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Coromandel Coast

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An 18th-century illustration of beautiful plants and flowers from the coast of India, showcasing the rich biodiversity of the region.

The Coromandel Coast is a beautiful coastal region along the southeastern edge of the Indian peninsula. It stretches from the Krishna river mouth in the north to the Bay of Bengal in the east, ending at Point Calimere cape to the south. To the west, it is bordered by the Eastern Ghats, a range of low hills. Some people also include areas as far north as Ganjam. This coast covers a large area and sits above sea level.

Long ago, this land was known as Cholamandalam in Tamil, meaning "the realm of the Cholas" after the ruling Chola dynasty. Later, it was called the Maʿbar Coast. The Coromandel Coast has been important to India's history and culture for many centuries.

Etymology

The name "Coromandel" comes from old times. In Tamil, a language spoken in Tamil Nadu, the land of the Chola dynasty was called Cholamandalam, meaning "The realm of the Cholas". Portuguese traders later changed this to "Coromandel".

Another idea is that Dutch sailors stopped at a place called Karimanal near Pulicat. They may have misheard the name and called it 'Corimondal', and that name stayed. An Italian explorer, Ludovico di Varthema, wrote about the area in 1510, and soon maps showed the name Coromandel. The Dutch then began trading there.

History

By the late 1530s, the Coromandel Coast had three settlements where people from Portugal lived, at Negapatão, São Tomé de Meliapore, and Paliacate.

During the 1600s and 1700s, many European countries wanted to control trade with India, and they built forts along the coast. The British built forts at Fort St George (Madras) and Masulipatnam, the Dutch at Pulicat and Sadras, the Belgians at Covelong, and the French at Pondicherry, Karaikal and Nizampatnam. The Danish also had a place called Dansborg or Tranquebar.

Sarasa chintz from the Coromandel Coast, 17th or 18th century, made for the Japanese market. Private collection, Nara Prefecture.

Eventually, the British became the strongest, but France kept small areas like Pondichéry and Karaikal until 1954. Special items from China, such as boxes and screens, were called “Coromandel” goods because many of them were sent out from ports along this coast.

In 2004, a very powerful earthquake under the ocean near Sumatra caused big waves that hurt many places along the coast, including the Coromandel Coast.

Vegetation

Flora

Lagerstroemia speciosa, from William Roxburgh's 1795 publication, Plants of the coast of Coromandel - Volume 1

The Coromandel Coast has a special type of forest called the East Deccan dry evergreen forests. These forests grow in a narrow strip along the coast. They are different from other dry forests because their trees keep their tough leaves all year, even when it’s dry.

The area also has large mangrove forests along the coast and river deltas. Important wetlands like Kaliveli Lake and Pulicat Lake are homes to many birds.

Applications of the name

Four ships in the Royal Navy were named after the Indian coast, HMS Coromandel. Because of this, a place in New Zealand called the Coromandel Peninsula, and a nearby town named Coromandel, got their names from one of these ships. In South Australia, a valley and a suburb are named Coromandel Valley and Coromandel East, after a ship that arrived there in 1837 with settlers from England.

The Coromandel Express at the Godavari arch bridge towards Rajahmundry.

In Slovenia, there is a saying that means a wonderful, perfect place, calling it "India Coromandel." A famous poem by Edward Lear also begins with the words "On the Coast of Coromandel."

The Coromandel Express is a train in India that travels along the east coast between Shalimar railway station in West Bengal and Chennai Central railway station in Tamil Nadu.

Images

A historical map from 1753 showing the Coromandel Coast region in India.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Coromandel Coast, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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