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Encyclopedia > Chengalpattu

Chingleput or Chengalpattu is a city in northern Tamil Nadu state of India. It is located on the Palar River about 56 km south-southwest of the city of Chennai (Madras). Chingleput is an important railway junction and commercial center. It has a medical school and other colleges affiliated with the University of Madras.


History

Chingleput was formerly a capital of the kings of Vijayanagara, after their defeat by the Muslim Deccan sultanates at Battle of Talikota in 1565. In 1639 a local governor or Nayak, subject to these kings, granted a piece of coastal land to the British East India Company where Fort St George now stands, which became the nucleus of the city of Madras. The fortress at Chingleput, built by the Vijayanagara kings in the 16th century, was of strategic importance, owing to its swampy surroundings and the lake that flanked its side. Chingleput was taken by the French in 1751, and was retaken in 1752 by Robert Clive, after which it proved of great strategic advantage to the British, especially when Lally failed to capture the fortress in his advance on Madras. During the wars of the British with Hyder Ali of Mysore it withstood his assault, and afforded a refuge to the nearby residents; in 1780, after the defeat of Colonel W. Baillie, the army of Sir Hector Munro took refuge there. By 1900 the town was noted for its manufacture of pottery, and was a local market center, especially of the rice trade. The surrounding district was home to cotton and silk weaving, indigo dyeing, tanneries, and a cigar factory, and extensive salt manufacturing took place along the coast.


Chingleput District

Chingleput was established as a district of the Madras Presidency in 1765. The administrative headquarters were at Saidapet. The area of the district was 3079 sq. mi., and the population was 1,312,122 in 1901. In 1999, the district was split into the districts of Kanchipuram and Thiruvallur.


  Results from FactBites:
 
SPECIAL STORY (1508 words)
The Chengalpattu Survey of 1767 - 1774 signalled the first attempt made by the English East India Company to understand the ways of living and life of the Indian people before firming up and streamlining the modes of effectively controlling and administering them.
Chengalpattu District encircles the city of Madras in a wide arc on three sides, stretching about 180 kilometers long and at places up to 80 kilometers wide.
The locality accounts of the Chengalpattu Survey present a picture of Indian society and polity that is the exact opposite of these images of poverty and dysfunctionality presented by most British and European writers and authorities'.
Chingleput - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (524 words)
Chingleput or Chengalpattu is a city and a municipality in Kancheepuram district in the state of Tamil Nadu, India.
Chengalpattu is a railway junction on the North South Corridor connecting Chennai on the North East, Kanchipuram on the West, to other parts of the country down South to Kanyakumari.
Today Chengalpattu has developed as a touristic spot for many foreign travellers on their way to Mamallapuram and Kanchipuram.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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