Pashar Village Polpulation
Pashar is a Village located in the Taluka of Tarhasi, in the district of Palamu district, in the state of Jharkhand state with a total population of 974. There are 228 houses in the Village.
Village name: Pashar
Taluka name: Tarhasi
District: Palamu
State: Jharkhand
Total population: 974
House Holds: 228
Pashar Population by Sex
There are total of 511 male persons and 463 females and a total number of 136 children below 6 years in Pashar.
The percentage of male population is 52.46%.
The percentage of female population is 47.54%.
The percentage of child population is 13.96%.
Males: 511.
Females: 463.
Children: 136.
Google Map of Pashar
Simple Googler map location of Pashar Village
View Larger Map of Pashar, Tarhasi, Palamu
View satellite images/ street maps of villages in Pashar, Tarhasi, Palamu 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.
Pashar similar Villages list
- Pashang, Mawkynrew
- Pashang, Debra
- Pashapur, Vaijapur
- Pashapur, Medak
- Pashapur, Peddemul
- Pashapur, Aurad
- Pashardanga, Amdanga
- Pashchhim Gaon, Rae Bareli
- Pashchim Basudebpur, Shyampur - II
- Pashchim Bergram, Bolpur Sriniketan
- Pashchim Bhabanipur, Diamond Harbour - II
- Pashchim Chandipur, Ausgram - II
- Pashchim Gaon, Bakshi Ka Talab
- Pashchim Gazipur, Shyampur - II
- Pashchim Gobindapur, Kumarganj
- Pashchim Gobindapur, Murshidabad Jiaganj
External Links
Pasha Records
Pasha Records was a record label founded by Spencer Proffer. With distribution through Columbia Records, Pasha was the home to acts such as Quiet Riot and Kick Axe.Pasha River
Pasha (Russian: Пашá) is a river in Tikhvinsky and Volkhovsky Districts in the northeastern part of Leningrad Oblast of Russia, a left tributary of the Svir River (Lake Ladoga basin).Pasha Kovalev
Pavel "Pasha" Kovalev (Russian: Па́вел "Па́ша" Ковалёв; born 19 January 1980) is a former Russian professional Latin and ballroom dancer.Pasha
Pasha or Paşa (Ottoman Turkish: پاشا, Turkish: paşa), in older works sometimes anglicized as bashaw, was a higher rank in the Ottoman political and military system, typically granted to governors, generals, dignitaries and others.