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Mangalore

Mangalore (/ˈmæŋɡəlɔːr, ˌmæŋɡəˈlɔːr/ MANG-gə-lor, -⁠LOR), officially known as Mangaluru,[9] is a major industrial port city in the Indian state of Karnataka and on the west coast of India. It is located between the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats about 352 km (219 mi) west of Bangalore, the state capital, 14 km north of KarnatakaKerala border, 297 km south of Goa. Mangalore is the state's only city to have all four modes of transport—air, road, rail and sea. The population of the urban agglomeration was 619,664 according to the 2011 national census of India. It is known for being one of the locations of the Indian strategic petroleum reserves.

Mangalore
City
Mangaluru
Clockwise from top: Mangalore CBD skyline, Falnir, Infosys campus, Mangalore Chemicals & Fertilizers, Kankanady, MRPL Refinery, KIOCL Pellet plant, New Mangalore Port
Mangalore
Mangalore
Coordinates: 12°52′5″N 74°50′33″E / 12.86806°N 74.84250°E / 12.86806; 74.84250
Country India
StateKarnataka
DistrictDakshina Kannada
TalukMangalore
Named forMangaladevi
Government
 • TypeMayor–Council
 • MayorJayanand Anchan[2]
Area
 • Total170 km2 (70 sq mi)
Elevation
22 m (72 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total724,159[1]
DemonymMangalorean
Languages
 • AdministrativeKannada, English
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
575001 to 575030
Telephone code+91-(0824)
Vehicle registrationKA-19, KA-62[4]
Sex ratio1.016[5]
Human Development Index 0.83 (as of 2015)[6]
very high
Literacy94.03%[7]
Websitewww.mangalurucity.mrc.gov.in

The city developed as a port in the Arabian Sea during ancient times, and after Independence a new port was constructed in 1968 and has since become a major port of India that handles 75 percent of India's coffee and cashew exports. It is also the country's seventh largest container port. Mangalore has been ruled by several major powers, including the Mauryan empire Kadambas, Alupas, Vijayanagar Empire, Keladi Nayaks, and the Portuguese. The city was a source of contention between the British and the Kingdom of Mysore rulers Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan, and was eventually annexed by the British in 1799. Mangalore remained part of the Madras Presidency until India's independence in 1947 and was unified with Mysore State (now called Karnataka) in 1956.

Mangalore is one of the fastest developing cities in India. The Dakshina Kannada district with its administrative headquarters at Mangalore has the highest Per Capita Income and Gross State Domestic Product in Karnataka, after Bangalore.[10] Mangalore is a commercial, industrial, business, educational, healthcare, and startup hub. Mangalore City Corporation is responsible for the civic administration which manages the 60 wards of the city. Its landscape is characterised by rolling hills, coconut palms, rivers, and hard laterite soil.

Mangalore is included as one of the cities in the Smart Cities Mission list and is among the 100 smart cities to be developed in India. It has an average elevation of 22 m (72 ft) above mean sea level. It has a tropical monsoon climate and is under the influence of the southwest monsoon. In 2017, Mangalore was ranked the 48th best city in the world to live in by a US survey, and the only Indian city in the top 50.[11] It has its own International Airport which is around 15 km from the city centre.

Etymology

 
1652 Sanson Map of India

Mangalore was named after the deity Mangaladevi, the presiding deity of the Mangaladevi Temple,[12] or a synonym of the goddess Tara of the Vajrayana Buddhist sect.[13] According to local legend, a princess named Parimala or Premaladevi from Malabar[14] renounced her kingdom and became a disciple of Matsyendranath, the founder of the Nath tradition.[15] Having converted Premaladevi to the Nath sect, Matsyendranath renamed her Mangaladevi.[14][16] She arrived in the area with Matsyendranath, but had to settle near Bolar in Mangalore because she fell ill on the way.[16] When she died, the people consecrated the Mangaladevi temple at Bolar in her honour.[17][14] The city was named for the temple.[18]

One of the earliest references to the city's name was in 715 CE when Pandyan King Chettian called the city Mangalapuram.[15] The city and the coastal region were part of the Pandyan Kingdom.[15] According to K.V. Ramesh, president of the Place Names Society of India, Mangaluru was first used in 1345 CE during Vijayanagara rule.[19] Many shilashasanas (stones) of the Vijayanagara period refer the city as Mangalapura.[19] During the Alupa dynasty period, it was referred to as Mangalapura (Mangala means 'auspicious').[19] In the Kannada language, the city is known as Mangaluru, a reference to Mangaladevi (the suffix uru means town or city).[19] Mangalore was historically an important centre of Indian Ocean trade on the Malabar coast.[20] Hence, it was also known by the name Manjalūr in Arabic.[20] During British rule from 1799, the anglicised version Mangalore became the official appellation.[19] According to historian George M. Moraes, however, the word Mangalore is the Portuguese corruption of Mangaluru.[21]: 2  The city's name appears on maps as far back as the 1652 Sanson Map of India.[22]

Mangalore's diverse communities have different names for the city in their languages.[23] In Tulu, which is the region's primary spoken language, the city is called Kudla, meaning junction because it is situated at the confluence of the Netravati and Gurupura rivers.[24] In Konkani, Mangalore is referred to as Kodiyal and the Beary name for the city is Maikala.[25] In Malayalam, the city is called "Mangalapuram".[citation needed] Mangalore was officially renamed "Mangaluru" by the Karnataka government on 1 November 2014.[9]

History

Early and medieval history

Mangalore's historical importance is highlighted by the many references to the city by foreign travellers.[26] During the first century CE, the Roman historian Pliny the Elder referred to a place called "Nitrias" and said it was an undesirable place for disembarkation because of the pirates who frequented its vicinity,[27] while Greek second-century historian Ptolemy referenced a place named "Nitra".[28] These references were probably about an area with the Netravati River which flows through Mangalore.[28] In his sixth-century work Christian Topography, Cosmas Indicopleustes (a Greek monk) mentions Malabar as being the chief seat of the pepper trade and Mangarouth (port of Mangalore) as one of the five pepper markets which exported pepper.[29][30]

According to Kerala Muslim tradition, the Masjid Zeenath Baksh at Mangalore is one of the oldest mosques in Indian subcontinent.[31] According to the Legend of Cheraman Perumals, the first Indian mosque was built in 624 AD at Kodungallur with the mandate of the last the ruler (the Cheraman Perumal) of Chera dynasty, who left from Dharmadom to Mecca and converted to Islam during the lifetime of Prophet Muhammad (c. 570–632).[32][33][34][35] According to Qissat Shakarwati Farmad, the Masjids at Kodungallur, Kollam, Madayi, Barkur, Mangalore, Kasaragod, Kannur, Dharmadam, Panthalayani (Koyilandy), and Chaliyam, were built during the era of Malik Dinar; they are among the oldest Masjids in Indian Subcontinent.[36] It is believed that Malik Dinar died at Thalangara in Kasaragod town.[37] Three of them, Mangalore, Barkur, and Kasaragod, are in Tulu Nadu.[37]

Mangalore is considered the heart of a distinct multi-linguistic cultural region, the homeland of the Tulu-speaking people.[38] In the third century BCE, the town formed part of the Maurya Empire, which was ruled by the Buddhist emperor Ashoka of Magadha.[14] From the third to the sixth century CE, the Kadamba dynasty, whose capital was based in Banavasi in North Canara, ruled over the entire Canara region as independent rulers.[39] From the middle of the seventh century to the end of the 14th century, the South Canara region was ruled by its native Alupa rulers,[40]: 17 [41][42] who ruled over the region as feudatories of major regional dynasties like the Chalukyas of Badami, Rashtrakutas of Manyakheta, Chalukyas of Kalyani, and Hoysalas of Dwarasamudra.[40] An Old Malayalam inscription (part of the Ramanthali inscriptions which date to 1075 CE), mentions king Kunda Alupa, the ruler of Alupa dynasty of Mangalore. It can be found at Ezhimala (the former headquarters of Mushika dynasty) near Cannanore, in the North Malabar region of Kerala.[43]

