( ; ), formerly , is the capital of the Indian
state of West Bengal
. It is located in eastern India on the east bank of the River Hooghly
. When referred to as Calcutta, it usually includes the suburbs, and thus its population exceeds 15 million, making it India
's third-largest metropolitan area and urban agglomeration as well as the world's 8th largest agglomeration.
Kolkata served as the capital of India during the
British Raj until 1911. Once the centre of
modern education, industry, science, culture and politics in India,
Kolkata has witnessed intense political violence, clashes and
economic stagnation since 1954.
Since the year 2000, economic rejuvenation has spurred on the
city's growth. Like other metropolitan cities in India, Kolkata
continues to struggle with the problems of
urbanisation: poverty, pollution and
traffic congestion.
Kolkata is noted for its revolutionary history, ranging from the
Indian struggle for
independence to the
leftist and
trade union movements.
Name
The name Kolkata and the anglicised name Calcutta have their roots
in
Kalikata, the name of one of the three villages
(
Kalikata,
Sutanuti,
Govindapur) in
the area before the arrival of the British. "Kalikata", in turn, is
believed to be a version of
Kalikshetra ( , "Land of [the
goddess]
Kali"). Alternatively, the name may
have been derived from the Bengali term
kilkila ("flat
area"). Again, the name may have its origin in the indigenous term
for a natural canal,
Khal, followed by
Katta
(which may mean dug). Another theory is that the place used to
specialize in quicklime (
kalicun) and coir rope
(
kátá) and hence the place was called Kalikátá.
While the city's name was always pronounced "Kolkata" in the local
Bengali language, its official
English name was changed from "Calcutta" to "Kolkata" in 2001,
reflecting the Bengali pronunciation. Some view this as a move to
erase the legacy of British rule.
This change has not always been reflected
by overseas media, but news sources like the BBC have opted to call
Bombay Mumbai
and
Calcutta Kolkata. On the other hand, many Indians
still refer to the city by its old British name.
History
The discovery of the nearby
Chandraketugarh, an archaeological site,
provides evidence that the area has been inhabited for over two
millennia.
The city's documented history, however,
begins with the arrival of the English East India Company in 1690, when
the Company was consolidating its trade business in Bengal
.
Job Charnock, an administrator with the
Company was traditionally credited as the founder of this city.
However some academics have recently challenged the view that
Charnock was the founder of the city, and in response to a public
interest litigation the High Court ruled in 2003 that the city does
not have a specific founder.
At that time Kolkata, under direct rule of the
Nawab of Bengal Siraj-Ud-Daulah, comprised three villages
Kalikata,
Govindapur and
Sutanuti.
The
British
in the late
17th century wanted to build a fort near Govindapur in order to consolidate their power
over other foreign powers—namely the Dutch
, the
Portuguese
, and the French
.
In 1702,
the British completed the construction of old Fort
William
, which was used to station its troops and as a
regional base. Calcutta was declared a
Presidency City, and later became the
headquarters of the
Bengal
Presidency. Faced with frequent skirmishes with
French forces, in 1756 the British
began to upgrade their fortifications. When protests against the
militarisation by the
Nawab of
Bengal Siraj-Ud-Daulah went
unheeded he attacked and captured Fort William, leading to the
infamous
Black Hole of
Calcutta incident. A force of Company
sepoys and British troops led by
Robert Clive recaptured the city the following
year.
Calcutta was named the capital of British India in 1772, and starting in 1864
during the summer months, the capital was temporarily shifted to
the hilly town of Shimla
.
In the
early 19th century the marshes surrounding the city were drained
and the government area was laid out along the banks of the
Hooghly
River
. Richard Wellesley,
the
Governor General between
1797–1805, was largely responsible for the growth of the city and
its public architecture which led to the description of Calcutta as
"The City of Palaces". The city was a centre of the British East
India Company's
opium trade during the 18th
and 19th century; locally produced opium was sold at auction in
Kolkata, to be shipped to China.
