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Mihir Virani is a name associated with individuals from the Virani community, a Gujarati surname commonly found in the Saurashtra region of Gujarat, India. The surname is borne by members of various communities, including Patidar (Leuva Patel) groups historically settled in districts such as Rajkot, Amreli, and Bhavnagar.
As the name may refer to more than one person and reliable, encyclopaedic detail on a single specific public figure of this exact name is limited, this article provides general context about the surname and its background rather than asserting biographical claims about a particular individual.
| Name | Mihir Virani |
|---|---|
| Surname origin | Gujarat, India |
| Common community association | Leuva Patidar (Patel) |
| Region | Saurashtra (Rajkot, Amreli, Bhavnagar districts) |
| Language | Gujarati |
"Virani" is a Gujarati surname most often used by members of the Leuva Patidar community in Saurashtra. Families bearing the surname have historically been involved in agriculture, trade, and, since the late twentieth century, in industries such as edible oil processing, snack foods, ceramics, and diamonds. The Virani name has gained wider recognition through commercial enterprises based in Rajkot and surrounding districts.
People with the Virani surname are concentrated in:
The first name Mihir is of Sanskrit origin, meaning "sun" and is used across India. In combination with the surname Virani, it reflects a typical naming pattern in Gujarati Hindu families, where a Sanskritic given name is paired with a community-linked family name.
The surname Virani has become publicly recognisable in India largely through business families in Saurashtra associated with the food, agriculture, and manufacturing sectors. Individuals named Mihir Virani may be encountered in fields such as business, academia, sports, or the arts, but no single widely documented public figure with this exact name has achieved standalone encyclopaedic prominence.
General references on Gujarati surnames, the Patidar community, and the Saurashtra region in standard works on Indian social history and demography.