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Medak district is an administrative district in the Indian state of Telangana. The town of Medak serves as the district headquarters. The district lies in the north-western part of Telangana and is part of the broader Telangana plateau, characterised by undulating terrain, agricultural plains, and several reservoirs.
| Country | India |
|---|---|
| State | Telangana |
| Headquarters | Medak |
| Region | Telangana plateau |
| Type | Revenue district |
Historically, Medak was part of the princely state of Hyderabad under the Nizams, and later became a district of Andhra Pradesh after the States Reorganisation Act of 1956. The area is associated with the Kakatiya and Qutb Shahi periods, and several monuments in the district reflect this layered history.
Following the formation of Telangana as a separate state on 2 June 2014, Medak continued as one of the state's districts. On 11 October 2016, the Government of Telangana reorganised the state's districts, and the erstwhile Medak district was bifurcated into three new districts: Medak, Sangareddy, and Siddipet. The present Medak district is therefore considerably smaller than the pre-2016 unit.
The district lies on the Deccan plateau, drained chiefly by the Manjira river, a tributary of the Godavari. The Manjira reservoir and the Singur project, along with smaller tanks, support irrigation in the region. The terrain consists of black cotton soils and red soils suitable for crops such as paddy, maize, sugarcane, cotton, and pulses.
The district is administered by a District Collector, with subordinate revenue divisions and mandals. Local self-government is exercised through gram panchayats, mandal parishads, the Zilla Parishad, and municipal bodies in urban centres such as Medak town.
Agriculture is the principal occupation, supplemented by allied activities such as dairying and poultry. The wider Medak region historically hosted significant industrial development around Patancheru and Sangareddy, though most of these industrial belts now fall within Sangareddy district after the 2016 reorganisation.
Telugu is the principal language of the district, with Urdu and Lambadi also spoken among certain communities. The cultural life of the district reflects mainstream Telangana traditions, including Bathukamma, Bonalu, and regional festivals, alongside Christian observances associated with the Medak Diocese.
Medak is significant for its religious heritage, particularly the Medak Cathedral, which is among the most important Protestant Christian sites in India. It is also notable as the parliamentary constituency once represented by Indira Gandhi, who won the Medak Lok Sabha seat in the 1980 general election.