Introduction
- Shelter is the third most essential and basic need of man after food and clothing
- Man build houses to lead a settled life and the place where he build houses is known as settlement
- Thus, settlement is a permanently occupied human dwelling place which indicates a community of dwellings and associated buildings ranging from a small hamlet to metropolitan city or megalopolis
Classification of Settlements
- Settlements may be classified on the basis of their functions, size, morphology, number and density of houses, etc.
- But the most widely used criteria is the function carried out by the inhabitants of a settlement
- On this basis, two types of settlements are recognized
- Rural Settlements
- Urban Settlements
RURAL SETTLEMENTS
- This refers to clusters of dwellings called ‘villages’ together with the surrounding land from which the inhabitants derive their sustenance
- In India, officially a Village stands for the area demarcated as mauza meaning, ‘parcel of ground with definite boundaries for revenue purposes without clear and consistent regard for its population’
- A revenue village thus defined, is a definite administrative unit and includes one or more clusters of dwellings together with the land territory under possession
Classification of Villages
- Although there are several ways, classification based on size, population and area of land is the most popular and accepted classification of villages
- On the basis of above criteria, following classes of villages are recognised:
- Pura
- The place where a habitat had been in ancient days and where chief habitats are all around or nearby areas is called pura
- This habitat can this be called the nucleus of the area
- Khas
- This is used for the main village
- When the population increases, the word khas is used for the village from where people spread around
- Kalan
- It is used for large villages and used at the end of the name of the village
- Khurd
- This word is used for small villages
- Khera
- This word is used for small colonies and also for the higher land of the village
- Khera has great social value for the village community because all shows such as Ramlila take place here
- Nanglay
- It comprises a group of small villages where on village is surrounded by several satellite villages
Settlement types
- The types of rural settlements imply the degree of dispersion or nucleation of the dwellings
- Compact settlements
- If the number of villages equals the number of hamlets in an area unit, the settlement is designated as compact
- Such types are found in the plateau region of Malwa, in Narmada Valley, Nimar upland, large parts of Rajasthan, etc.
- In such villages, all the dwellings are concentrated in one central site
- Factors contributing to growth to compact settlements:
- Fertile plains, resulting in development of intensive agriculture in an area
- Availability of water resulting in such settlements in Punjab, Haryana region
- Semi-compact or Hamletted settlements
- If the number of villages equals more than half of the hamlets, it is semi-compact settlements
- It covers more area than compact settlements
- Chief characteristic of these settlements is an early recognised site and one or more than one hamlets which are closely linked with the main site, foot paths, or roads
- The pressure of population on the main site forces many families to shift outside the main village
- These are common in the khadar areas of Ganga, Bet banks of Punjab, Terai region of Uttar Pradesh and in delta regions of rivers
- Hamletted settlements
- If the number of villages is equal to half of hamlet number, it is a hamlet settlement
- The hamlets are spread over the area with intervening fields and the main/central settlement is either absent or has feeble influence upon others
- Dispersed settlements
- If the number of villages is less than half the number of hamlets, the settlement is regarded as dispersed
- The people in this type, live In isolated dwellings scattered in the cultivated fields
- These are found in tribal areas, on Himalayan slopes
- Homesteads/farmsteads of Punjab, Haryana region belong to this category
 Settlement Patterns
- Pattern refers to geometrical form and shape of the settlement
- The most common patterns of rural settlements found in India are:
- Linear pattern
- In this, the main street of the village runs parallel to a road, railway line or water front and most of the village shops are located on this road
- Such pattern is found in the Ganga plain, along coasts and in north-east Indian states

- Checkerboard Pattern
- This develops at a place where two roads or some other mode of transport meet almost at right angles
- The point of intersection of two main roads is the focus of growth of the settlement
- Such villages are found in large numbers in the fertile plains of North India
- Also, the pattern is quite common in Tamilnadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh

