Generated by GPT-5-mini| Lambi | |
|---|---|
| Name | Lambi |
| Settlement type | Village |
| Subdivision type | Country |
| Subdivision name | India |
| Subdivision type1 | State |
| Subdivision name1 | Punjab |
| Subdivision type2 | District |
| Subdivision name2 | Sri Muktsar Sahib |
| Population total | 4,000 (approx.) |
| Timezone | IST |
| Utc offset | +5:30 |
Lambi
Lambi is a village in the Indian state of Punjab, India located in the Sri Muktsar Sahib district. The settlement is noted for its agrarian landscape, participation in regional politics, and proximity to transport routes linking Bathinda, Fazilka, and Malout. Lambi has been associated with notable political figures from Punjab, India and is part of the rural mosaic of India shaped by post-independence agrarian reforms and demographic shifts.
The place-name is rooted in the linguistic traditions of Punjabi language and local toponymy influenced by historical movements across the plains bounded by Sutlej River and the Ghaggar-Hakra River basin. Oral traditions in the region reference nomenclature parallels found in neighboring settlements in Malwa (Punjab), reflecting patterns similar to those documented in studies of Indo-Aryan languages and regional onomastics recorded by administrators during the period of British Raj in India.
Lambi lies within the agro-climatic zone of southern Punjab, India, situated on the alluvial plains that extend between Fazilka and Bathinda. The village is accessible via district roads that connect to the NH 7 corridor through Muktsar, and it lies within the irrigation command area served by canals branching from the Indus Basin Project networks including distributaries originating from the Bhakra–Nangal Project. The regional topography is predominantly flat, with soils classified in agronomic surveys alongside neighboring talukas such as Malout and Gidderbaha. Climatic conditions correspond to the semi-arid continental regime experienced across the Punjab plains, with seasonal variations influenced by the Monsoon of South Asia.
Population estimates for the village fall within the low thousands, with household structures typical of rural Punjab, India communities. The social composition includes adherents of Sikhism and Hinduism, with cultural practices and life-cycle events linked to institutions such as the Gurudwara and local mandirs. Census patterns in the wider Sri Muktsar Sahib district indicate fertility, literacy, and migration trends comparable to those observed in adjacent districts like Bathinda district and Fazilka district, including male out-migration to regional urban centers and international destinations including Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia.
Agriculture forms the backbone of the local economy, with cultivation of wheat, rice, and cotton prominent across holdings irrigated by canal and tubewell systems. The village participates in commodity markets linked to mandi centers in Muktsar, Bathinda, and Malout, and benefits from state-level procurement mechanisms instituted by agencies modeled on the Food Corporation of India framework. Rural infrastructure includes primary educational institutions aligned with standards promoted by the Punjab School Education Board, primary healthcare provision under schemes influenced by the National Rural Health Mission model, and electrification initiatives connected to grids managed by the Punjab State Power Corporation Limited. Transport links enable access to railway junctions at Tarn Taran and Bathinda Junction, and road connectivity to the Grand Trunk Road (GT Road) network via feeder routes.
The settlement's historical trajectory intersects with broader regional events: the consolidation of agrarian Punjab under the Sikh Empire, administrative reorganization during the British Raj, and post-1947 developments shaped by Partition of India and land reform legislation enacted in Punjab, India. During the 20th century, agrarian modernization associated with the Green Revolution in India affected cropping patterns and rural livelihoods in the area around Lambi, mirroring transformations seen in districts like Bathinda and administrative programs of the Government of Punjab, India. In contemporary politics, the village has been a focal point in state electoral contests and local governance administered under the Panchayati Raj institutions and district administration seated in Sri Muktsar Sahib.
Cultural life in the village reflects Punjabi religious and festival calendars including observances such as Baisakhi and Gurpurab, with community gatherings centered on the local Gurudwara and village commons. Architectural features include traditional rural residential layouts and agricultural structures similar to typologies documented in surveys of Punjab, India vernacular architecture. Nearby landmarks and sites of regional significance include historical gurudwaras, memorials associated with the Sikh Confederacy and modern commemorative sites in Sri Muktsar Sahib district, and access to cultural institutions in urban centers like Bathinda and Muktsar. The village’s social life is tied to regional institutions such as cooperative societies and mandi boards that connect local producers to state and national markets including export channels reaching Mumbai and international diasporic markets in Canada and the United Kingdom.
Category:Villages in Sri Muktsar Sahib district