Bampara Village Polpulation
Bampara is a Village located in the Taluka of Chenga, in the district of Barpeta district, in the state of Assam state with a total population of 1528. There are 309 houses in the Village.
Village name: Bampara
Taluka name: Chenga
District: Barpeta
State: Assam
Total population: 1528
House Holds: 309
Bampara Population by Sex
There are total of 687 male persons and 841 females and a total number of 211 children below 6 years in Bampara.
The percentage of male population is 44.96%.
The percentage of female population is 55.04%.
The percentage of child population is 13.81%.
Males: 687.
Females: 841.
Children: 211.
Google Map of Bampara
Simple Googler map location of Bampara Village
View Larger Map of Bampara, Chenga, Barpeta
View satellite images/ street maps of villages in Bampara, Chenga, Barpeta India. The Map data on this website is provided by Google Maps, a free online map service one can access and view in a web browser.
Bampara similar Villages list
- Bamoti, Khair
- Bamouri Khalsa, Almora
- Bampa, Rasol
- Bampa, Joshimath
- Bampada, Adva
- Bampal Charkhi, Ratua - I
- Bampewada, Sakoli
- Bamphapur, Tirtol
- Bamphei, Govindpur
- Bamphidi, Sainkul
- Bamphu, Dharmasala
- Bampu, Kamakshyanagar
- Bampung Hema, Parsi-Parlo
- Bampur, Amarpur
- Bampur Rampur, Bidhuna
- Bampur Uparhar, Meja
External Links
Bambara language
The Bambara (Bamana) language, Bamanankan, is a lingua franca and national language of Mali spoken by perhaps 15 million people, natively by 5 million Bambara people and about 10 million second-language users.Bambara people
The Bambara (Bambara: Bamana or Banmana) are a Mandé ethnic group native to much of West Africa, primarily southern Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso and Senegal.Bamana Empire
The Bamana Empire (also Bambara Empire or Ségou Empire) was a large West African state based at Ségou, now in Mali.Bambaram
Bambaram (in Tamil Nadu), Pambaram (in Kerala), Buguri (in Karnataka), Lattu لٹو (in Urdu), Bongaram బొంగరం (in Telugu), Latim লাটিম (in Bengali) is a traditional throwing top used mainly in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.