native name | Madurai |
---|---|
Other name | மதுரை |
type | City |
skyline | Dawn_Madurai.jpg |
skyline caption | View of Madurai |
state name | Tamil Nadu |
district | Madurai district |
language | tamil |
area total | 51.82 |
altitude | 8 |
population total | 928869 |
population as of | 2001 |
population total cite | |
leader title | Mayor |
leader name | Thenmozhi Gopinathan |
area telephone | 452 |
postal code | 625 0xx |
vehicle code range | TN-58,TN-59 and TN-64 |
website | www.maduraicorporation.in }} |
Madurai's recorded history goes back to the 3rd century BC and the city is mentioned by Megasthenes, the Greek ambassador to India and Kautilya, the minister of the Mauryan Emperor Chandragupta Maurya. The city was the principal administrative and cultural centre of the Pandyan dynasty which ruled over the southern parts of Tamil Nadu and Kerala till the first half of the 14th century AD. In about 1311, the Pandyan dynasty was overthrown by the Delhi Sultanate which established the province of Ma'bar which later became independent as the Ma'bar Sultanate. When the Ma'bar Sultanate began to decline in the latter years of the 14th century, Madurai was absorbed into the Vijayanagar Empire. The viceroys of the Vijayanagar Empire established the Madurai Nayak kingdom and ruled as independent kings from 1559 to 1736. After a brief period of occupation by Chanda Sahib and the Carnatic kingdom, Madurai was annexed by the British East India Company in 1801.
After the Sangam age, most of present day Tamil Nadu, including Madurai, came under the rule of the Kalabhras dynasty, who were ousted by the Pandyas around 550 CE. The Pandyas were in their turn removed from power by the Chola dynasty during the early 9th century. The city remained under control of the Cholas until the early 13th century, when the second Pandyan empire was established with Madurai as its capital. After the death of the last Pandyan ruler, Kulasekara Pandian, Madurai came under the rule of the Delhi Sultanate. The Madurai Sultanate, then seceded from Delhi and functioned as an independent kingdom till its destruction by the Vijayanagar Empire in 1378. Madurai became independent from Vijayanagar in 1559 under the Nayaks. Nayak rule ended in 1736 and Madurai changed hands several times between Chanda Sahib, Arcot Nawab and Muhammed Yusuf Khan (Marudhanayagam) in the middle of the 18th century.
In 1801 the British East India Company took direct control of Madurai and brought it under the Madras Presidency. In 1837, the city was expanded to accommodate the growing population by demolishing the fortifications around the temple. This was done on the orders of the then collector John Blackburn. The moat was drained and the debris was used to construct the new streets - Veli, Marat and Perumaal Mesthiri streets. The city was constituted as a municipality in 1866.
Madurai played a role in the Indian independence movement. It was there that Gandhi made the decision to switch to wearing a loin cloth after seeing agricultural laborers wearing it. The independence movement in Madurai was led by leaders such as N. M. R. Subbaraman, Mohammad Ismail Sahib and Meer Niyamatullah Ibrahim Sahib. Post-independence, the city has expanded particularly to the north of river Vaigai by the development of new residential neighbourhoods like Anna Nagar and K. K. Nagar.
Madurai is located at Madurai city is situated at a distance of south-west of Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu. It is situated at a distance of from Tiruchirappalli, from Coimbatore and north of Kanniyakumari. It has an average elevation of 101 metres. The city of Madurai lies on the flat and fertile plain of the river Vaigai which runs in the north-south direction through the city dividing it almost into two equal halves. The Sirumalai and Nagamalai hills lie to the north and west of Madurai. The land in and around Madurai is utilized largely for agricultural activity which is fostered by the Periyar Dam.
The municipal corporation of Madurai has an area of 52 km2, within an urban area now covering 178 km2 The climate is dry and hot, with Northeast monsoon rains during October–December. Temperatures during summer reach a maximum of 40 and a minimum of 26.3 °C, though temperatures over 43 °C are not uncommon. Winter temperatures range between 29.6 and 18 °C. The average annual rainfall is about 85 cm. The city is surrounded by Tirumangalam, Tiruparankunram, Melur, Anaiyur, Avaniapuram Municipalities.
An inhabitant of Madurai is known as a Maduraiite. The 2001 census showed that the city corporation had a population of 928,869, while that of the Madurai urban agglomeration was 1,203,095. In Madurai, males constitute 50.53% of the population and females 49.46%. The city has an average literacy rate of 77.6%, higher than the national average of 64.5%. Male literacy is 82.2%, and female literacy is 72.9%. 10,7% of the population is under 6 years of age. The sex ratio is 979 females per 1,000 males. slightly higher than the national average of 944. In 2005, the crime rate in the city was 283.2 per 100,000 people, accounting for 1.1% of all crimes reported in major cities in India. Madurai ranked 19th among 35 major cities in India in the incidence of crimes. In 2001, the population density in the city was 17,100 per km2 (44,200 per mi²). A government order was issued which would cause a substantial expansion of the area defined as Madurai by merging various surrounding areas into it . However, the whether or not this will be implemented remains uncertain as at summer 2011. Madurai Tamil is the standard dialect spoken. Other languages spoken are Sourashtra, Urdu and English. However the words of some of these languages have Tamil words mixed in with them.
