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Explore Kolkata
About Kolkata |
Kolkata Introduction
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A city of love and warmth, sorrow and despair, dreams and hopes, poverty and
squalor, grandeur and glory. Kolkata is compelling , effervescent, teeming
with life and traditions - a medley of moods, styles, cultures, politics,
industry and commerce. More than 300 years ago, Job Charnock, an English
tradesman set up a trading post on the banks of the Ganga along the
three-village nucleus. Gradually Europeans started setting up business and
trade establishments, the moneyed class taking interest in banking and
usury. The East India Company steadily encroached into matters of state. The
fate of the Nawabi rule was sealed in the Battle of Plassey and the English
went ahead to seize power, a grip which loosened only 250 years later when
power was transferred from the British Empire to the Indians. Independent
India has crossed 50 years and these five decades have seen many miracles.Kolkata has grown, remains a city of contrasts, a mix-up of light and
shade, a strange medley of ancient and modern, skyscrapers and Victorian
edifices, haven of the rich and the poor as seldom found anywhere in the
world.
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Facts and Figures
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| Area |
187 Sq km |
| Altitude |
5.8 metres above sea level. |
| Temperature |
Summer:Max 41.7 °C,Min 38.1 °C.
Winter :Max 36.3 °C, Min 9.6 °C. |
| Language |
Bengali |
| STD Code |
33 |
| Rainfall |
158 cm |
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Kolkata History
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Kolkata is not an ancient city like Delhi, with its impressive relics of
the past. In fact, it's largely a British creation which dates back only
some 300 years and was the capital of British India until the beginning of
this century.
In 1686, the British abandoned Hooghly, their trading post 38km up the
Hooghly River from present-day Kolkata, and moved downriver to there small
villages - Sutanati, Govindpur and Kolkata. Kolkata takes its name from
the last of those three tiny settlements.
Much of the Kolkata's most enduring development took place between 1780 and
1820. Latter in the 19th century, Bengal became an important centre in the
struggle for Indian independence, and this was a major reason for the
decision to transfer the capital to Delhi in 1911. Loss of political power
did not alter Kolkata's economic control, and the city continued to prosper
until after WW11. |
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How to Reach Kolkata
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Air: Kolkata is connected by air with Jorhat, Lucknow, Mumbai,
Nagpur, Patna, Port Blair, Ranchi, Silchar, Tezpur, Visakhapatnam, Amritsar,
Delhi and Leh.
Rail: Kolkata is connected by rail with all major cities of the
country.
Road: Kolkata is well connected by road with all major parts of the
country.
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Best Season to Visit Kolkata
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You must not miss Kolkata in the month of October for the colourful
festivities and people in complete high due to the Durga Puja as well as
Kali Puja that take place one after the other.
However, the period remains filled with joy upto the month of March as some
event or the other keeps taking place, be it cultural or sports related.
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