Timeline of Chennai history
This is a timeline of major events in the history of Chennai.
Prehistory
- Around 250,000 BCE: An Old Stone Age settlement thrives on Pallavaram Hill.
- 1000 BCE: Megalithic settlement at Kundrathur.
Before 17th century
- 300 BCE - 300 CE: Sangam period in Tamil Nadu. Some Chennai neighbourhoods such as Mylapore appear to have been places of prominence during the Sangam period. The Sangam period saint Thiruvalluvar is often associated with Mylapore.
- 31 BCE: Thiruvalluvar is born in Mylapore.
- 52 - 70 CE: According to Christian tradition, one of the Christian apostles St. Thomas arrives in the vicinity of Chennai and preaches in the city. He is allegedly martyred on St. Thomas Mount.[1][2][3]
- 806 CE: Date of the oldest surviving inscription in the city, a mixed Tamil-Sanskrit record of the Pallava king Dantivarman found in the Parthasarathi Temple at Triplicane.
- 900 - 1200 CE: Chennai forms a part of the Chola Empire. Neighbourhoods to the south of Egmore form part of the Chola province of Puliyur Kottam while those to the north form part of province of Puzhal Kottam.
- 1522: The Portuguese occupy Mylapore and set up a colony which they name São Tomé de Meliapore.
- 1523: Portuguese establish San Thome Church in honour of St. Thomas.
17th century
- 1612: Dutch arrive and capture the region and establish near Pulicat, just north of the city.
- 1626: The British East India Company decide to build a factory on the east coast and select Armagon (Dugarazpatnam), a village some 35 miles north of Pulicat, as its site.
- 1637: Francis Day, one of the officers of the East India Company, a member of the Masulipatam Council and the chief of the Armagon Factory, makes a voyage of exploration in 1637 down the coast as far as Pondicherry in order to choose a site for a new settlement.
- 1639: The English secures a grant from the Damarla Venkatadri Nayaka, Nayaks of Kalahasti, for getting a three-mile-long strip of land and the city of Madras is founded (22 August).[4] Foundation is laid for Fort St. George.
- The population of the Portuguese and Dutch settlers in the region reaches 10,000, although substantially outnumbered by the local population.
- 1640: Francis Day and Andrew Cogan land with 25 Europeans (20 February). Fort St. George is completed (23 April).
- 1646: Population of the city recorded as 19,000.[5]
- 1664: First British hospital in the country is started in Fort St. George (16 November); later becomes the Government General Hospital.
- 1668: Triplicane is annexed to the city.
- 1669: Population of the city increased to 40,000.[5]
- 1678: Foundation is laid for St. Mary's Church in Fort St. George.
- Kalikambal Temple was built in its new location.[6]
- 1679: St. Mary's Church is completed.
- 1688: Madras City Municipal Corporation is inaugurated.
- 1693: Egmore, Purasawalkam and Tondiarpet are annexed to the city.[6]
18th century
- 1701: Emperor Aurangazeb's general Daud Khan attacks Fort St. George. However, the British manage to hold the Fort.[7]
- 1708: Five neighbouring villages of Thiruvottiyur, Nungambakkam, Vyasarpadi, Kottivakkam and Sathangadu are annexed to the city.
- Wall is built around Black Town.
- 1711: First printing press is erected.
- 1751: East India Company acquires Tondiarpet.[7]
- 1721: Cyclone strikes (13 and 14 November).
- 1726: Coja Petrus Uscan constructs the 134 stone steps at St. Thomas Mount, which are still used to reach the summit of the 300-feet hillock.[7]
- 1735: Chintadripet is formed.
- 1742: Vepery, Periamet, Perambur and Pudupakkam are annexed to the city.
- 1744: Robert Clive, who later goes on to become the hero of the Carnatic, works as a writer at Fort St. George.[7]
- 1746: The French Admiral La Bourdonnais capture Fort St George.[7]
- 1749: The French return Madras to the English through the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748).[7]
- 1758: French Commander Lawly sieges Madras.
- 1759: French siege ends.
- 1760: New Black Town is developed over the debris of the old Black Town.[8]
- 1767: Hyder Ali invades the city for the first time.
- 1768: Chepauk Palace is built by Nawab of Arcot.
- 1769: Hyder Ali invades the city for the second time.
