hinduism was the principal religion in the state at 76.91% of the total population, while Buddhists constituted 13.08 of the total population. Vidarbha accounts for 45.91% of total Buddhists in Maharashtra ...