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Bharatpur (/ b ə ˈ r ɑː t p ər /, Nepali: भरतपुर, pronounced [ˈbʱʌɾʌt̪pur] ⓘ) is a city in south central Nepal. It is the third most populous city of Nepal after Kathmandu and Pokhara with 369,377 inhabitants in 2021. [2] It is also the second largest metropolitan city in Nepal by area.
Bharatpur, largest city of Nepal after Kathmandu, is its administrative centre. It covers 2,238.39 km 2 (864.25 sq mi), and in 2011 had a population of 579,984 (279,087 male and 300,897 female) people. [ 3 ]
Gunjanagar is a town in Bharatpur, Chitwan in Bagmati Province of southern Nepal.The former Gunjanagar VDC and Saradanagar VDC were merged on 18 May 2014 to form new Chitrawan Municipality, [1] [2] which later was merged with Bharatpur.
Via Sunauli / Bhairahawa — on eastern bound (Birganj/Biratnagar) buses traveling through Butwal, Bharatpur, Tandi Bazar. Change to local bus, jeep, pony cart, or rickshaw to Sauraha (3 – 4 hours trip). Via Pokhara — direct tourist buses are available via Mugling, Narayangarh / Bharatpur, Tandi Bazar, Sauraha (3 – 4 hours trip).
Jagatpur is a small town of Bharatpur Metropolitan City and former village development committee in Chitwan District, Bagmati Province of Nepal.At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 11,195 people (5,217 male; 5,978 female) living in 2,635 individual households.
Ganeshthan (Nepali: गणेशथान मन्दिर) is a Hindu temple located at Bharatpur Ward No. 11 in the Chitwan District of Nepal. It is believed that the original structure of the temple was built in the fifteenth century by Muni Makunda, King of Palap. The modern temple was built in 1952, during the reign of King Mahendra. [1]
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Bharatpur, Rajasthan, a city in Bharatpur district; Bharatpur (Lok Sabha constituency) Bharatpur (Rajasthan Assembly constituency) Bharatpur State, former princely state in modern Rajasthan; Bharatpur, Chhattisgarh, a subdivision and tehsil of Koriya district in Chhattisgarh; Bharatpur, Murshidabad, a village in Murshdiababd district, West Bengal