By the early 19th century, Kolkata was split into two distinct
areas—one British (known as the White Town), the other Indian
(known as Black Town). The city underwent rapid industrial growth
from the 1850s, especially in the textile and
jute sectors; this caused a massive investment in
infrastructure projects like railroads and telegraph by British
government. The coalescence of British and Indian culture resulted
in the emergence of a new
Babu
class of urbane Indians — whose members were often bureaucrats,
professionals, read newspapers, were
Anglophiles, and usually belonged to
upper-
caste Hindu
communities. Throughout the nineteenth century, a socio-cultural
reform, often referred to as the
Bengal Renaissance resulted in the
general uplifting of the people. In 1883,
Surendranath Banerjee organised a
national conference —
the first of its kind in nineteenth century India. Gradually
Calcutta became a centre of the
Indian independence movement,
especially
revolutionary
organisations. The
1905
Partition of Bengal on communal grounds resulted in widespread
public agitation and the boycott of British goods (
Swadeshi movement).
These activities,
along with the administratively disadvantageous location of
Calcutta in the eastern fringes of India, prompted the British to
move the capital to New
Delhi
in 1911.
The city and its port were bombed several times by the
Japanese during
World War II, the first occasion being 20
December 1942, and the last being 24 December 1944. During the War,
millions starved to death during the
Bengal famine of 1943, caused by a
combination of military, administrative and natural factors. In
1946, demands for the creation of a Muslim state led to
large-scale communal violence resulting in
the deaths of over 4,000 people. The
partition of India also created intense
violence and a shift in demographics — large numbers of Muslims
left for
East Pakistan, while hundreds
of thousands of Hindus fled into the city.Over the 1960s and 1970s,
severe power shortages, strikes and a violent
Marxist-Maoist movement — the
Naxalites — damaged much of the city's
infrastructure, leading to an economic stagnation.
In 1971, war between
India
and Pakistan
led to the mass influx of thousands of refugees
into Kolkata resulting in a massive strain on its
infrastructure. In the mid-1980s, Bombay, now Mumbai
, overtook
Kolkata as India's most populous city. Kolkata has been a
strong base of Indian communism as West Bengal has been ruled by
the
CPI dominated
Left
Front for 32 years now — the world's longest-running
democratically elected
Communist
government. The city's economic recovery gathered momentum after
economic reforms in India
introduced by the central government in the mid-1990s. Since 2000,
Information Technology (IT)
services have revitalized the city’s stagnant economy. The city is
also experiencing a growth in the manufacturing sector.
Geography
Kolkata is located in eastern India at in the
Ganges Delta at an elevation ranging between to
.
It is
spread linearly along the banks of the River Hooghly
in a north-south direction. Much of the city
was originally a vast wetland, reclaimed over the decades to
accommodate the city's burgeoning population. The remaining
wetland, known as
East Calcutta
Wetlands has been designated a "wetland of international
importance" under the
Ramsar
Convention.
Like the most of the
Indo-Gangetic
plains, the predominant soil type is
alluvial. Quaternary sediments consisting of clay,
silt, various grades of sand and gravel underlie the city. These
sediments are sandwiched between two clay beds, the lower one at
depths between and and the upper one ranging between and in
thickness. According to the
Bureau of Indian Standards, the
town falls under
seismic zone-III, in a
scale of I to V (in order of increasing proneness to earthquakes)
while the wind and
cyclone zoning is "very
high damage risk", according to
UNDP report.
Urban structure

Kolkata cityscape.
Kolkata city, under the jurisdiction of the
Kolkata Municipal Corporation
(KMC), has an area of . The Kolkata urban agglomeration (
Kolkata Metropolitan Area),
however, is spread over , and comprises 157 postal areas, as of
2006. The urban agglomeration is formally administered by several
local governments including 38
local municipalities. The urban
agglomeration comprises 72 cities and 527 towns and villages.
The
suburban areas of Kolkata metropolitan district incorporates parts
of the districts North 24 Parganas
, South 24 Parganas
, Howrah
, Hooghly
and Nadia
.
The east-to-west dimension of the city is narrow, stretching from
the Hooghly River in the west to roughly the
Eastern Metropolitan Bypass in
the east, a span of barely – . The north-south expansion is roughly
divided into North, Central and South Kolkata. North Kolkata
locality is the oldest part of the city, with 19th century
architecture and narrow alleyways. South Kolkata grew mostly after
independence of India
and consists of posh localities such as Ballygunge, Alipore, New
Alipore.
The Salt Lake City
area to the northeast of the city is a planned
section of Kolkata. Rajarhat
, also called New Town, is a planned township being
developed on the north-eastern fringes of the city.
Central Kolkata houses the
central business district around
the
B. B.
D. Bagh
area. The
government secretariat,
General Post Office,
High Court,
Lalbazar Police HQs and several other government
and private offices are located here.