During the 1130s and 1140s, during the reign of the Alupa king Kavi Alupendra (1110–1160), the city was home to the Tunisian Jewish merchant Abraham Ben Yiju.[44] The Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta, who visited Mangalore in 1342, referred to it as Manjarur and stated the town was situated on a large estuary called the Estuary of the wolf, which was the greatest estuary in the country of Malabar.[45][46]: 30  By 1345 the Vijayanagara rulers brought the region under their control.[40]: 17 

During the Vijayanagara period (1345–1550), South Canara was divided into Mangalore and Barkur rajyas (provinces), and two governors were appointed to look after each of them from Mangalore and Barkur.[40][47] Often a single governor ruled over both Mangalore and Barkur rajyas; when the authority passed to the Keladi rulers (1550–1763), they only had a governor at Barkur.[40]: 19  In 1448 Abdur Razzaq who was the Persian ambassador of Sultan Shah Rukh of Samarkand, visited Mangalore en route to the Vijayanagara court.[48][46]: 31  The Italian traveller Ludovico di Varthema, who visited India in 1506, said he saw nearly sixty ships laden with rice ready to sail from the port of Mangalore.[40]: 20 

Foundation and early modern history

 
Lopo Vaz de Sampaio, Viceroy of Portuguese India, established Portuguese factories in Mangalore in 1526,[49] which lasted until 1695.[50]
 
A pen and ink drawing of Mangalore Fort made in 1783, after it had been taken over by the British East India Company
 
The tower at Light House Hill, Hampankatta, served as a lookout for the British.[51]

In 1498, European influence in Mangalore began when the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama landed at the nearby St Mary's Islands, just after his arrival at Koyilandy, Kozhikode.[52] The Portuguese acquired many commercial interests in Canara in the 16th century.[53] Krishnadevaraya (1509–1529), the ruler of the Vijaynagara empire maintained a friendly relationship with the Portuguese,[54] whose trade slowly grew and they strove to destroy the coastal Arab and Mappila trade.[40] In 1524, Vasco da Gama ordered the blockading of rivers after he heard the Muslim merchants of Kozhikode had agents at Mangalore and Basrur.[40] In 1526, the Portuguese under the viceroyship of Lopo Vaz de Sampaio took possession of Mangalore.[49] The coastal trade passed into Portuguese hands.[40]: 20 

In 1550, the Vijayanagara ruler Sadashiva Raya entrusted to Sadashiv Nayaka of Keladi with administering the coastal region of Canara.[40] By 1554, he established political authority over South Canara.[55] The 16th century work Tuhfat Ul Mujahideen written by Zainuddin Makhdoom II appears to be the first historical work written in detail about the contemporary history of Mangalore. It is written in Arabic and contains pieces of information about the resistance put up by the navy of Kunjali Marakkar alongside the Zamorin of Calicut from 1498 to 1583 against Portuguese attempts to colonize Tulu Nadu and Malabar coast.[56][57][58]

After the disintegration of the Vijaynagara Empire in 1565, the rulers of Keladi attained greater power in dealing with the coastal Canara region.[40]: 27  They continued the Vijayanagara administrative system[40] and the provinces of Mangalore and Barkur continued to exist.[59][42] The governor of Mangalore also acted as the governor of the Keladi army in his province.[40]: 30  The Italian traveller Pietro Della Valle visited here in 1623–1624.[60] In 1695, Arabs burnt the town in retaliation to Portuguese restrictions on Arab trade.[50]

In 1763, Hyder Ali, the de facto ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore, conquered Mangalore,[61] which was brought under his administration until 1767. Mangalore was ruled by the British East India Company from 1767 to 1783,[62] but Hyder Ali's son Tipu Sultan took it from their control in 1783 and renamed it "Jalalabad".[63][64] The Second Anglo–Mysore War ended with the signing of the Treaty of Mangalore by Tipu Sultan and the British East India Company on 11 March 1784.[65] After the defeat of Tipu at the Fourth Anglo–Mysore War, the city remained under British control. South Canara district was the headquarters under the Madras Presidency.[19][66][67]

Francis Buchanan, a Scottish physician who visited Mangalore in 1801, said the city was a prosperous port with plentiful trade.[68] The main commodity of export was rice; it went to Muscat, Bombay, Goa, and Malabar.[40] Supari (Betel-nut) was exported to Bombay, Surat, and Kutch.[40] Sandalwood and black pepper were exported to Bombay.[40]

Local capital was mainly invested in land and money lending, leading to the regional development of banking because the British colonial government did not support industrialisation there.[69] After European missionaries arrived in the early 19th century, educational institutions and modern industries modelled on European ones were developed in the region.[70] The opening of the Lutheran Swiss Basel Mission in 1834 was an important step towards industrialisation.[71] Missionaries set up printing presses, textile mills and factories that made Mangalore tiles.[38] When Canara (part of the Madras Presidency until this time) was split into North Canara and South Canara in 1859, Mangalore became the headquarters of South Canara,[72]: 5  which remained under Madras Presidency while in 1862, North Canara was transferred to the Bombay Presidency.[72]: 6 

Later modern and contemporary history

On 23 May 1866, a municipal council for Mangalore with responsibility for civic amenities and urban planning was mandated by the Madras Town Improvement Act (1865).[21]: 178  The Italian Jesuits who arrived in the city in 1878, played an important role in the city's education, economy, health, and social welfare.[73] Mangalore was linked to the Southern Railway in 1907 and the subsequent proliferation of motor vehicles in India further increased trade and communication between the city and the rest of the country.[74] Mangalore was a major source of educated workers to Bombay, Bangalore, and the Middle East by the early 20th century.[38]

The States Reorganisation Act (1956) led to Mangalore being incorporated into the newly created Mysore State, which was later renamed Karnataka.[75][76]: 415  Mangalore is the seventh-largest port of India, giving the state access to the Arabian Sea coastline.[38][77] Between 1970 and 1980, Mangalore experienced significant growth with the opening of New Mangalore Port in 1974 and commissioning of Mangalore Chemicals & Fertilizers Limited in 1976.[78][79] The late 20th and early 21st centuries saw Mangalore develop as a commercial and petrochemical hub.[80][81]

Geography

 
Sunset at Netravati Bridge

Mangalore is located on the western coast of India at 12°52′N 74°53′E / 12.87°N 74.88°E / 12.87; 74.88 in Dakshina Kannada district, Karnataka state.[82] It has an average elevation of 22 m (72 ft) above mean sea level.[83] The city is the administrative headquarters of Dakshina Kannada district and is the state's largest coastal urban centre.[84]

 
A schematic map showing the tourist places in Mangalore city

Mangalore is bounded by the Arabian Sea to its west and by the Western Ghats to its east.[82] As a municipal entity the city spans 170 km2 (65.64 sq mi).[3] The Netravati and Gurupura rivers encircle the city; the Gurupura flows around the north and the Netravati flows around the south of the city.[85] The rivers form an estuary in the south-western region of the city, from where they flow into the Arabian Sea.[86] Coconut, palm, and ashoka trees comprise the primary vegetation of the city.[85]

The city's topography consists of a plain that stretches up to 30 km (18.64 mi) from the coast and undulating, hilly terrain towards the east near the Western Ghats.[87] The local geology is characterised by hard laterite in hilly tracts and sandy soil along the seashore.[84] The Geological Survey of India has identified Mangalore as a moderately earthquake-prone urban centre and categorised the city in the Seismic III Zone.[88]