- 1772: General Hospital at Fort St. George moves to its present location.[6]
- Seven Wells Scheme, the city's first organised water supply, is started.[8]
- 1777: Veerappillai is appointed as first Kotthawal, giving rise to the name 'Kotthawal Chavadi'.
- 1783: Fort St. George is repaired and attains the present shape.
- 1784: The first newspaper, Madras Courier, is founded.
- 1785: First post office starts functioning.
- 1786: William Petrie, a member of the Madras Government, builds a private astronomical observatory, the first observatory in the East.[9]
- 1788: Thomas Parry lands in Madras and begins the oldest surviving mercantile name in the city—Parry's.[8]
- 1792: Systematic meteorological observations start, giving birth to the Madras Observatory and later the Regional Meteorological Centre.[9]
- 1794: The Government Survey School, the oldest engineering school outside Europe and now part of the Anna University, commences at Fort St. George.[8]
- American merchant William Abbott is appointed the first American consular agent of the Madras Presidency, marking the first consular presence in the city (24 November).[10]
- 1795: Triplicane Wallajah Mosque is built.[8]
- 1798: The area of the city was demarcated as the 69 sq km area surrounding the Fort and contained 16 hamlets within it.[5]
19th century
- 1817: Madras Literary Society is founded.
- 1819: Madras Eye Infirmary, later the Egmore Eye Hospital, is established.
- 1826: Board of Public Instructions is founded.
- 1831: First Commercial Bank, Madras Bank, is founded.
- First census in the city is taken (population: 39,785).
- 1832: Madras Club is founded.
- 1834: First survey school is inaugurated; later develops as an engineering college.
- 1835: First medical college is founded; later becomes Madras Christian College.
- 1840: Captain S. O. E. Ludlow begins hourly recording of meteorological observations.[9]
- 1841: Ice House is built, where ice brought from America through ships is stored; later gets renamed as Vivekananda House.
- 1842: First lighthouse is built.
- General Hospital, originally meant only for the English, opens its doors to Indians.[6]
- 1844: Higginbotham's, the first book store in the country, is opened.
- 1846: Pachaiappan School is founded; later becomes Pachaiappa's College.
- 1851: Museum is formed.
- 1853: Zoo is formed.
- 1854: Imperial Hotel is opened, which later becomes the Taj Connemara, the oldest functioning hotel in the city.[11]
- 1855: University Board is formed.
- 1856: First Railway line from Royapuram to Arcot is built.
- 1857: University of Madras is founded.
- 1862: First pier is constructed at the harbour.[5]
- 1864–65: Presidency College is built.
- 1868: Attempt begins to protected water supply.
- Further developments at the harbour begin.[5]
- 1873: Birth registration begins.
- Madras Mail newspaper is founded.
- Cosmopolitan Club is founded.
- 1874: University Senate House is built.
- 1875: Madras observatory starts issuing daily weather reports.[9]
- 1876–78: Great Famine wipes the city.
- Buckingham Canal is dug.
- 1878: The Hindu newspaper is founded.
- 1882: First telephone is installed.
- 1885: Marina Beach road is formed.
- 1886: Indian National Congress meets at Madras.
- Connemara Public Library is founded.
- 1889: High Court Building foundation is laid.
- 1893: San Thome Church is rebuilt in neo-Gothic style.[12]
- 1894: First car is sold; A. J. Boag, director of Parry & Co, drives the car on city roads.
- 1895: First tram car service is inaugurated.
- 1899: First Tamil newspaper, Swadesamitran, is founded.
20th century
- 1901: The city, covering an area of about 70 sq km, has a population of 540,000.[5]
- 1905: Chennai Port Trust is formed.
- 1906: Indian Bank is founded.
- King Institute, Guindy is founded.
- 1910: Parsi fire temple is built at Royapuram.[13]
- 1911: Government Royapettah Hospital is established.
- 1914: Water mains and drainage are formed.
- Street lights are introduced.
- Kilpauk water works is inaugurated.
- Emden bombardment—German fighter vessel Emden bombarded the sea shore and disappeared during the First World War.
- 1917: First aeroplane flies; Simpson & Co. arranges for the trial flight.
- 1923: The city is expanded to occupy an area of about 80 sq km.[5]
- 1924: School of Indian Medicine is founded.
- 1925: Loyola College is founded.
- First bus transport begins.
- 1928: Tambaram TB Sanatorium is established (9 April).
