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This is a list of States of India ranked according to the number of registered motor vehicles per 1000 population, as of 2011–2012. The list is compiled from the Road Transport Yearbook 2011–2012 published by Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, Government of India. [1]
Two-letter state codes of India. This is a list of the Indian Regional Transport Offices and the assigned codes for vehicle registration.These are broken down to states or union territories and their districts.
A pre-Independence car showroom in Secunderabad, showing Fiat Topolino and Fiat 1100 Kolkata street traffic in 1945. In 1897, the first car ran on an Indian road. Through the 1930s, cars were imports only, and in small numbers. An embryonic automotive industry emerged in India in the 1940s.
List of automotive plants in Gujarat Location Manufacturer Class Becharaji,Mehsana: Suzuki Motor Gujarat: Passenger Vehicles Sanand, Ahmedabad: Tata Motors: Passenger Vehicles Chharodi, Ahmedabad: Ford India: Passenger Vehicles Currently Tata Passenger Electric Mobility Halol: MG Motor India: Passenger Vehicles Halol: Hero MotoCorp: Two ...
There are 16.6 million registered vehicles in the city as of 30 June 2014, which is the highest in the world among all cities, most of which do not follow any pollution emission norm (within municipal limits), while the Delhi metropolitan region has 11.2 million vehicles.
The history of Gujarat began with Stone Age settlements followed by Chalcolithic and Bronze Age settlements like Indus Valley Civilisation. [1] Gujarat's coastal cities, chiefly Bharuch, served as ports and trading centers in the Nanda, Maurya, Satavahana and Gupta empires as well as during the Western Kshatrapas period. After the fall of the ...
Ghogha, an all-weather port near Sihor-Bhavnagar, from where prince Vijay set off with his army to Lanka, after he was exiled by his father King Sinhavarma / Sinhabahu from Sinhpur. In ancient times, the region of Gujarat was known as Lata or Lala or Laldesa, which suggests to be Gujarat. Mahavamsa and various references mention of this.
' Gurjara country ', or Gurjaratra) [1] is a historical region in India comprising the southern Rajasthan and northern Gujarat during the period of 6th–12th century CE. The predominant power of the region, the Gurjara-Pratiharas eventually controlled a major part of North India centered at Kannauj .