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, Mangalore has a tropical monsoon climate and is under the direct influence of the Arabian Sea branch of the southwest monsoon.[89] It receives about 95 percent of its total annual rainfall between May and September but remains extremely dry from December to March.[89] Humidity is approximately 75 percent on average and peaks during June, July and August.[90] The maximum average humidity is 93 percent in July and average minimum humidity is 56 percent in January.[90] Mangalore experiences moderate to gusty winds during day time and gentle winds at night.[91] The driest and least humid months are from December to February.[92] During this time of year temperatures during the day stay below 34 °C (93 °F) and drop to about 19 °C (66 °F) at night.[93] The lowest temperature recorded at Panambur is 15.6 °C (60 °F) on 8 January 1992 and at Bajpe it is 15.9 °C (61 °F) on 19 November 1974.[94] According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), the temperature in Mangalore has never reached 40 °C (104 °F).[95] The summer gives way to the monsoon season, when the city experiences the highest precipitation of all urban centres in India due to the influence of the Western Ghats.[96] The rains subside in September but there is occasional rainfall in October.[97] The highest rainfall recorded in a 24-hour period is 330.8 mm (13 in) on 22 June 2003.[94] In 1994, Mangalore recorded its highest annual rainfall at 5,018.52 mm (198 in).[98]

Climate data for Mangalore, India (Panambur) 1981–2010, extremes 1968–2012
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.9
(98.4)
38.2
(100.8)
38.1
(100.6)
35.9
(96.6)
36.8
(98.2)
34.9
(94.8)
32.5
(90.5)
31.8
(89.2)
33.8
(92.8)
35.9
(96.6)
36.8
(98.2)
36.9
(98.4)
38.2
(100.8)
Average high °C (°F) 32.5
(90.5)
32.3
(90.1)
32.6
(90.7)
33.3
(91.9)
33.0
(91.4)
29.9
(85.8)
28.8
(83.8)
28.7
(83.7)
29.5
(85.1)
30.6
(87.1)
32.3
(90.1)
32.9
(91.2)
31.4
(88.5)
Average low °C (°F) 21.1
(70.0)
22.0
(71.6)
23.9
(75.0)
25.3
(77.5)
25.4
(77.7)
23.8
(74.8)
23.4
(74.1)
23.4
(74.1)
23.6
(74.5)
23.6
(74.5)
23.0
(73.4)
21.5
(70.7)
23.3
(73.9)
Record low °C (°F) 15.6
(60.1)
17.5
(63.5)
18.7
(65.7)
19.2
(66.6)
20.3
(68.5)
19.8
(67.6)
19.6
(67.3)
20.1
(68.2)
20.1
(68.2)
19.1
(66.4)
16.6
(61.9)
15.6
(60.1)
15.6
(60.1)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 2.8
(0.11)
0.1
(0.00)
2.4
(0.09)
28.1
(1.11)
187.4
(7.38)
1,053.4
(41.47)
975.4
(38.40)
699.0
(27.52)
285.8
(11.25)
216.0
(8.50)
83.8
(3.30)
14.0
(0.55)
3,548.4
(139.70)
Average rainy days 0.2 0.0 0.3 1.7 7.0 23.7 26.6 24.6 14.0 9.5 3.8 0.5 111.7
Average relative humidity (%) (at 17:30 IST) 60 62 65 66 69 83 86 87 82 79 69 61 73
Source: India Meteorological Department[99][100]
Climate data for Mangalore, India (Mangalore International Airport) 1991–2020, extremes 1956–2012
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.8
(98.2)
38.2
(100.8)
39.8
(103.6)
37.8
(100.0)
38.0
(100.4)
36.4
(97.5)
33.3
(91.9)
33.3
(91.9)
35.4
(95.7)
35.2
(95.4)
36.6
(97.9)
36.0
(96.8)
39.8
(103.6)
Average high °C (°F) 33.2
(91.8)
33.6
(92.5)
34.0
(93.2)
34.3
(93.7)
33.5
(92.3)
30.0
(86.0)
28.7
(83.7)
28.8
(83.8)
30.0
(86.0)
31.2
(88.2)
32.8
(91.0)
33.1
(91.6)
31.9
(89.4)
Average low °C (°F) 21.0
(69.8)
22.0
(71.6)
23.8
(74.8)
25.0
(77.0)
25.0
(77.0)
23.6
(74.5)
23.0
(73.4)
23.1
(73.6)
23.2
(73.8)
23.3
(73.9)
22.8
(73.0)
21.6
(70.9)
23.1
(73.6)
Record low °C (°F) 16.1
(61.0)
17.3
(63.1)
18.8
(65.8)
19.7
(67.5)
20.4
(68.7)
20.5
(68.9)
19.8
(67.6)
19.4
(66.9)
20.2
(68.4)
19.1
(66.4)
15.9
(60.6)
16.1
(61.0)
15.9
(60.6)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 0.6
(0.02)
0.0
(0.0)
4.7
(0.19)
34.3
(1.35)
169.8
(6.69)
1,033.8
(40.70)
1,095.8
(43.14)
743.5
(29.27)
341.1
(13.43)
230.5
(9.07)
80.7
(3.18)
12.8
(0.50)
3,747.6
(147.54)
Average rainy days 0.1 0.0 0.3 2.1 6.3 23.5 28.1 25.4 15.0 9.9 4.0 0.8 115.5
Average relative humidity (%) (at 17:30 IST) 55 58 62 64 67 83 86 85 80 78 69 57 70
Mean monthly sunshine hours 303.8 257.1 269.7 258.0 220.1 99.0 55.8 89.9 156.0 186.0 213.0 269.7 2,378.1
Mean daily sunshine hours 9.8 9.1 8.7 8.6 7.1 3.3 1.8 2.9 5.2 6.0 7.1 8.7 6.5
Source: India Meteorological Department (sun 1971–2000)[99][100][101]
Climate data for Mangalore (1961–1990, extremes 1901–1981)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.3
(97.3)
37.8
(100.0)
37.4
(99.3)
36.6
(97.9)
36.7
(98.1)
34.4
(93.9)
35.6
(96.1)
32.2
(90.0)
34.6
(94.3)
35.0
(95.0)
35.6
(96.1)
35.6
(96.1)
37.8
(100.0)
Average high °C (°F) 31.7
(89.1)
31.7
(89.1)
31.9
(89.4)
32.8
(91.0)
32.3
(90.1)
29.9
(85.8)
28.6
(83.5)
28.5
(83.3)
29.2
(84.6)
30.4
(86.7)
31.7
(89.1)
32.0
(89.6)
30.9
(87.6)
Average low °C (°F) 21.7
(71.1)
22.7
(72.9)
24.4
(75.9)
25.7
(78.3)
25.4
(77.7)
23.7
(74.7)
23.1
(73.6)
23.1
(73.6)
23.1
(73.6)
23.4
(74.1)
23.0
(73.4)
22.4
(72.3)
23.5
(74.3)
Record low °C (°F) 16.7
(62.1)
16.7
(62.1)
18.3
(64.9)
20.0
(68.0)
18.9
(66.0)
18.4
(65.1)
18.0
(64.4)
19.8
(67.6)
19.0
(66.2)
18.8
(65.8)
17.6
(63.7)
16.7
(62.1)
16.7
(62.1)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 0.2
(0.01)
3.6
(0.14)
2.5
(0.10)
35.0
(1.38)
199.5
(7.85)
955.8
(37.63)
1,160.3
(45.68)
792.6
(31.20)
331.5
(13.05)
184.0
(7.24)
75.2
(2.96)
33.9
(1.33)
3,774.1
(148.59)
Average rainy days 0.0 0.0 0.1 2.0 7.2 24.5 29.4 25.4 15.3 10.1 4.4 1.3 119.7
Average relative humidity (%) (at 17:30 IST) 65 68 70 71 73 82 86 85 83 80 71 67 75
Source: India Meteorological Department[100][102]

