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Karungulam is a village in Tamil Nadu, India. There are several villages in the state which share this name; this article is about the village in Thoothukudi district at Vagulagiri hill. The village is also called Marthandam Karungulam for the Lord Marthandeswara temple located at the entrance of the village on its northern border.
In mid-1998, in the village of Karungulam, southern Tamil Nadu, the primary occupation is harvesting raw banana bunches and transporting them to lorries, for which a meager payment of Rs. 1 per bunch is made.
Developmental administration of Tamil Nadu is carried out by Panchayat Unions or blocks in rural areas of Tamil Nadu, a southern state of India.These panchayat unions have a set of panchayat villages under them.
There were 1023 women for every 1000 men. The taluk had a literacy rate of 76.91. Child population in the age group below 6 was 10,616 males and 10,232 females. Appanad Maravars are living in large numbers in this region along with Yadav in Mukkani, Velur, Karungulam and Nadars in cheraikulam, Athalikulam and Scheduled Caste .
At the 2001 India census, [2] Karungal had a population of 15,832. [citation needed] Males constituted 49% of the population and females 51%.It had an average literacy rate of 79%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 82%, and female literacy is 76%. 10% of the population were under six years of age.
Dheeniya Aided Ps, T.Karungulam; Gt. Hs, Kamankottai; Gt. Hs, Manjur; Gt. Hss, Sathirakudi; Harijan Aided Ps, Muthuvayal (Owner-Sethuraman) Idar Theertha Amman Ps, Theeya
As of 2011 India census, [3] Thiruppathur had a population of 25,980. Males constitute 50% of the population and females 50%. Thiruppathur has an average literacy rate of 82%, higher than the national average of 69.5%: male literacy is 83%, and female literacy is 79%.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, many residents of Chettinad were trading in South and Southeast Asia, particularly Burma, Ceylon, Vietnam and Malaysia.By 2010, only 74 villages remained of the original 96, [4] organised in clusters spread over a territory of 1,550 square kilometres (600 square miles) in the Districts of Sivagangai and Pudukottai in the State of Tamil Nadu.