The region around
Chennai/
Madras has served as an important administrative, military, and economic centre for many centuries. During
1st century CE, a poet and weaver named
Thiruvalluvar lived in the town of
Mylapore (a neighbourhood of present Chennai). From 1st century CE until 12th CE the region of present
Tamil Nadu and parts of south
India was ruled by the
Cholas.
Stone age implements have been found near
Pallavaram in Chennai. According to the
Archaeological Survey of India (
ASI), Pallavaram was a megalithic cultural establishment, and pre-historic communities resided in the settlement.The
Pallavas of Kanchi built the areas of
Mahabalipuram and Pallavaram during the reign of
Mahendravarman I. They also defeated several kingdoms including the
Cheras, Cholas and
Pandyas who ruled over the area before their arrival. Sculpted caves and paintings have been identified from that period.
Ancient coins dating to around
500 BC have also been unearthed from the city and its surrounding areas. A portion of these findings belonged to the
Vijayanagara Empire, which ruled the region during the medieval period.
The
Portuguese first arrived in 1522 and built a port called
São Tomé after the
Christian apostle,
St. Thomas, who is believed to have preached in the area between 52 and 70
AD. In
1612, the
Dutch established themselves near
Pulicat, north of the Chennai. On 22 August 1639, which is referred to as
Madras Day, the
British East India Company under
Francis Day bought a small strip of land stretching 3 miles on the
Coromandel Coast. They got a license to build a fort and a castle in the contracted region. The ruler of the area, Chennapa
Nayak, the Nayaka of
Vandavasi, granted the
British permission to build a factory and warehouse for their trading enterprises. The region was then primarily a fishing village known as "Madraspatnam". A year later, the British built
Fort St. George, the first major British settlement in India, which became the nucleus of the growing colonial city (Fort St. George housed the
Tamil Nadu Assembly until the new
Secretariat building was opened in
2010).
In 1746, Fort St. George and Madras were captured by the
French under
General La Bourdonnais, the
Governor of Mauritius, who plundered the town and its outlying villages. The British regained control in 1749 through the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle and strengthened the town's fortress wall to withstand further attacks from the French and
Hyder Ali, the
Sultan of
Mysore. They resisted a French siege attempt in 1759 under the leadership of
Eyre Coote. In 1769 the city was threatened by Mysore and the British were defeated by Hyder Ali, after which the
Treaty of Madras ended the war. By the late
18th century, the British had conquered most of the region around Tamil Nadu and the northern modern--day states of
Andhra Pradesh and
Karnataka, establishing the
Madras Presidency with Madras as the capital.
Gradually, the city grew into a major naval base and became the central administrative center for the British in
South India. With the advent of railways in India in the
19th century, the thriving urban centre was connected to other important cities such as
Bombay and
Calcutta, promoting increased communication and trade with the hinterland. Madras was the only
Indian city to be attacked by the
Central Powers during
World War I, when an oil depot was shelled by the
German light cruiser
SMS Emden on
22 September 1914, as it raided shipping lanes in the
Indian Ocean, causing disruption to shipping
After India gained its independence in
1947, the city became the capital of
Madras State.
- published: 31 Jan 2013
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