Mandhar Village Polpulation
Mandhar is a Village located in the Taluka of Haveli, in the district of Punch district, in the state of Jammu and Kashmir state with a total population of 1540. There are 318 houses in the Village.
Village name: Mandhar
Taluka name: Haveli
District: Punch
State: Jammu and Kashmir
Total population: 1540
House Holds: 318
Mandhar Population by Sex
There are total of 790 male persons and 750 females and a total number of 317 children below 6 years in Mandhar.
The percentage of male population is 51.30%.
The percentage of female population is 48.70%.
The percentage of child population is 20.58%.
Males: 790.
Females: 750.
Children: 317.
Google Map of Mandhar
Simple Googler map location of Mandhar Village
View Larger Map of Mandhar, Haveli, Punch
View satellite images/ street maps of villages in Mandhar, Haveli, Punch 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.
Mandhar similar Villages list
- Mandhana(194), Narnaul
- Mandhana (48), Bhiwani
- Mandhana (65), Paonta Sahib
- Mandhani, Jintur
- Mandhania, Mayur Hand
- Mandhap (308), Palampur
- Mandhar (26), Jagadhri
- Mandhar (333), Jagadhri
- Mandhar, Raipur
- Mandhar, Satpuli
- Mandhar, Alirajpur
- Mandhar, Purandhar
- Mandhar, Bhinmal
- Mandhar Kalan, Simga
- Mandhar Patti, Amethi
- Mandhara (105), Chamba
External Links
Mandharam
Mandharam is an Indian Malayalam-language romance film directed by Vijesh Vijay and scripted by M. Sajas, with Asif Ali in the lead role.Mandhara
Mandhara is a small village in Tehsil Dadahu, Sirmaur District, Himachal Pradesh. There are about 30 families in this small village with approx 400 population.Mandarin Chinese
Mandarin ( (listen); simplified Chinese: 官话; traditional Chinese: 官話; pinyin: Guānhuà; literally: 'speech of officials') is a group of related varieties of Chinese spoken across most of northern and southwestern China.Mandarin Chinese profanity
Profanity in Mandarin Chinese most commonly involves sexual references and scorn of the object's ancestors, especially their mother.