- 1930: First broadcasting station is founded at Ripon Buildings complex.
- 1931: Suburban electric train services start (from Chennai Beach to Tambaram).
- 1934: Raja Sir Muthiah Chettiyar is appointed first mayor of the city.
- 1938: All India Radio is formed and broadcasting from Ripon Buildings ceases.
- Government Stanley Hospital is established.
- 1942: Second World War results in evacuation of Madras.
- 1943: Japanese fighter plane drops bombs on city and disappears.
- Population of the city crosses the million mark.[5]
- 1945: Regional Meteorological Centre is established from the old Madras observatory.[9]
- 1946: Mambalam, Saidapet, Government Farm, Puliyur, Kodambakkam, Saligramam, Adayar and Alandur villages, which formed part of Saidapet Municipality, are annexed to the city. Sembiyam, Siruvallur, Peravallur, Small Sembarambakkam and Ayanavaram, which formed part of Sembium Panchayat Board, are annexed to the city. Aminjikarai, Periyakudal, Maduvankarai villages, which formed part of Aminjikarai Panchayat Board, are annexed to the city. Part of Velacheri village, belonging to Velacheri Panchayat Board, is annexed to the city.
- 1947: Indian national flag is hoisted over Fort. St. George.
- Madras city chose capital of Madras state
- 1950: Boundary of the city is extended to cover 129 sq km by the inclusion of Saidapet and Sembium[5]
- 1952: Nehru Stadium is built.
- Integral Coach Factory starts functioning.
- 1953: Government Dental College is founded (10 August).
- 1954: Adyar Cancer Institute is founded (June 18).
- 1956: Gandhi Mandapam is built.
- 1956: Madras city Capital of Tamil Nadu state
- 1957: Sri Lanka opens its consulate.[14]
- 1959: Guindy Children's Park is inaugurated.
- LIC Building is built.
- 1960: Kilpauk Medical College starts functioning.
- 1961: Malaysia opens its consulate.[15]
- 1965: Heavy Vehicles Factory is established at Avadi.
- 1966: Japan opens its consulate.[16]
- Stedeford Hospital starts functioning (25 February).
- 1969: First World Tamil Congress is held.
- Madras State was renamed Tamil Nadu, meaning Tamil country.
- 1971: Snake Park is inaugurated.
- 1972: Madras Metropolitan Development Authority is formed.
- 1973: Madras Corporation is superseded.
- 1974: Rajaji Mandapam is built.
- Madras Television Centre is founded.
- Taj Coromandel hotel, the first Taj Group hotel, is opened (14 April).
- Taj Group of Hotels opens its second hotel in the city, the Fisherman's Cove.
- 1975: Kamaraj Mandapam is built.
- Valluvar Kottam is built.
- Chola Sheraton hotel is opened (18 October).
- 1976: New (present) lighthouse is built.
- 1977: Madras Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewage Board is formed.
- Kanagam, Taramani, Thiruvanmiyur, Velacheri, Kodambakkam, Virugambakkam, Saligramam, Koyambedu, Thirumangalam, Villivakkam, Errukancheri, Kolathur and Kodungaiyur panchayat areas are annexed to the city.
- 1978: Sankara Nethralaya hospital is founded (6 September).
- 1981: Adyar Gate Hotel, later the Park Sheraton hotel is constructed.
- 1982: Hindu Mission Hospital is founded (5 December).
- 1983: Zoo is shifted to Vandalur.
- Apollo Hospitals opens the country's first corporate hospital.
- 1985: Sri Ramachandra Hospital is established (September 11).
- 1987: Singapore opens its consulate (17 September).[17]
- Madras Medical Mission hospital is established.
- 1988: Periyar Science Park is formed.
- Birla Planetarium is built.
- Madras Corporation's tercentenary is celebrated.
- Decentralisation of administration occurs.
- 10 circles are formed.
- The Trident hotel is opened (March).
- 1990: Sundaram Medical Foundation is established.
- 1995: Australia opens its consulate.[18]
- 1996: City of Madras is renamed as Chennai.
- 1998: Maximum permissible height of tall buildings is raised from 40 m to 60 m.
- 1999: MIOT Hospital is established.
- Radisson Hotels opens its first hotel, the Radisson GRT in the city (1 March).
- 2000: Le Royal Meridien hotel is opened (30 December).
21st century
- 2002: The Park hotel is opened (15 May).