The Maidan
is a large open field in the heart of the city
where several sporting events and public meetings are held.
Several companies have set up their offices around the area south
of
Park Street which has become
a secondary central business district.
Climate
Kolkata has a
tropical
wet-and-dry climate (
Koppen climate classification
Aw). The annual mean temperature is ; monthly mean
temperatures range from to . Summers are hot and humid with
temperatures in the low 30's and during dry spells the maximum
temperatures often exceed 40 °C (104 °F) during May and
June. Winter tends to last for only about two and a half months,
with seasonal lows dipping to 9 °C – 11 °C
(54 °F – 57 °F) between December and January.
The highest recorded temperature is and the lowest is . On an
average, May is the hottest month with daily temperatures ranging
from a low of to a maximum of , while January the coldest month has
temperatures varying from a low of to a maximum of .Often during
early summer, dusty squalls followed by spells of thunderstorm or
hailstorms and heavy rains with ice sleets lash the city, bringing
relief from the humid heat. These thunderstorms are
convective in nature, and is locally known
as
Kal baisakhi ( , Nor'westers).
Rains brought by the Bay of Bengal branch of South-West monsoon
lash the city between June and September and supplies the city with
most of its annual rainfall of . The highest rainfall occurs during
the monsoon in August— . The city receives 2,528 hours of sunshine
per annum, with the maximum sunlight occurring in March. Pollution
is a major concern in Kolkata, and the
Suspended Particulate Matter
(SPM) level is high when compared to other major cities of India,
leading to regular
smog and
haze. Severe air pollution in the city has caused rise
in pollution-related respiratory ailments such as lung
cancer.
Economy

Vendors selling flowers in a
market.
Informal economy in the form of hawkers has traditionally been
a major part of the city's economy
Kolkata is the main business, commercial and financial hub of
eastern India and the
northeastern states. It is home to the
Calcutta
Stock Exchange — India's second-largest
bourse. It is also a major commercial and military
port, and the only city in the region to have an international
airport. Once India's leading city and Capital, Kolkata experienced
a steady economic decline in the years following India's
independence due to the prevalent unstabilised political condition
and rise in trade-unionism. Between the 1960s to the mid 1990s,
flight of capital was enormous as many large factories were closed
or downsized and businesses relocated. The lack of capital and
resources coupled with a worldwide glut in demand in the city's
traditional industries (e.g.
jute) added to the
depressed state of the city's economy. The liberalisation of the
Indian economy in the 1990s has
resulted in the improvement of the city's fortunes.Until recently,
flexible production had always been the norm in Kolkata, and the
informal sector has comprised more
than 40% of the labour force. For example,
roadside hawkers generated business worth
Rs. 8,772
crore
(around 2 billion
U.S. dollars) in
2005. State and federal government employees make up a large
percentage of the city's workforce. The city has a large unskilled
and semi-skilled labour population, along with other blue-collar
and knowledge workers.Kolkata's economic revival was led largely by
IT services, with the IT
sector growing at 70% yearly — twice that of the national average.
In recent years there has been a surge of investments in the
housing infrastructure sector with several new projects coming up
in the city. Kolkata is home to many industrial units operated by
large Indian corporations with products ranging from electronics to
jute. Some notable companies headquartered in Kolkata include
ITC Limited,
Bata
India,
Birla Corporation,
Coal India Limited,
Damodar Valley Corporation,
United Bank of India,
UCO Bank and
Allahabad
Bank.
Recently, various events like adoption of
"Look East" policy by the government of India, opening of the
Nathu
La
Pass in Sikkim as a border trade-route with
China
and immense interest in the South East Asian countries to enter the
Indian market and invest have put Kolkata in an advantageous
position.
Civic administration
The civic administration of Kolkata is executed by several
government agencies, and consists of overlapping structural
divisions. At least five administrative definitions of the city are
available; listed in ascending order of area, those are: 1)
Kolkata District, 2) the
Kolkata Police area, 3) the
Kolkata Municipal Corporation
area ("Kolkata city"), 4) "Greater Kolkata", which includes the KMC
area and a few neighbourhoods adjacent to it, and 5) the urban
agglomeration or
Kolkata
Metropolitan Area (
Kolkata Metropolitan
Development Authority (KMDA) is responsible for the statutory
planning and development of the metropolitan area).Kolkata
Municipal Corporation (KMC)- The governance of the city proper—the
area within which KMC has a directly-elected council of 141 ward
councillors who elect a council Chairman and an executiive Mayor.