The city is also the seat of a bench of the Madras High Court, being one of only a few that exist outside the state capitals of India. It started functioning in July 2004.
The corporation received several awards in 2008 for implementing development works.
The state government has announced Mono rail project for Madurai. The railway stations in the Madurai area are Madurai Junction, Koodal Nagar, Samayanallur, Sholavandan, Vadipatti, East Madurai, Silaiman, Tirupuvanam, Thiruparankundram, Tirumangalam, Chekanoorani, and Usilampatti.
The airport has handled 3 lakhs passengers between the period Jan 2009 to Oct 2009 and it is approved for the unloading and loading of export and import baggage.
Madurai has a literacy rate and human development index above the state average.
Madurai Kamaraj University is situated in Madurai. It pioneered the concept of distance education in India. The university was accorded the status of "University with Potential for Excellence". There is also Madurai Medical College, a government homoeopathic medical college and hospital, an agricultural college and research institute, a law college, and many colleges for engineering, arts and science, such as Thiagarajar College of Engineering.
The Madura College, The American College in Madurai, M.S.S.Wakf Board College and Lady Doak College are among the oldest institutions of Madurai. Thiagarajar School of Management is devoted to Management Studies. Tamilnadu polytechnic college is in Madurai. There are also significant number of Hotel Management & Catering institutes in the city.
Madurai has many schools, polytechnics and Industrial training institutes (ITIs).
Apollo Speciality Hospitals was founded in the city in the year 1997. The 200-bed hospital provides affordable and quality critical care to people of Madurai and southern districts. Another multi-speciality healthcare hospital Vadamalayan Hospitals runs clinics, pharmacies, and diagnostic centers in the rural areas in and around Madurai.
The legend is that Murugan married Deivanai at Thiruparankundram Murugan Temple, which also is the first among the Six Holy Abodes of Murugan (Arupadai Veedu, literally "Six Battle Camps"). This cave temple is much older than the Meenakshi temple. On Fridays women place candles or sit around the temple floor and create ''kolams'' or ''rangoli'' patterns on the ground using coloured powders, ash and flowers as an offering to Durga.
A durga is located at the top of the hill, where the grave of an Islamic saint, Hazrat Sultan Sikandhar Badushah Shaheed Radiyallah Ta'al anhu, who came from Jeddah along with Hazrat Sulthan Syed Ibrahim Shaheed Badushah of Madinah during the early 13th century, is found. Irrespective of religion, people from all parts of Tamil Nadu and from Kerala visit this durgah. People who visit the Ervadi Durgah in Ramanathapuram district are supposed to visit this durgah. The Anniversary urus festival of Hazrat Sulthan Sikandar badusha Shaheed is commemorated on 17th night of the Islamic month of Rajab every Hijri year.
Major automobile producers, including General Motors, Ford, Toyota and Honda, are regular buyers of components produced in the city.
In 2008, C Chandramouli, the IT Secretary to the government of Tamil Nadu, said that the " ... work culture, low attrition rates and also the availability of educational institutions in these tier II cities [such as Madurai] is attracting these companies,” This followed announcements of business process outsourcing ventures in the area involving HCL, Satyam and Sutherland Global Services. The state government proposed two IT- Special Economic Zone (SEZ)s in Madurai and these have been fully occupied by various IT companies. The work on provision of infrastructure is in progress in Information Technology parks.
''The Hindu'', ''The New Indian Express'' and ''The Times of India'' are the three principal English language daily newspapers which have editions published in the city. Deccan Chronicle, though not printed here, is widely circulated in the city. Tamil language daily morning newspapers include ''Dina Malar'', ''Dina Thanthi'', ''Dina Mani'' and ''Dinakaran''. There are also daily evening newspapers, being ''Tamil Murasu'', ''Malai Murasu'' and ''Malai Malar''.
Category:Madurai Category:Madurai railway division Category:Divisions of Indian Railways Category:Southern Railway (India) Zone Category:Planned cities in India Category:Former Indian capital cities Category:Ancient Indian cities
ca:Madurai cs:Madurai de:Madurai et:Madurai es:Madurai eo:Maduraj fa:مادورای fr:Madurai ko:마두라이 hi:मदुरई bpy:মদুরাই id:Madurai it:Madurai kn:ಮಧುರೈ pam:Madurai ml:മധുര mr:मदुरै nl:Madurai new:मदुराय ja:マドゥライ no:Madurai pnb:مادورائ pl:Maduraj pt:Madurai ro:Madurai ru:Мадурай simple:Madurai fi:Madurai sv:Madurai ta:மதுரை te:మదురై th:มทุไร uk:Мадурай vi:Madurai war:Madurai zh:马杜赖This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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