- Intercity bus terminus at George Town gets shifted to Chennai Mofussil Bus Terminus (CMBT) at Koyambedu (18 November).[19]
- 2004: Indian Ocean Tsunami wreaks havoc in the city, killing about 206 persons (26 December).[20]
- 2005: Thailand opens its consulate.[21]
- 2007: Chettinad Health City hospital is established.
- 2008: Taj Group of Hotels opens its fourth hotel, the Taj Club House (December).
- 2010: First seawater desalination plant starts functioning at Minjur (25 July).[22]
- 2011: Nine municipalities, 8 town panchayats, and 25 village panchayats are annexed to the city. The city reaches the present stage of 426 km2 from 174 km2.
- Hilton Chennai hotel is inaugurated (28 February).
- Hyatt Regency hotel is inaugurated (10 August).
- 2012: A second Radisson hotel (3 March), ITC Grand Chola (15 September) and Park Hyatt (1 October) hotels are inaugurated.
- 2013: Leela Palace hotel is inaugurated.
- Second seawater desalination plant starts functioning at Nemmeli (22 February).[23]
- Belgium opens its consulate (28 November)
- 2014: South Korea opens its consulate (7 February)
- 2015: The Chennai Metro starts functioning.
- The 2015 South Indian floods cause the deaths of hundreds of people and damages worth several billions of dollars.
See also
References
- ↑ The Encyclopedia of Christianity, Volume 5 by Erwin Fahlbusch. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing - 2008, Page 285. ISBN 978-0-8028-2417-2.
- ↑ A. E. Medlycott, (1905) "India and the Apostle Thomas"; Gorgias Press LLC; ISBN 1-59333-180-0.
- ↑ Thomas Puthiakunnel, (1973) "Jewish colonies of India paved the way for St. Thomas", The Saint Thomas Christian Encyclopedia of India, ed. George Menachery, Vol. II.
- ↑ S. Muthiah (21 August 2006). "Founders' Day, Madras". Hindu Times. Retrieved 28 Jan 2009.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Structure of Chennai" (PDF). Chapter 1. CMDA. Retrieved 24 Feb 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 "1639 a.d. to 1700 a.d.". History of Chennai. ChennaiBest.com. Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "1701 A.D. to 1750 A.D.". History of Chennai. ChennaiBest.com. Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "1751 A.D. to 1800 A.D.". History of Chennai. ChennaiBest.com. Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "History of Old Madras Observatory". Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ↑ "History". US Consulate Chennai. Retrieved 15 Jan 2012.
- ↑ Haripriya, V. (25 August 2008). "Tracing its roots". Ergo 360°. Retrieved 3 Dec 2011.
- ↑ "A day in Chennai". Chennai Magic. Archived from the original on July 8, 2013. Retrieved 30 Sep 2012.
- ↑ Muthiah, S. (4 July 2010). "Madras Miscellany: The century-old Parsi temple". The Hindu. Chennai: The Hindu. Retrieved 27 Apr 2014.
- ↑ "About Us". Sri Lanka Deputy High Commission in Southern India. Retrieved 12 Feb 2012.
- ↑ "Corporate Information—History". Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Malaysia. Retrieved 5 Feb 2012.
- ↑ "Greetings from the Consul-General, Mr. Kazuo Minagawa". Consulate-General of Japan in Chennai. Retrieved 1 Mar 2012.
- ↑ "History of Singapore Immigration". Immigration & Checkpoints Authority, Government of Singapore. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- ↑ "Australian Minister for Trade opens Australian Consulate-General in Chennai". UTSAV Australia: Australian Trade Commission—India. 26 February 2007. Retrieved 19 Jul 2012.
- ↑ "Chennai Mofussil Bus Terminal (CMBT)". CMDA. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ↑ "Asia's Deadly Waves". The New York Times. The New York Times. Retrieved 26 Oct 2011.
- ↑ "60 Years of Friendship, Thailand–India" (PDF). Retrieved 14 Feb 2012.
- ↑ "Commencement of operations of Chennai Water Desalination Ltd". The Economic Times. 9 August 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
- ↑ "Nemmeli plant brings hope to parched Chennai". The Hindu. Chennai: The Hindu. 22 February 2013.
- "History". ChennaiBest.com. Retrieved 19 Sep 2012.
- "Chennai Historical Timeline". ExploCity. Retrieved 19 Sep 2012.
External links
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