Tiruchirappalli
Tiruchirappalli திருச்சிராப்பள்ளி |
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State : | India | |
State : | Tamil Nadu | |
District : | Tiruchirappalli | |
Sub-district : | Tiruchirappalli | |
Location : | 10 ° 49 ′ N , 78 ° 42 ′ E | |
Residents : | 847,387 (2011) | |
View of Tiruchirappalli and the Rock Fort, in the foreground the Kaveri River |
Tiruchirappalli ( Tamil : திருச்சிராப்பள்ளி Tiruccirāppaḷḷi [ ˈt̪iɾɯtːʃiɾaːpːaɭːi ]; there are several different spellings in the Latin script), earlier English. Trichinopoly , also known as Tiruchi or Trichy for short , is a city in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu . Located on the banks of the Kaveri River, Tiruchirappalli is the fourth largest city in Tamil Nadu with around 850,000 inhabitants (2011 census). Tiruchirappalli is an important industrial location, university town and administrative seat of the Tiruchirappalli district. The main attraction of the city is the Rock Fort , a fortress on a steep rock in the heart of the city. In the immediate vicinity, on a river island in the Kaveri, is the temple town of Srirangam with the Ranganathaswami temple , one of the most important Hindu shrines in Tamil Nadu.
geography
Tiruchirappalli is located in the center of Tamil Nadu, 320 kilometers southwest of Chennai (Madras), the capital of the state. The city is the administrative seat of the Tiruchirappalli District . The river Kaveri (Cauvery), the most important river in Tamil Nadu, flows through Tiruchirappalli . At Tiruchirappalli the Kaveri divides into two arms, of which the northern one is called Kollidam (Coleroon) and the southern one keeps the name Kaveri. To the east of Tiruchirappalli, the river branches further into a broad estuary delta.
The area of the municipality of Tiruchirappalli ( Tiruchirappalli Corporation ) covers 146.7 square kilometers and can be divided into three areas: The old town of Tiruchirappalli extends on the south bank of the Kaveri at the foot of the 83-meter-high steep rock on which the Rock Fort is built. To the south of the densely built-up old town is the new town ( cantonment area ), which was laid out during the British colonial era . In the north, on a river island between Kaveri and Kollidam, is the temple town of Srirangam , which administratively also belongs to Tiruchirappalli.
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Monthly average temperatures and rainfall for Tiruchirapalli
Source: WMO
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history
Uraiyur , now a suburb of Tiruchirappalli, was the capital of the early Chola rulers. It was founded in the 3rd century BC. Mentioned in the Ashoka inscriptions and in the 2nd century AD by the Greek geographer Claudius Ptolemy as Orthura ( Ὄρθουρα ). After the invasion of the Kalabhra , the Chola dynasty disappeared in the 3rd century. In the 9th century, the Chola, now from Thanjavur , rose again to become the most powerful empire in South India and also ruled the area of Tiruchirappalli. After the decline of the Chola in the 13th century, the area was controlled by the Hoysala , then the Pandya of Madurai and the short-lived Sultanate of Madurai , before coming under the rule of the Vijayanagara Empire in 1372 . After the decline of Vijayanagar made Tiruchirappalli came under the control of the Nayaks of Madurai in the 16th century, who had been installed as military governors by the Vijayanagar rulers and who now filled the power vacuum that had developed (see Nayak dynasties ).
The fortress of Tiruchirappalli was built during the Nayak rule. The city developed into one of the centers of the Nayak Empire and was even the capital of the Nayak rulers from 1616 to 1634 and again from 1665 to 1736. In the turmoil that followed the end of the Nayak dynasty in 1736, Tiruchirappalli came under the rule of the Nawabs of Arcot . During the Carnatic Wars , in which Great Britain and France fought for supremacy in southern India, the Fort of Tiruchirappalli was besieged several times by the French and their allies between 1751 and 1759. In the Peace of Paris in 1763 , which put an end to French ambitions in India, Tiruchirappalli was awarded to the Nawabs of Arcot. In 1801 the Nawab ceded its possessions to the British, and Tiruchirappalli was incorporated into British India . After Indian independence in 1947, Tiruchirappalli came to the state of Madras , which was renamed Tamil Nadu in 1969 .
population
According to the 2011 census, Tiruchirappalli has 846,915 inhabitants. This makes Tiruchirappalli the fourth largest city in Tamil Nadu after Chennai , Coimbatore and Madurai . The population development is constantly increasing. Between 2001 and 2011, Tiruchirappalli's population grew by 13 percent.
74 percent of the population of Tiruchirappalli are Hindus , 15 percent are Muslims and 11 percent are Christians (2011 census). The city is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tiruchirappalli , the Diocese of Trichy-Tanjore of the Anglican Church of South India and the Bishop of Tranquebar of the Tamil Evangelical Lutheran Church .