Economy

Industrial, commercial, agricultural processing, and port-related activities comprise this city's economy.[103] The New Mangalore Port is India's seventh-largest container port.[77] It handles 75 percent of India's coffee exports and the bulk of its cashew nuts.[104] The Mangalore Customs Commissionerate collected a revenue of 4.47 billion (US$55.98 million) during 2012–13[105] and 27.91 billion (US$349.53 million) during December 2018.[106] During 2012–13, MRPL and MCF contributed 501 million (US$6.27 million) and 373 million (US$4.67 million), respectively, to the state's revenue.[105] Dakshina Kannada district has the highest percentage of workers employed in industry and the second-highest industry-to-district GDP ratio in Karnataka.[107] Imports through New Mangalore port include crude oil, edible oil, liquefied petroleum gas, and timber.[108]

 
Cognizant campus in Mangalore[109]

The city's major chemical industries include BASF,[110] Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited (MRPL), Mangalore Chemicals and Fertilizers (MCF), Kudremukh Iron Ore Company Ltd. (KIOCL),[111] Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd. (HPCL),[112] Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd. (BPCL),[113] Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL),[114] Total Oil India Limited,[115] and Hindustan Unilever.[116] The Indian government has built 5.33 million tons of strategic crude oil storage at Mangalore and Padur to ensure energy security.[117][118] Out of the 5 million metric tonnes (MMT) storage, 1.5 MMT is stored at Mangalore.[119] Bharati Shipyard Ltd (BSL) (now known as Bharati Defence and Infrastructure Limited) has established a shipbuilding site near Tannirbavi in Mangalore.[120][121]

 
Syndicate Bank at Hampankatta

Major information technology (IT) and outsourcing companies like Infosys,[122] Cognizant,[123] and [124] have their offices at Mangalore.[104] Mphasis' Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) has a branch in this city.[125] IT parks Export Promotion Investment Park (EPIP) at Ganjimutt[126] and Special Economic Zone (SEZ) near Mangalore University have been constructed.[127] An IT park called Soorya Infratech park is situated in Mudipu.[128] Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) has planned to invest 500 crore (US$62.62 million) and set up its office at Karnad near Mangalore.[129][130] KEONICS has planned to build an IT park at Derebail in Mangalore, similar to Electronic City, spanning an area of 100 acres.[131][132][133]

Centre for Entrepreneurship Opportunities and Learning (CEOL) is a startup incubation centre situated in the city.[134] Corporation Bank,[135] Canara Bank,[136] and Vijaya Bank[137] were the three nationalised banks established in Mangalore during the first half of the 20th century. Mangalore is the headquarters of Corporation Bank and Karnataka Bank.[138] The Mangalore Catholic Co-operative Bank (MCC Bank) Ltd.,[139] Mangalore Cooperative Town Bank Ltd.,[140] and SCDCC Bank[141] were the scheduled banks established in Mangalore.

Syngene International which is a contract research arm of Biocon, has set up its manufacturing plant at Mangalore.[142][143] Old Mangalore Port is a fishing port located at Bunder, Mangalore, where a large number of mechanised boats anchor.[144] The traffic at this port was 122,000 tonnes during the years 2003–04.[145] New Mangalore Port handled over 100,000 Twenty-foot equivalent units of containers during the years 2017–18.[146] Fishing is a traditional occupation and the products are sold in the surrounding regions.[147] Mangalorean firms have a major presence in the tile, beedi, coffee and cashew nut industries although the tile industry has declined because concrete is preferred in modern construction.[104][103] The Albuquerque tile factory in Mangalore is one of India's oldest red-roof-tile manufacturing factories.[148][149] The city's suburb Ullal produces hosiery and coir yarns while beedi rolling is an important source of revenue to many of the city's residents.[103]

Demographics

Population Growth
YearPop.±%
192166,400—    
193173,600+10.8%
194185,500+16.2%
1951110,750+29.5%
1961145,300+31.2%
1971210,400+44.8%
1981305,200+45.1%
1991425,600+39.4%
2001512,100+20.3%
2011619,600+21.0%
2021724,159+16.9%
Source: Census of India[1][150][151]
Religions in Mangalore (2011 census)
Religion Percent
Hinduism
68.99%
Islam
17.40%
Christianity
13.15%
Jainism
0.21%
Other or not stated
0.12%
Distribution of religions
Includes Sikhism (0.08%), Buddhism (0.05%).

Languages spoken as of 2011.[152]

  Tulu (33.7%)
  Konkani (14.03%)
  Kannada (12.45%)
  Malayalam (5.64%)
  Others (34.18%)

In 2021 the population of Mangalore city was 724,159.[1] According to the 2011 Indian census, the male literacy rate was 96.49 percent and the female literacy rate was 91.63 percent.[151] About 8.5 percent of the population was under the age of six years.[151] The death rate and Infant mortality rate were at 3.7 percent and 1.2 percent respectively.[153] About 7726 people lived in slums in Mangalore city which was 1.55 percent of the total population.[154][155] The Human Development Index (HDI) of Mangalore city was 0.83 in 2015.[6]

Religions

Hinduism is the largest religion in Mangalore, and Devadiga, Mogaveera, Billavas, Ganigas, Bunts, Vishwakarma, Padmashali, Brahmins, and Daivadnyas are the major communities among Hindus.[156][157] Christians form a sizeable section of Mangalorean society; Mangalorean Catholics comprise the city's largest Christian community.[158] Protestants in Mangalore typically speak Tulu and Kannada.[159] Anglo-Indians were also part of the Mangalorean Christian Community.[160] Mangalore has one of the highest percentage of Muslims in Karnataka cities.[161] Most Muslims in Mangalore are Bearys who speak the Beary language.[162] Most of them follow the Shafi'i school of Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence).[163] Mangalore also has a small group of Urdu-speaking Dakhini Muslims.[164] The Masjid Zeenath Baksh at Mangalore is one of the oldest mosques in the Indian subcontinent.[36][32][33][34][35]

Languages

Mangalore is a multi-lingual city where several prominent regional languages such as Tulu, Konkani, Kannada, and Beary are spoken.[23] The city is known as Kudla in Tulu, Kodial in Konkani, Maikāla in Beary, Mangalapuram in Malayalam, and Mangaluru in Kannada.[23] Among most of the residents of the city, Kudla is the most commonly used name to refer to it.[23] There are also smaller communities of Tuluva Jains,[165] Gujaratis,[38] Tamils,[166] and Marathis.[167] Tulu is a predominant language in Mangalore and Kannada is the administrative language of Mangalore, but the city is multi-cultural. According to the 2011 census, Tulu is spoken as a first language by 33.7% of the population, Konkani by 14.03%, Kannada by 12.45%, Malayalam by 5.64%, and other languages are spoken by 34.18%.[152] Unlike other cities in Karnataka where Kannada is a primary language, Kannada is the third most spoken language, Tulu is predominant language in Mangalore, and Konkani is the second most spoken language in Mangalore.