The Mayor, in turn chooses a Deputy Mayor and not more than 10
elected councillors to form the Mayor-in-Council which works like a
cabinet. In addition, there is a Municipal Accounts Committee
(MAC)of five to seven elected councillors, other than the MiC,
chosen through proportional representation, to act like a public
accounts committee (PAC), usually headed by the Leader of
Opposition. The MiC was introduced in 1980 and the system has been
replicated in other Municipalities and Panchayats as Mayor/
Chairperson-in-council during 1981-1991. No other state in India
has introduced a system of political executive in local
government.
(KMC) functions— The main functions of the KMC are water supply,
drainage and sewerage, sanitation, solid wastes management, streets
and public places, street lighting, and building regulation. Fire
services are handled by a state agency- Kolkata Fire Brigade.
Similarly, for the river port services, there is a Kolkata Port
Trust, an agency of the central government.
Other authorities: the Collector of the
Kolkata District, the
Kolkata Police, the Collector/District
Magistrate (DM) of South 24 Parganas District, and the
Superintendent of Police (SP) of
South 24 Parganas District. As of 2008, the
CPI led
Left Front holds
the power in KMC. The city also has an apolitical titular post,
that of the
Sheriff of
Kolkata.
As the capital of the state and the seat of the
Government of West Bengal, Kolkata
houses not only the offices of the local governing agencies, but
also the
West Bengal
Legislative Assembly, the state Secretariat (
Writers' Building) and the
Calcutta High Court. Kolkata also has
lower courts; the
Small Causes Court forcivil matters, and
the
Sessions Court for criminal
cases. The
Kolkata Police, headed by
the Police Commissioner, comes under the West BengalHome Ministry.
The city elects 3 representatives to the
Lok
Sabha (India's lower house) and 21 representatives to the state
Legislative Assembly.
Utility services and media
The KMC supplies
potable water to the
city, sourced from the River Hooghly.
The water is purified
and treated at Palta water pumping station located in North 24
Parganas
. Almost all of Kolkata's daily refuse of
2500
tonnes is transported to the dumping
grounds in
Dhapa to the east of the town.
Agriculture on this dumping ground is encouraged for natural
recycling of garbage and sewer water. Parts of the city still lack
sewage facilities leading to unsanitary methods of waste disposal.
Electricity is supplied by the privately operated
Calcutta Electric Supply
Corporation (CESC) to the city region, and by the
West Bengal State
Electricity Board in the suburbs. Frequent interruption of
power supply was a problem until the mid 1990s; however the
situation has since improved immensely with seldom power cuts
occurring presently. The city has 20 fire stations (under
West Bengal Fire Service) that
attend to 7,500 fire and rescue calls on average per year.
State-owned BSNL
and private
enterprises like Vodafone, Airtel, Reliance Communications, Aircel, Idea Cellular,
Tata DoCoMo, Tata Indicom, Virgin
Mobile and MTS India are the leading
telephone and cell phone service
providers in the city. Cellular coverage is extensive with
both
GSM and
CDMA services
being available.
Broadband
internet penetration has steadily increased with BSNL,
Tata Indicom,
Sify, Airtel,
Reliance and
Alliance being the
leading service providers.
Bengali language newspapers like
Anandabazar Patrika,
Aajkaal,
Bartaman,
Sangbad Pratidin and
Ganashakti,
Dainik Statesman are widely circulated.
Popular English language newspapers published and sold in Kolkata
include the
Times of India,
Hindustan Times,
The Hindu,
The Statesman,
The Telegraph and
Asian Age. Some major periodicals are
Desh,
Sananda,
Unish
Kuri,
Kindle,
Anandalok and
Anandamela. Being the biggest trading market
in Eastern India, Kolkata has a substantial readership of many
financial dailies including
The
Economic Times,
The
Financial Express and
Business Standard. Vernacular
newspapers such as those in
Hindi,
Gujarati,
Oriya,
Urdu,
Punjabi and
Chinese are also read by a minority.
All India Radio (AIR), the
state-owned radio broadcaster, airs several
AM radio stations in the city. Kolkata has
12
local
FM radio stations, including
two from AIR. The state-owned television broadcaster
Doordarshan provides two free terrestrial
channels, while four
MSO
provide a mix of Bengali, Hindi, English and other regional
channels via
cable.
