Anogi
Anogi is a village in Machhrehta block of Misrikh tehsil in Sitapur, Uttar Pradesh, India. It belongs to the Lucknow Division. It had a population of 3,326 as of 2011. It is a gram panchayat.
Government and politics
Kiran Bala Singh is the current village Sarpanch and Gaurav Mishra is the Panchayat Secretary. Praveen Singh is the most prominent political figure of the village; as part of the Samajwadi Party, he served as the Block Head of Machhrehta Block from 2011 to 2016. In March 2024, he joined the Bharatiya Janata Party and continues to work along with Ashok Rawat, the current Parliament Member from Misrikh.Geoography
is situated 18km away from sub-district headquarter Misrikh and 31km away from district headquarter Sitapur. As per 2009 stats, Anogi village is also a gram panchayat. It is 70 km from the state capital Lucknow.DIVISIONS OF ANOGI VILLAGE
- Red - Main Village
- Yellow - Praveen's Residence
- Green - Lower Parts Of Village
Notable people
Assembly MLAs':'
- Ramkrishna Bhargava
- Manish Rawat
- Praveen Singh
- Kiran Bala Singh
- Late Ram Prasad Singh
Demographics
Children aged 0–6 years in Anogi number 493, which constitutes 15% of the total. Among these children, 255 are male and 238 are female. The child sex ratio is 933 females for every 1,000 males, which is higher than the village's overall sex ratio.
The literacy rate in Anogi is 69.6%, significantly higher than the overall literacy rate of 50.9% in the Sitapur district. Male literacy in the village is 83.65%, while female literacy is 53.77%.
Scheduled Castes make up 47.2% of Anogi's population, while no Scheduled Tribes are reported in the village.
Hindus are the largest religious group, with Muslims forming the second largest minority. The town also hosts significant populations of Christians and Sikhs.
1,380 were involved in some type of work. 61.4% of workers describe their work as "Main Work," meaning permanent employment or the job provided livelihood for more than 6 months of the year. Meanwhile, 38.6% of workers described their work as "Marginal" work, meaning the job provided livelihood for less than 6 months of the year. Of the 1,380 workers engaged in "Main Work," 342 were landowners, while 216 were agricultural labourers.