Government and public services

Civic administration

 
Mangalore City Corporation at Lalbagh

Mangalore has a city area of 170 km2 (65.64 sq mi).[3] Municipal limits begin at Surathkal in the north, Netravati River bridge in the south, the western coast, and Vamanjoor in the east.[168] Mangalore City Corporation (MCC) came into existence in 1980; it is the municipal corporation in charge of the city's civic and infrastructural assets.[169] The MCC council consists of 60 elected representatives which are called corporators, one from each of the city's 60 wards.[170][171] A corporator from the ruling majority party is selected to be the mayor.[172] MCC's headquarters are at Lalbagh.[168] Mangalore Urban Development Authority (MUDA) manages the planning, urban growth, and expansion of the city.[173][174][175] The District Commissioner is the chairperson of MUDA.[176] The 44 projects which are listed as part of the Smart Cities Mission programme are managed by Mangalore Smart City Limited (MSCL).[177]

Until the Delimitation commission's revised the Lok Sabha and the legislative constituencies, Mangalore contributed two members to the Lok Sabha; one for the southern part of the city that fell under the Mangalore Lok Sabha constituency and another for the northern part of the city that fell under the Udupi Lok Sabha constituency.[178] After the delimitation of parliamentary constituencies in 2008, Mangalore Lok Sabha constituency was replaced with Dakshina Kannada Lok Sabha constituency, resulting in Mangalore being represented by one Member of Parliament (MP).[179][180] Additionally Mangalore sends three members to the Karnataka Legislative Assembly from Mangalore City South, Mangalore City North, and Mangalore.[181] The Mangalore City Police Department is headed by a Commissioner of Police.[182] Mangalore is also the headquarters of the Western Range Police, which covers the western districts of Karnataka and is headed by an Inspector General of Police (IGP).[183]

Healthcare

 
KMC Hospital in Mangalore[184]

The city is served by various hospitals such as the KMC Hospitals, Father Muller Charitable Institutions (FMCI),[185] AJ Hospital, and Wenlock Hospital.[186] Wenlock Hospital, a teaching hospital of KMC Mangalore has around 1000 beds and caters to the healthcare needs of the neighboring districts.[187] Mangalore is a hub for medical tourism and receives patients from foreign countries.[188] From 2017 to 2019, around 240 foreign nationals were treated in three hospitals across the city.[188] Approximately 50 per cent of the patients (the foreign nationals) arrived in 2018 and 2019. KMC, AJ, and Yenepoya Hospitals have received the highest number of foreign patients, including those from the United States.[188] At Yenepoya Hospital, 68 foreign nationals have availed treatment during 2017–19.[188] The largest inflow of foreign patients into Mangalore is from the Gulf countries. Deralakatte is a main healthcare hub of Mangalore.[188]

Utility services

In Mangalore, electricity is regulated by the Karnataka Power Transmission Corporation Limited (KPTCL) and distributed through Mangalore Electricity Supply Company (MESCOM).[189][190][191] Major state-owned enterprises such as Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited (MRPL) and Mangalore Chemicals & Fertilizers (MCF) operate their own captive power plants.[192][193]

Potable water is supplied to the city from a vented dam that was constructed across the Netravati River at Thumbe, 14 km (9 mi) from Mangalore.[194][195][196] The Karnataka Urban Development and Coastal Environment Management Project (KUDCEMP) aims to improve safe water supply systems also reducing leakage and losses in the city's distribution system.[195] The distribution and rehabilitation of the drinking water in the city are handled by the French company Suez Environnement.[197][198] Mangalore's official refuse disposal site is in Vamanjoor.[199] The city generates an average of 175 tonnes per day of waste, which is handled by the MCC's health department.[200]

Mangalore is the headquarters of the Dakshina Kannada Telecom District, the second largest telecom district in Karnataka.[201] Fixed-line telecom services are provided alongside GSM and Code division multiple access (CDMA) mobile services.[202] Prominent broadband internet service providers in the city include Airtel and DataOne by Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited.[203]

Education

 
National Institute of Technology Karnataka (NITK) in Surathkal is among the premier institutes of India

The districts of Dakshina Kannada and Udupi are considered to be a major education corridor in India. Deralakatte is a university and Medical town in Mangalore where Universities like Mangalore University, Nitte, Yenepoya, Father Mullers, and Kanachur are situated.[204] In schools and colleges which are below university-level, the media of instruction are mostly English and Kannada, and English is used for teaching in universities. [205] Schools and colleges in Mangalore are either government-run or are operated by private trusts and individuals.[206][207] Schools are affiliated with either the Karnataka State Board, Indian Certificate of Secondary Education (ICSE),[208] the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE),[209] or the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) boards.[210]

Here are some of the earliest schools and colleges established in Mangalore, and their years of establishment

Kasturba Medical College which was established in 1953, was India's first private medical college and Manipal College Of Dental Sciences (MCODS) was established in the city in 1987.[223] A public library run by the Corporation Bank is located at Mannagudda.[224] Mangalore University was established on 10 September 1980[225] to fulfil the higher-education needs of Dakshina Kannada, Udupi and Kodagu districts.[226] It is a National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC)-accredited, four-star-level institution.[227] NITK houses South India's first Regional Academy Centre for Space (RAC-S) which was launched by ISRO.[228]

Transport

Mangalore is the only city in Karnataka to have all modes of transport—air, road, rail and sea.[229]

 
Jet bridge at the Mangalore International Airport

Mangalore International Airport (IATA: IXE, ICAO: VOML) is located near Bajpe-Kenjar and about 13 km (8 mi) north-east of Mangalore city centre.[230] It operates regular scheduled flights to major cities in India and the Middle East.[231][232] It is the second-largest and second-busiest airport in Karnataka.[233][234] New terminals and runways at the airport accommodate both cargo and passenger requirements.[235] This airport is accredited by the Airports Council International (ACI) under the Airport Health Accreditation (AHA) programme.[236] State-government-run buses connect the city with the airport.[237]

Five National Highways pass through Mangalore.[238] NH-66 (previously known as NH-17[239]), which runs from Panvel, Maharashtra, to Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu, passes through Mangalore in a north–south direction.[240] NH-75 (previously known as NH-48) runs eastward to Bangalore and Vellore.[241] NH-169 (previously known as NH-13) runs north-east from Mangalore to Shimoga.[242] NH-73, a 315 km (196 mi)-long National Highway connects Mangalore to Tumkur.[243] NH-275 also connects Mangalore with Bangalore via Mysore.[244] National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) is upgrading the national highways connecting New Mangalore Port to Surathkal on NH-66 and BC Road junction on NH-75.[245] Under the port connectivity programme of the National Highways Development Project (NHDP), a 37.5 km (23 mi) stretch of these highways will be widened from two lanes to four.[246]

Mangalore's city bus service is dominated by private operators, which operate routes that extend beyond the city's boundary. Bus services from Mangalore are operated by the Dakshina Kannada Bus Operators' Association (DKBOA) and Canara Bus Operators Association (CBOA).[247][248] Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) also runs bus services in the city.[249] Two distinct sets of routes for the buses exist; city routes are covered by city buses while intercity routes are covered by service and express buses.[250] KSRTC also operates long-distance bus services that connect Mangalore with other parts of the state.[251] KSRTC JnNurm green city buses operate within the city limits.[252]

 
Clock Tower to Nehru Maidan Road

Rail connectivity in Mangalore was established in 1907;[253] the city was the starting point of India's longest rail route.[74] The city has three railway stations; Mangalore Central at Hampankatta, Mangalore Junction at Padil, and Surathkal railway station.[254] A railway track built through the Western Ghats connects Mangalore with Sakleshpur and Hassan.[255] The broad gauge track connecting Mangalore to Bangalore via Hassan was opened to freight traffic in May 2006[256] and passenger traffic in December 2007.[257] Mangalore is also connected to Chennai, Mumbai, Pune, Bhatkal, Karwar, Surat, Ajmer, and Margao through the Konkan Railway.[258][259]