Bengali 24-hour
television news channels include
STAR
Ananda,
Tara Newz,
Kolkata TV,
24 Ghanta
and Channel 10.
Transport

Kolkata is the only Indian city with
trams
Public transport is provided by the
Kolkata suburban railway,
the
Kolkata Metro,
trams and buses. The suburban network is extensive and
extends into the distant suburbs. The Kolkata Metro, run by the
Indian Railways, is the oldest
underground system in India. It runs parallel to the River Hooghly
and spans the north-south length of the city covering a distance of
16.45 km. Buses are the preferred mode of transport and are
run by both government agencies and private operators. Kolkata is
India's only city to have a tram network, operated by
Calcutta Tramways Company. The
slow-moving tram services are restricted to certain areas of the
city. Water-logging due to heavy rains during the monsoon sometimes
interrupts the public transport.
Hired forms of mechanised transport include the yellow metered
taxis, while
auto rickshaws ply in
specific routes. Almost all the taxis in Kolkata are
Ambassadors.
This is unlike most
other cities where Tata Indicas or Fiats
are more
common. In some areas of the city,
cycle rickshaws and hand-pulled
rickshaws are also patronised by the public for
short distances. Private owned vehicles are less in number and
usage compared to other major cities due to the abundance in both
variety and number of public vehicles. However, the city witnessed
a steady increase in the number of registered vehicles; 2002 data
showed an increase of 44% over a period of seven years. The road
space (matched with population density) in the city is only 6%,
compared to 23% in Delhi and 17% in Mumbai, creating major traffic
problems. Kolkata Metro Railway and a number of new roads and
flyovers have decongested the traffic to some extent.
Kolkata
has two major long distance railway
stations at Howrah
Station
and Sealdah
. A third station named Kolkata has been
launched in early 2006. The city is the headquarters of two
divisions of the Indian Railways —
Eastern Railway and
South Eastern Railway.
The
city's sole airport, the Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International
Airport
at Dum
Dum
to the north of the city, operates both domestic
and international flights. Kolkata is also a major riverport
in eastern India.
The Kolkata
Port Trust manages both the Kolkata docks and the Haldia
docks. There are passenger service to Port Blair
in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
and cargo ship service to
various ports in
India and abroad, operated by the Shipping Corporation of
India. Also there are ferry services connecting
Kolkata with its twin city of Howrah
.
Demographics
Residents of Kolkata are called
Calcuttans. As of 2001,
Kolkata city had a population of 4,580,544, while the urban
agglomeration had a population of 13,216,546. Current estimates for
2009 project the city's population to be 5,080,519. The
sex ratio is 928 females per 1000 males
which is lower than the
national
average, because many working males come from rural areas,
where they leave behind their families. Kolkata's literacy rate of
81% exceeds the all-India average of 80%. Kolkata Municipal
Corporation area has registered a growth rate of 4.1%, which is the
lowest among the million-plus cities in India.
Bengalis comprise the majority of
Kolkata's population (55%), with
Marwaris
and
Bihari communities forming a large
portion of the minorities (20%). Some of
Kolkata's minor communities
include
Chinese,
Tamils,
Nepalis,
Oriyas,
Telugus,
Assamese,
Gujaratis,
Anglo-Indians,
Armenians,
Tibetans,
Maharashtrians,
Punjabis and
Parsis.
Major languages spoken in Kolkata are
Bengali,
Hindi,
Urdu,
English,
Oriya, and
Bhojpuri.
According to the census, 80% of the population in Kolkata is
Hindu, 18%
Muslim, 1%
Christian and 1%
Jains. Other minorities such as
Sikhs,
Buddhist,
Jews and
Zoroastrian
constitute the rest of the city's population. 1.5 million people,
who constitute about a third of the city's population, live in
2,011 registered and 3,500 unregistered (occupied by
squatters)
slums.
Kolkata reported 67.6% of total Special and Local Laws (SLL) crimes
registered in 35 Indian mega cities in 2004. Kolkata police
district registered 10,757
IPC
cases in 2004, which was 10th highest in the country. The crime
rate in the city was 71 per 100,000 against the national rate of
167.7 in 2006, which is the lowest among all the mega cities in
India. Kolkata's
Sonagachi area, with more
than 10,000
sex workers, is one of Asia's
largest
red-light
districts.
Culture
Kolkata has long been known for its literary, artistic and
revolutionary heritage. As the former capital of India, Kolkata was
the birthplace of modern Indian literary and artistic thought.