The main language in Tiruchirappalli is, as in all of Tamil Nadu, Tamil , which according to the 2001 census is spoken by 89 percent of the population as their mother tongue. 5 percent speak Telugu , 4 percent Urdu and 2 percent speak other languages.
Culture and sights
The main attraction of Tiruchirappalli City is the Rock Fort , a fortress on the steep 83 meter high rock, at the foot of which the old town of Tiruchirappalli extends. The fort in its current form was built during the Nayak period in the 17th century. Its origins go back further into the past, as two cave temples from the Pallava period in the 6th century show. The Thayumanavaswami Temple, dedicated to the god Shiva , halfway up the rock, was celebrated in the 7th century by the poet saint Sambandar . This makes it one of the holy places of Tamil Shaivism ( Padal Petra Sthalams ). The Uchi Pillayar Temple, dedicated to the god Ganesha , is located on the tip of the rock spur . 437 stairs lead to the summit, from where there is a wide view of Tiruchirappalli and across the Kaveri River to the temple of Srirangam.
On the opposite side of the river, on a river island, is the temple city of Srirangam . The Ranganathaswami Temple of Srirangam, dedicated to the god Vishnu , is the most important of the Vishnuit shrines ( Divya Desams ) in Tamil Nadu. It is also an outstanding example of the Dravidian temple style . The temple complex covers an area of 960 × 825 meters; it is enclosed by seven concentric wall rings with 21 gopurams (gate towers), the highest of which is 73 meters high. The actual sanctuary is located in the area between the four innermost wall rings, the outer areas form a district with streets, houses and shops, mainly inhabited by Vishnuit Brahmins . This makes Srirangam the ideal example of a south Indian temple city. In addition, there is an important Shivaitic sanctuary in Srirangam with the Sri Jambukeshwara temple, which is consecrated to Shiva.
Economy, education and infrastructure
Tiruchirappalli is an important industrial location. In the city there is a metalworking factory of Bharat Heavy Electricals , which makes industrial steam boilers , a locomotive factory of Golden Rock Locomotive Workshops , a chemical factory of Trichy Distilleries and Chemicals Limited , a steel mill of Trichy Steel Rolling Mills and, since 2010, an IT park . The Indian Ordnance Factory Tiruchirapalli (OFT) is also located there. She manufactures u. a. the South African Anti-Materiel Rifle Denel NTW-20 under license as Vidhwansak .
In the field of education, Tiruchirappalli is home to a university and a technical college. The Bharatidasan University was established under public ownership 1,982th The National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirappalli is part of the network of 30 national technical universities ( National Institutes of Technology ), which are maintained by the Indian central government. There are also numerous colleges in Tiruchirappalli , of which St. Joseph's College, founded by Jesuits in 1844, is the most traditional.
Tiruchirappalli has good transport links. The city, located in the center of Tamil Nadu, is the crossroads of numerous highways: National Highway 45 , the most important north-south connection of Tamil Nadu from Chennai to Theni , and National Highway 67 from Gundlupet to Nagapattinam run through Tiruchirappalli ; The city is also the starting point for National Highway 45B to Thoothukudi , National Highway 210 to Ramanathapuram and National Highway 227 to Chidambaram . From Tiruchirappalli Station ( Tiruchirappalli Junction ) there are numerous train connections to all major cities in India. With Tiruchirapalli Airport, Tiruchirappalli has its own airport. In addition to domestic Indian flights, there are regular connections to Sri Lanka and the Gulf States .
Personalities
Born in Tiruchirappalli
- Thomas Roch Agniswami , Bishop of Kottar
- Sheila Arnold (* 1970), concert pianist
- Prabhu Edouard , percussionist
- Pablo Mariaselvam SDB , Bishop of Vellore
- Arokia Rajiv (* 1991), track and field athlete
- CV Raman , physicist and Nobel Prize winner
- T. Sankaran , percussionist
- Vidya Pillai , snooker player; eleven times winner in two disciplines of the Indian snooker championship
Work in Tiruchirappalli
- Christian Friedrich Schwartz , missionary
- Paul Gäbler , missionary from the Leipziger Missionswerk
literature
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Census of India 2011.
- ^ Tiruchirappalli Corporation: Town Planning Department .
- ^ Census of India 2011: C-1 Population By Religious Community. Tamil Nadu.
- ↑ Census of India 2001: C-16 City: Population by Mother Tongue (Tamil Nadu), accessed under Tabulations Plan of Census Year - 2001 .
- ↑ BSF IG satisfied of AMR produced at OFT. In: oneindia.com. February 15, 2008, accessed February 13, 2016 .
- ^ Vidhwansak AMR - Anti-Materiel Rifle / Sniper Rifle - History, Specs and Pictures - Military, Security and Civilian Guns. In: militaryfactory.com. Retrieved February 13, 2016 .