Seoni, Madhya Pradesh

Seoni
City
Mowgli Statue In Seoni, Mundara Wainganga Origin, Seoni Medical College, Seoni Railway Station, Dal Sagar lake
Seoni
Location in Madhya Pradesh, India
Seoni
Seoni (India)
Coordinates: 22°05′N 79°32′E / 22.08°N 79.53°E / 22.08; 79.53
Country India
StateMadhya Pradesh
DistrictSeoni
Established1867
Government
 • TypeNagar Palika
 • BodyMunicipal Corporation Seoni
 • District MagistrateMs. Sanskriti Jain, IAS
 • District Police ChiefShri Sunil Kumar Mehta, IPS
Area
 • Total
50 km2 (19 sq mi)
Elevation
611 m (2,005 ft)
Population
 • Total
102,343
 • Rank30th (MP)
 • Density2,000/km2 (5,300/sq mi)
Languages
 • OfficialHindi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
480661
Telephone code07692
ISO 3166 codeIN-MP
Vehicle registrationMP-22
Websiteseoni.nic.in, seoni.mppolice.gov.in

Seoni, formerly spelled Seeonee, is a city and a municipality in Seoni district in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

Rudyard Kipling used the forests of the Satpura Range in the vicinity of Seoni as the setting for the Mowgli stories collected as The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book in 1894 and 1895. Seoni is a city where the Wainganga, a tributary of the river Godavari, originates.

Seoni is reachable by train and road. Major adjacent cities are Nagpur and Jabalpur. The National Highway 44 north–south corridor passes through Seoni. Seoni Railway Station serves as the primary transportation hub for Seoni district and connects Seoni city to the National capital (New Delhi) and the State capital (Bhopal) directly via express trains. The nearest airport is Nagpur (130 km); a small airport (air-strip) is available at Seoni near Sukhtara village for landing charter airplanes/helicopters.

The Wainganga is a river in India originating in the Mahadeo Hills in Mundara near the village Gopalganj in Seoni, Madhya Pradesh. It is a key tributary of the Godavari. The river flows south in a winding course through the states of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, roughly 579 km (360 mi). After joining the Wardha River, the united stream, which is known as the Pranahita River, empties into the Godavari River at Kaleshwaram, Telangana.