Kolkatans tend to have a special appreciation for art and
literature; its tradition of welcoming new talent has made it a
"city of furious creative energy".
Cited by: For these reasons, Kolkata has often been dubbed as the
"cultural capital of India".
A characteristic feature of Kolkata is the
para or neighbourhoods having a strong
sense of community. Typically, every
para has its own
community club with a clubroom and often, a playing field. People
here habitually indulge in
adda or leisurely chat, and these adda
sessions are often a form of freestyle intellectual conversation.
The city has a tradition of political
graffiti depicting everything from outrageous
slander to witty banter and limericks, caricatures to
propaganda.
Kolkata has many buildings adorned with
Gothic,
Baroque,
Roman,
Oriental and
Indo-Islamic (including
Mughal)
motifs. Several major buildings of the Colonial period are well
maintained and have been declared "heritage structures", while
others are in various stages of decay. Established in 1814, the
Indian Museum is the oldest museum in
Asia and houses vast collection of
Indian natural history and
Indian art.
The Victoria Memorial
, one of the major tourist attractions in
Kolkata, has a museum documenting the city's history.
The
National
Library of India
is India's leading public library. Academy of Fine Arts and
other art galleries hold regular art exhibitions.
The city has a tradition of dramas in the form of
jatra (a kind of folk-theatre), theatres and
Group Theatres. Mainstream
Hindi films are
popular, as are films from the
Bengali
cinema industry, dubbed "Tollywood".
Tollygunj
in Kolkata is the location of Bengali movie
studios. Its long tradition of filmmaking includes acclaimed
directors such as
Satyajit Ray,
Mrinal
Sen,
Tapan Sinha and
Ritwik Ghatak to contemporary directors such
as
Aparna Sen and
Rituparno Ghosh.
Key elements of
Kolkata's cuisine
include rice and
macher jhol (fish curry), with
rasagolla,
sandesh and
mishti doi (sweet yoghurt) as dessert.
Bengal's vast repertoire of fish-based dishes includes various
hilsa preparations (a favorite among
Bengalis). Street foods such as
beguni (fried
battered eggplant slices),
kati roll
(flatbread roll with vegetable or chicken, mutton, or egg
stuffing),
phuchka (deep fried crêpe with
tamarind and lentil sauce) and
Indian Chinese cuisine from
China Town in the eastern parts of the
city are quite popular.
Bengali women commonly wear the
shaŗi
as per tradition and global/western outfits. Among men, western
dressing has greater acceptance.
Durga Puja is the most important and the
most glamourous event in Kolkata. It usually takes place in the
month of October, although it can also fall in September or
November, depending on the traditional calendar. Other notable
festivals include
Jagaddhatri Puja,
Diwali,
Eid,
Holi,
Christmas,
poila boishak (new year),
Saraswati puja,
Rath
Yatra and Poush parbon (harvest festival). Some of the cultural
festivals are
Kolkata Book Fair,
Dover Lane music festival,
Kolkata Film Festival and
National Theatre
Festival.
In the nineteenth and twentieth century,
Bengali literature was modernized in the
works of authors such as
Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay,
Michael Madhusudan Dutt,
Rabindranath Tagore,
Kazi Nazrul Islam and
Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay. The
rich literary tradition set by these authors has been carried
forward in the works of
Jibanananda
Das,
Bibhutibhushan
Bandopadhyay,
Tarashankar
Bandopadhyay,
Manik
Bandopadhyay,
Ashapurna Devi,
Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay,
Buddhadeb Guha,
Mahashweta Devi,
Samaresh Majumdar,
Sanjeev Chattopadhyay and
Sunil Gangopadhyay among others.
The city is also noted for its appreciation of
Indian classical music as well as
Bengali folk music such as
baul. From the early
1990s, there has been an emergence of
new genres of music, including
fusions of
Baul and
Jazz by
several
Bangla bands, as well as the
emergence of what has been called
Jeebonmukhi Gaan (a
modern genre based on realism) by artists like
Kabir Suman,
Nachiketa
and bands like
Chandrabindoo,
Cactus.
