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ABOUT CHENNAI
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The vibrant history of the city of Chennai which
was previously named as Madras, traces back to
368 years and Chennai was originally a tiny
fishing village. The region surrounding Chennai
has served as a significant administrative,
military, and economic centre dating back to the
1st century. It has been ruled by renowned South
Indian kingdoms like the Pallava, the Chola, the
Pandya, and Vijaynagar empires.
On 22 August 1639, Francis Day of the British
East India Company acquired a small strip of
land in the Coromandel Coast from the
Vijayanagara King, Peda Venkata Raya (a.k.a.
Venkata III) in Chandragiri. The region was
under by the Damerla Venkatapathy, Nayak of
Vandavasi.The permission was granted to build a
factory and warehouse for their trading
activities. A year later, Fort St George was
built, which gradually became the nucleus around
which the colonial city grew. In 1746, Fort St
George and Madras were captured by the French
under General La Bourdonnais, the Governor of
Mauritius, who ransacked the town and its
outlying villages.
The treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1749 ensured
the reacquiring of British regained control over
the town and consequently equipped the base to
endure further attacks from the French and Hyder
Ali, the powerful Sultan of Mysore. By the late
18th century, the British had occupied most of
the region around Tamil Nadu and the northern
modern-day states of Andhra Pradesh and
Karnataka to establish the Madras Presidency,
whose capital was Madras and under the British
patronage only the city of Madras or
contemporary Chennai evolved as a major urban
centre and naval base.
Chennai is 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. After independence in 1947,
the city attained the status of the capital of
Madras State, which was renamed Tamil Nadu in
1969. |