Mangalore Harbour has shipping, storage, and logistical services; New Mangalore Port handles dry, bulk and fluid cargoes,[260] and is equipped to handle petroleum oil lubricants, crude products and LPG containers.[261] The Indian Coast Guard has a station at New Mangalore Port.[262] The artificial harbour is India's seventh largest container port and the only major port in Karnataka.[263][77] Electronic visa (e-visa) facilities are available for travellers arriving in India at New Mangalore Port.[264]

Culture

 
World Konkani Centre in Mangalore

Music and dance

Many classical dance forms and folk art are practised in Mangalore. Yakshagana is a night-long dance and drama performance[265] while Pilivesha (tiger dance), a folk dance unique to the city, is performed during Dasara and Krishna Janmashtami.[266] Karadi Vesha (bear dance) is another well-known dance that is performed during Dasara.[267]

Paddanas, ballad-like epics passed on verbally through generations, are sung by a community of impersonators in Tulu and are usually accompanied by the rhythmic drum beats.[267] The Bearys' unique traditions are reflected in folk songs such as Kolkai (sung during Kolata, a valour folk-dance during which sticks are used as props), Unjal Pat (traditional lullaby), Moilanji Pat and Oppune Pat (sung at weddings).[268] The Evkaristik Purshanv (Konkani: Eucharistic procession) is an annual Catholic religious procession that is held on the first Sunday of each year.[267]

Festivals

Most of the popular Indian festivals are celebrated, the most important are Dasara, Diwali, Christmas, Easter, Eid and Ganesh Chaturthi.[269][270] Kodial Theru, also known as Mangaluru Rathotsava (chariot festival) is unique to the Goud Saraswat Brahmin community and is celebrated at the city's Sri Venkatramana Temple.[271]

The Mangalore Catholic community's unique festivals include Monti Fest (Mother Mary's feast), which celebrates the Nativity feast and the blessing of new harvests.[272] The Jain Milan, a committee that consists of Jain families, organises the annual Jain food festival,[273] while Mosaru Kudike (curd pots feast), which is part of Krishna Janmashtami festival is celebrated by the whole community.[274] Special night prayers called Taraveeh (rest and relaxation) are offered in mosques during the month of Ramadan.[275]

Aati, a festival worshiping Kalenja, a patron spirit of the city, is during the Aashaadha month of Hindu calendar.[276] Festivals such as Karavali Utsav (coastal festival) and Kudlotsava (Tulu: festival of Mangalore) are celebrated with national and state-level performances in dance, drama and music.[277] Bhuta Kola (spirit worship) is usually performed by the Tuluva community at night.[278] Bhuta Kola is similar to Theyyam in Kerala.[279][280] Nagaradhane (snake worship) is performed in praise of Naga Devatha (the serpent king), who is said to be the protector of all snakes.[281] Kori Katta, an ancient ritual associated with the Hindu temples in rural areas,[282][283] a religious and spiritual cockfight, is held at the temples when permission is given by police.[284]

Cuisine

 
Neer dosa, a variant of dosa and pundi (rice ball), are native to Mangalore

Mangalorean cuisine is largely influenced by South Indian cuisine; several local cuisines are unique to the diverse communities of the region.[285] Coconut, curry leaves, ginger, garlic, and chili are common ingredients in Mangalorean curries.[286] Well-known Mangalorean dishes include kori rotti, neer dosa, pundi (rice ball), patrode, golibaje and Mangalore buns.[287] Mangalorean cuisine is also known for fish and chicken dishes like bangude pulimunchi (spicy sour silver-grey mackerels), boothai gasi (sardine semi-gravy), anjal fry, Mangalorean Chicken Sukka, and Chicken Ghee Roast.[288][289] Due to Mangalore being a coastal city, fish is a staple of most people's diet.[290] The Konkani Hindu community's specialties include daali thoy (lentil curry), bibbe-upkari (tender cashew-nut curry), val val (coconut-milk-based curry), ambat (vegetable-based coconut curry),[291] avnas ambe sasam (pineapple-mango fruit salad), kadgi chakko (raw jackfruit-coconut curry), paagila podi (spine gourd fries), and chane gashi (chickpea curry).[292][293] Mangalorean Catholics' dish sanna-dukra maas (sannaidli fluffed with toddy or yeast; dukra maas—pork), pork bafat, sorpotel,[294] and mutton biryani of the Beary Muslims are well-known dishes.[295] Pickles such as happala, sandige, and puli munchi are unique to Mangalore.[296][297] Shendi (toddy) which is a country liquor prepared from coconut flower sap, is popular.[267] Vegetarian cuisine, also known as Udupi cuisine, is known throughout the state and region.[298]

Media

 
All India Radio's FM tower at Kadri

Mangaluru Samachara, the first ever newspaper in Kannada, was published in 1843 by Hermann Mögling of the Basel Mission.[299][300] The first Kannada-to-English dictionary was published in Mangalore by Ferdinand Kittel in 1894.[301] Major national English-language newspapers such as Times of India, The Hindu, The New Indian Express, Deccan Herald and Daijiworld[302][303] publish localised Mangalore editions.[304][305] Madipu (Esteem), Mogaveera, Samparka (Contact) and Saphala (Success) are the well-known Tulu periodicals in Mangalore.[306]

Popular Konkani language periodicals published in the city are Raknno (Guardian), Konknni Dirvem (Konkani Treasure) and Kannik (Offering).[304] Beary periodicals published in Mangalore include Jyothi (Light) and Swatantra Bharata (Independent India).[304] Kannada-language newspapers are Udayavani (Morning Voice) by Manipal Press Ltd, Vijaya Karnataka (Victory of Karnataka) and Vijayavani (Voice of Victory)[307] by VRL Group, Prajavani (Voice of the People), Kannada Prabha (Kannada Radiance), Varthabharathi (Indian News), Samyukta Karnataka (United Karnataka), and Hosa Digantha (New Horizon).[304][308] The city's evening newspapers include Karavali Ale (Waves from the Coast), Mangaluru Mitra (Friend of Mangalore), Sanjevani (Evening Voice), and Jayakirana (Rays of Victory) are also published in the city.[309] The Konkani-language newspaper Kodial Khabar (Mangalore News) is published fortnightly.[304] Malayalam newspapers such as Malayala Manorama (Malayalam Entertainer) and Madhyamam (Medium) publish localised Mangalore editions.[310]

The state-run, nationally broadcast television channel Doordarshan provides national and local television coverage.[311] Cable television also provides channels from independently owned private networks.[312] Canara TV and V4 Digital infotech network, local Multi System Operators, transmits daily video news channels, live events and cultural programmes to the city through local channels.[313] Multiple local television channels broadcast programmes and news in Tulu, Konkani, Beary and Kannada;[314] these include Namma TV, V4 News and Spandana.[315] Tulu channels are Namma Kudla[316] and Posa Kural.[317] All India Radio (AIR) has a studio at Kadri and broadcasts to Mangalore on 100.3 MHz.[318] Mangalore's private FM stations include Radio Mirchi 98.3 FM, Big 92.7 FM[319] and Red 93.5 FM.[320] Radio SARANG 107.8 is a community radio station that is run by St. Aloysius College.[321]

Mangalore is home to the Tulu film industry which releases one film per month on average.[322] Popular Tulu films include Kadala Mage (Son of the Sea) and Suddha (The Cleansing Rites).[323] Tulu dramas which are mostly played in the Town Hall at Hampankatta, are very popular.[223] Mangalore hosted the Tulu film festivals in 2006 and 2015.[324][325]