Education
Kolkata's schools are either run by the state government or by
private (many of which are religious) organisations. Schools mainly
use
Bengali or
English as the
medium of instruction, though
Hindi and
Urdu are also used. The
schools are affiliated with the
West Bengal Board of
Secondary Education, the
Indian Certificate of
Secondary Education , the
Central Board for
Secondary Education , the
National Institute of Open
School and the
A-Level (British
Curriculum). Under the
10+2+3 plan,
after completing their secondary education, students typically
enroll in a 2 year
junior college
(also known as a pre-university) or in schools with a higher
secondary facility affiliated with
West Bengal
Council of Higher Secondary Education, ICSE or CBSE. Students
usually choose from one of three streams —
liberal arts,
commerce,
or
science, though vocational streams are
also available. Upon completing the required coursework, students
may enrol in general or professional degree programmes.
Kolkata houses
nine
universities and numerous colleges affiliated to them or to
other universities located outside. The
University of Calcutta (founded in
1857) has more than 200 affiliated colleges.
Bengal Engineering
& Science University and
Jadavpur University are notable
engineering universities.
Calcutta Medical College is the
first institution teaching modern
medicine
in Asia. Other notable institutions are
Presidency College,
St. Xavier's College,
Bethune College (the first women's
college in India) and
Scottish
Church College.
Some institutions of national importance are
the Asiatic Society, Bose Institute, the Indian Statistical Institute,
the Indian
Institute of Management,the Indian
Association for the Cultivation of Science, the Variable Energy Cyclotron
Centre, the Saha
Institute of Nuclear Physics, the Centre for
Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta, the West Bengal National University of
Juridical Sciences
, the Marine Engineering and
Research Institute, the Rabindra Bharati University, the
Indian Institute of Science Education and
Research, the S.N.
Bose
National Centre for Basic Sciences, the
Indian
Institute of Social Welfare and Business Management, and the
National
Institute of Fashion Technology, Indian Institute of Chemical
Biology.
The Indian
Institute of Technology Kharagpur
and National Institute of
Technology, Durgapur are within a few hours distance from the
city.
Sports
Association football (sometimes
referred to as 'soccer'),
cricket and
field hockey are popular sports in the
city. Kolkata is one of the major centres of football activity in
India. Kolkata is known as Mecca of Indian Football.
Calcutta Football League, which
started in 1898, is the oldest football league in
Asia. Kolkata is home of top national Sports Clubs such
as
Mohun Bagan AC,
Mohammedan Sporting
Club and
East Bengal, who are
among the top football clubs of India.Chirag United SC and George
Telegraph SC are two other clubs from the city who also play in the
I-League.
Mohun
Bagan AC, the oldest football clubs in
Asia, is the only club to be entitled 'National Club of
India'.
As in the rest of India,
cricket is
extremely popular and is played throughout the city in its grounds
and streets. Tournaments, especially those involving outdoor games
like cricket, football, and
badminton or
indoor games like
carrom are regularly
organized on an inter-locality or inter-club basis.
The maidan
area hosts several minor football and cricket clubs
and coaching institutes. Notable sports stars from Kolkata
include former
Indian
national cricket captain Sourav
Ganguly and
Olympic tennis bronze medallist
Leander Paes. Former football stars
include Olympic medalist
Sailen Manna,
Chuni Goswami,
P.K. Banerjee,
Subrata Bhattacharya, and Current
Football star, India Captain
Bhaichung
Bhutia.
Kolkata is known for its large stadia.
The Eden Gardens
is one of only two 100,000-seat cricket stadiums in
the world. Salt Lake Stadium
(also known as Yuva Bharati Krirangan)—a multi-use
stadium—is the world's third largest capacity football
stadium. Calcutta Cricket and Football
Club is the second-oldest cricket club in the world.
Kolkata
has three 18-hole golf courses at the Royal Calcutta Golf Club (the first
golf club in the world outside Britain
), Tollygunge Club and Fort
William
. The
Royal Calcutta Turf Club (RCTC)
holds regular equestrian races and
polo
matches. The
Calcutta Polo Club
is now considered as the oldest polo club of the world. The
Calcutta South Club is the venue
for some national and international tennis tournaments.
From
2005, Sunfeast Open, a Tier-III
tournament of Women's Tennis
Association Tour, takes place in Netaji
Indoor Stadium
. The
Calcutta Rowing Club hosts regular
rowing races and training.
Kolkata is also home to
Shahrukh
Khan-owned
Kolkata Knight
Riders IPL cricket team
franchise.
Although it is a minor sport, Kolkata is considered the "capital"
of
rugby union in India. The
city also gives its name to the name of the oldest international
tournament in rugby union, the
Calcutta
Cup, which is of Indian workmanship.
Sister cities
See also
Notes
References
External links