- Rectangular pattern
- The geometry of these settlements is largely rectangular
- Such settlements develop in the fertile plains of north India where intensive cultivation is practiced
- These settlements have straight streets which meet each other at right angles
- This pattern is the heritage of our old system of land measurement in ‘Bighas’
- These are abundantly found in Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh
- In Rajasthan, the Indira Gandhi Canal Command region has a large number of rural settlements planned as rectangles
- In south India, the deltas of the peninsular rivers have a large number of villages in this pattern

- Radial Pattern
- This develops at a nodal place where number of roads and streets coming from different directions converge at a site
- Houses are built along a radial route and a radial pattern comes into being
- About one-third of Indian villages have radial pattern are most are found in northern plain of India

- Star-like pattern
- It is a refined form of radial pattern
- It develops when the space between the transport routes like roads, streets and foot path is occupied by houses and other buildings
- The building process of the houses starts from the nodal place and spreads in all directions
- This pattern is found in the fertile areas of Punjab, Haryana and western part of Uttar Pradesh

- Triangular pattern
- This pattern is a result of hindrance occurring on three sides
- The hindrance may be physical or cultural
- Such a pattern develops usually at the confluence of two rivers or two roads

- Circular pattern
- This pattern develops around a pond, lake or a crater
- People prefer to construct houses close to pond because of easy accessibility of water
- The pattern may develop around a temple/mosque
- These are found in the upper part of the Ganga-Yamuna Doab, trans-Yamuna region, etc.

- Semi-circular pattern
- Villages which grow along the river meanders, oxbow lakes or a lake at the foothill assume this shape
- The Ganga and its several tributaries have semi-circular villages

- Arrow pattern
- The villages which grow at the end of a cape, or at a sharp bend of a meandering river or a lake often assume this shape
- Such settlements are found in Kanniyakumari, Chilka lake, Gulf of Khambat, etc.

- Nebular pattern
- They represent the shape of a nebula
- The roads in such settlements are generally circular, which end at the centre or nucleus of the village
- These are found in hilly and undulating areas of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and in Ganga-Yamina doab region

- Terraced pattern
- These are found on the hill slopes, which are cut for cultivation
- Such villages are seen along hill slopes in Jammu Kashmir region, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram and Western Ghats

- T-Shape pattern
- Sometime the routes meet in such a way, that they make a ‘T’ junction
- People start building houses along the routes extending in all the three directions and T shape pattern develops
- Â

Â
Distribution of Villages in India
- According to Census of India 2011, there are 640,867 villages in the country, including un-inhabited villages
- According to 2011 Census figures, 68.84% or more than two-thirds of India’s population lives in more than 6.4. lakh villages
- The largest number(more than 16.6%) are in Uttar Pradesh alone
- Chandigarh has the minimum number of 5 villages only
- The spatial pattern of above explained types, in India is as Indicated below:

Density of Rural settlements
- It is defined as the number of village per 100 square kilometers of land area
- The average density of rural settlements in India is 19 villages per 100 sq.km
- Among the larger states Bihar has the highest density of 48 villages per 100 sq.km; followed by Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal and Jharkhand
- The lowest densities of less than 10 villages per 100 sq.km are found in Kashmir region, Kerala, Sikkim and so on
- Among the Union territories, Lakshadweep has the highest density of 65 villages per 100 sq.km, which is the highest in whole of India
Morphology of rural settlements
- Morphology of rural settlements is concerned with their internal and external structure and identification, classification, regionalization and analysis of its components
- The four main parts of a rural settlement include:
- Homogenous part, agricultural fields etc.
- Central part, built up area of Basti
- Circulatory part, roads, streets, footpaths, etc.
- Special part, school, temple, mosque, church, panchayat-ghar, cultural place, etc.

Rural Houses and house types
- The census of India defines a ‘census house’ as a building or a part of a building having a separate main entrance from the road, common courtyard or staircase, etc. used or recognized as a separate unit
- The houses made of locally available materials such as stones, mud, unburnt bricks, bamboos, etc. are called Kutcha houses
- The houses built using burnt bricks and cement are called Pucca Houses
Â