Sports and pastimes

 
Mangalore Golf Course at Pilikula

Cricket is a popular sport in Mangalore.[326] Local cricket stadia include Mangala Stadium and B.R. Ambedkar Cricket Stadium (near NMPT).[327][328] The Sports Authority of India (SAI) has a sports training centre at Mangala Stadium.[329] Mangalore United is a Karnataka Premier League (KPL) franchise owned by Fiza Developers.[330] Mangalore Premier League (MPL) is a cricket tournament organised by Karnataka Regional Cricket Academy.[331] Nehru Maidan is an important local venue that hosts domestic, inter-school and intercollegiate tournaments.[332] Mangalore Sports Club (MSC) has been elected as the institutional member for the Mangalore Zone of the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA).[333][334] Lokesh Rahul, commonly known as KL Rahul and Budhi Kunderan, a former Indian wicket-keeper are from Mangalore.[335] Ravi Shastri, who represented India for several years in international cricket as an all-rounder and captained the team, is of Mangalorean descent.[336]

Football is also a popular sport in the city and is usually played in the maidans (grounds); the Nehru Maidan is the most popular venue for domestic tournaments.[337] Dakshina Kannada District Football Association (DKDFA) annually organises the Independence Day Cup, which is played on Independence Day at district football grounds adjacent to Nehru Maidan.[338] Schools and colleges from across Dakshina Kannada, Udupi and Kodagu districts participate and the matches are conducted under seven categories for children and young adults in education.[339] Chess is a popular indoor pastime in the city.[340] Mangalore is the headquarters of South Kanara District Chess Association (SKDCA), which has hosted two All India Open Chess tournaments.[341][342][343] Other sports such as tennis, squash, billiards, badminton, table tennis and golf are played in clubs and gymkhanas in Mangalore.[344] Pilikula Nisargadhama, an integrated theme park, has an 18-hole golf course[345] at Vamanjoor.[346] U S Mallya Indoor Stadium offers sporting facilities for badminton and basketball players.[347]

Tourism

 
Panambur Beach
 
St Aloysius College

Mangalore lies between the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats.[348] The city's temples and buildings include the Mangaladevi Temple, Kadri Manjunath Temple, St Aloysius Chapel, the Rosario Cathedral, Milagres Church, Dargah of Hazrat Shareef ul Madni at Ullal, and the Zeenath Baksh Jumma Masjid in Bunder.[349][350]

The city is known for beaches such as Panambur, Tannirbhavi, NITK beach, Sasihithlu beach, Someshwara beach, Ullal beach, Kotekar beach and Batapady beach.[348][351][352][353] Panambur and Thannirbhavi beaches attract tourists from across the country.[354] Panambur beach has facilities including food stalls, jet ski rides, boating and dolphin viewing;[355] trained beach lifeguards and patrol vehicles ensure the safety of visitors.[356][357][358]

 
Dome of the Swami Vivekananda 3D Planetarium[359]

Saavira Kambada Basadi is situated in Moodabidri, 34 km (21 mi) north-east of Mangalore.[360] The Sultan Battery watch tower built by Tipu Sultan is situated in Boloor on the banks of Gurupura River;[361] visitors can take the ferry across the river to Tannirbhavi Beach.[362] Adyar waterfalls is on the city's outskirts about 12 km (7.5 mi) from Mangalore city centre.[363] The city has developed and maintains public parks such as Pilikula Nisargadhama,[364] Kadri Park, Tagore Park[365] at Light House Hill, Mahatma Gandhi Park[366] at Gandhinagar in Mannagudda,[367] Tannirbavi Tree Park,[368] Arise Awake Park at Karangalpady,[369] and Corporation Bank Park at Nehru Maidan. Pilikula, which occupies 370 acres (150 ha),[346][370] has a zoo, botanical garden, lake, water park (manasa),[371] Swami Vivekananda Planetarium,[372] science centre,[373] and a 50-acre (20 ha) 18-hole golf course.[345][374][375][376][377] Swami Vivekananda Planetarium is the first 3D planetarium in India with an 8K resolution display.[372]

Mangalore Dasara, a ten-day festival held at Sri Gokarnatheswara temple attracts devotees from across India.[378] Mangaladevi Temple attracts devotees from all over the country during Navaratri.[379]

Sister cities

Mangalore is twinned with two Canadian cities:

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mangalore, this, article, about, city, karnataka, india, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔːr, ɔː, mang, officially, known, mangaluru, major, industrial, port, city, indian, state, karnataka, west, coast, india, located, between, arabian, western, ghats, about, we. This article is about the city in Karnataka India For other uses see Mangalore disambiguation Mangalore ˈ m ae ŋ ɡ e l ɔːr ˌ m ae ŋ ɡ e ˈ l ɔː r MANG ge lor LOR officially known as Mangaluru 9 is a major industrial port city in the Indian state of Karnataka and on the west coast of India It is located between the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats about 352 km 219 mi west of Bangalore the state capital 14 km north of Karnataka Kerala border 297 km south of Goa Mangalore is the state s only city to have all four modes of transport air road rail and sea The population of the urban agglomeration was 619 664 according to the 2011 update national census of India It is known for being one of the locations of the Indian strategic petroleum reserves MangaloreCityMangaluruClockwise from top Mangalore CBD skyline Falnir Infosys campus Mangalore Chemicals amp Fertilizers Kankanady MRPL Refinery KIOCL Pellet plant New Mangalore PortMangaloreShow map of KarnatakaMangaloreShow map of IndiaCoordinates 12 52 5 N 74 50 33 E 12 86806 N 74 84250 E 12 86806 74 84250Country IndiaStateKarnatakaDistrictDakshina KannadaTalukMangaloreNamed forMangaladeviGovernment TypeMayor Council MayorJayanand Anchan 2 Area 3 Total170 km2 70 sq mi Elevation22 m 72 ft Population 2021 Total724 159 1 DemonymMangaloreanLanguages AdministrativeKannada EnglishTime zoneUTC 5 30 IST PIN575001 to 575030Telephone code 91 0824 Vehicle registrationKA 19 KA 62 4 Sex ratio1 016 5 Human Development Index0 83 as of 2015 update 6 very highLiteracy94 03 7 Websitewww wbr mangalurucity wbr mrc wbr gov wbr inThe city developed as a port in the Arabian Sea during ancient times and after Independence a new port was constructed in 1968 and has since become a major port of India that handles 75 percent of India s coffee and cashew exports It is also the country s seventh largest container port Mangalore has been ruled by several major powers including the Mauryan empire Kadambas Alupas Vijayanagar Empire Keladi Nayaks and the Portuguese The city was a source of contention between the British and the Kingdom of Mysore rulers Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan and was eventually annexed by the British in 1799 Mangalore remained part of the Madras Presidency until India s independence in 1947 and was unified with Mysore State now called Karnataka in 1956 Mangalore is one of the fastest developing cities in India The Dakshina Kannada district with its administrative headquarters at Mangalore has the highest Per Capita Income and Gross State Domestic Product in Karnataka after Bangalore 10 Mangalore is a commercial industrial business educational healthcare and startup hub Mangalore City Corporation is responsible for the civic administration which manages the 60 wards of the city Its landscape is characterised by rolling hills coconut palms rivers and hard laterite soil Mangalore is included as one of the cities in the Smart Cities Mission list and is among the 100 smart cities to be developed in India It has an average elevation of 22 m 72 ft above mean sea level It has a tropical monsoon climate and is under the influence of the southwest monsoon In 2017 update Mangalore was ranked the 48th best city in the world to live in by a US survey and the only Indian city in the top 50 11 It has its own International Airport which is around 15 km from the city centre Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early and medieval history 2 2 Foundation and early modern history 2 3 Later modern and contemporary history 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Economy 5 Demographics 5 1 Religions 5 2 Languages 6 Government and public services 6 1 Civic administration 6 2 Healthcare 6 3 Utility services 7 Education 8 Transport 9 Culture 9 1 Music and dance 9 2 Festivals 9 3 Cuisine 10 Media 11 Sports and pastimes 12 Tourism 13 Sister cities 14 References 15 Sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology 1652 Sanson Map of IndiaMangalore was named after the deity Mangaladevi the presiding deity of the Mangaladevi Temple 12 or a synonym of the goddess Tara of the Vajrayana Buddhist sect 13 According to local legend a princess named Parimala or Premaladevi from Malabar 14 renounced her kingdom and became a disciple of Matsyendranath the founder of the Nath tradition 15 Having converted Premaladevi to the Nath sect Matsyendranath renamed her Mangaladevi 14 16 She arrived in the area with Matsyendranath but had to settle near Bolar in Mangalore because she fell ill on the way 16 When she died the people consecrated the Mangaladevi temple at Bolar in her honour 17 14 The city was named for the temple 18 One of the earliest references to the city s name was in 715 CE when Pandyan King Chettian called the city Mangalapuram 15 The city and the coastal region were part of the Pandyan Kingdom 15 According to K V Ramesh president of the Place Names Society of India Mangaluru was first used in 1345 CE during Vijayanagara rule 19 Many shilashasanas stones of the Vijayanagara period refer the city as Mangalapura 19 During the Alupa dynasty period it was referred to as Mangalapura Mangala means auspicious 19 In the Kannada language the city is known as Mangaluru a reference to Mangaladevi the suffix uru means town or city 19 Mangalore was historically an important centre of Indian Ocean trade on the Malabar coast 20 Hence it was also known by the name Manjalur in Arabic 20 During British rule from 1799 the anglicised version Mangalore became the official appellation 19 According to historian George M Moraes however the word Mangalore is the Portuguese corruption of Mangaluru 21 2 The city s name appears on maps as far back as the 1652 Sanson Map of India 22 Mangalore s diverse communities have different names for the city in their languages 23 In Tulu which is the region s primary spoken language the city is called Kudla meaning junction because it is situated at the confluence of the Netravati and Gurupura rivers 24 In Konkani Mangalore is referred to as Kodiyal and the Beary name for the city is Maikala 25 In Malayalam the city is called Mangalapuram citation needed Mangalore was officially renamed Mangaluru by the Karnataka government on 1 November 2014 9 HistoryMain article History of Mangalore Early and medieval history Mangalore s historical importance is highlighted by the many references to the city by foreign travellers 26 During the first century CE the Roman historian Pliny the Elder referred to a place called Nitrias and said it was an undesirable place for disembarkation because of the pirates who frequented its vicinity 27 while Greek second century historian Ptolemy referenced a place named Nitra 28 These references were probably about an area with the Netravati River which flows through Mangalore 28 In his sixth century work Christian Topography Cosmas Indicopleustes a Greek monk mentions Malabar as being the chief seat of the pepper trade and Mangarouth port of Mangalore as one of the five pepper markets which exported pepper 29 30 According to Kerala Muslim tradition the Masjid Zeenath Baksh at Mangalore is one of the oldest mosques in Indian subcontinent 31 According to the Legend of Cheraman Perumals the first Indian mosque was built in 624 AD at Kodungallur with the mandate of the last the ruler the Cheraman Perumal of Chera dynasty who left from Dharmadom to Mecca and converted to Islam during the lifetime of Prophet Muhammad c 570 632 32 33 34 35 According to Qissat Shakarwati Farmad the Masjids at Kodungallur Kollam Madayi Barkur Mangalore Kasaragod Kannur Dharmadam Panthalayani Koyilandy and Chaliyam were built during the era of Malik Dinar they are among the oldest Masjids in Indian Subcontinent 36 It is believed that Malik Dinar died at Thalangara in Kasaragod town 37 Three of them Mangalore Barkur and Kasaragod are in Tulu Nadu 37 Mangalore is considered the heart of a distinct multi linguistic cultural region the homeland of the Tulu speaking people 38 In the third century BCE the town formed part of the Maurya Empire which was ruled by the Buddhist emperor Ashoka of Magadha 14 From the third to the sixth century CE the Kadamba dynasty whose capital was based in Banavasi in North Canara ruled over the entire Canara region as independent rulers 39 From the middle of the seventh century to the end of the 14th century the South Canara region was ruled by its native Alupa rulers 40 17 41 42 who ruled over the region as feudatories of major regional dynasties like the Chalukyas of Badami Rashtrakutas of Manyakheta Chalukyas of Kalyani and Hoysalas of Dwarasamudra 40 An Old Malayalam inscription part of the Ramanthali inscriptions which date to 1075 CE mentions king Kunda Alupa the ruler of Alupa dynasty of Mangalore It can be found at Ezhimala the former headquarters of Mushika dynasty near Cannanore in the North Malabar region of Kerala 43 During the 1130s and 1140s during the reign of the Alupa king Kavi Alupendra 1110 1160 the city was home to the Tunisian Jewish merchant Abraham Ben Yiju 44 The Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta who visited Mangalore in 1342 referred to it as Manjarur and stated the town was situated on a large estuary called the Estuary of the wolf which was the greatest estuary in the country of Malabar 45 46 30 By 1345 the Vijayanagara rulers brought the region under their control 40 17 During the Vijayanagara period 1345 1550 South Canara was divided into Mangalore and Barkur rajyas provinces and two governors were appointed to look after each of them from Mangalore and Barkur 40 47 Often a single governor ruled over both Mangalore and Barkur rajyas when the authority passed to the Keladi rulers 1550 1763 they only had a governor at Barkur 40 19 In 1448 Abdur Razzaq who was the Persian ambassador of Sultan Shah Rukh of Samarkand visited Mangalore en route to the Vijayanagara court 48 46 31 The Italian traveller Ludovico di Varthema who visited India in 1506 said he saw nearly sixty ships laden with rice ready to sail from the port of Mangalore 40 20 Foundation and early modern history Lopo Vaz de Sampaio Viceroy of Portuguese India established Portuguese factories in Mangalore in 1526 49 which lasted until 1695 50 A pen and ink drawing of Mangalore Fort made in 1783 after it had been taken over by the British East India Company The tower at Light House Hill Hampankatta served as a lookout for the British 51 In 1498 European influence in Mangalore began when the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama landed at the nearby St Mary s Islands just after his arrival at Koyilandy Kozhikode 52 The Portuguese acquired many commercial interests in Canara in the 16th century 53 Krishnadevaraya 1509 1529 the ruler of the Vijaynagara empire maintained a friendly relationship with the Portuguese 54 whose trade slowly grew and they strove to destroy the coastal Arab and Mappila trade 40 In 1524 Vasco da Gama ordered the blockading of rivers after he heard the Muslim merchants of Kozhikode had agents at Mangalore and Basrur 40 In 1526 the Portuguese under the viceroyship of Lopo Vaz de Sampaio took possession of Mangalore 49 The coastal trade passed into Portuguese hands 40 20 In 1550 the Vijayanagara ruler Sadashiva Raya entrusted to Sadashiv Nayaka of Keladi with administering the coastal region of Canara 40 By 1554 he established political authority over South Canara 55 The 16th century work Tuhfat Ul Mujahideen written by Zainuddin Makhdoom II appears to be the first historical work written in detail about the contemporary history of Mangalore It is written in Arabic and contains pieces of information about the resistance put up by the navy of Kunjali Marakkar alongside the Zamorin of Calicut from 1498 to 1583 against Portuguese attempts to colonize Tulu Nadu and Malabar coast 56 57 58 After the disintegration of the Vijaynagara Empire in 1565 the rulers of Keladi attained greater power in dealing with the coastal Canara region 40 27 They continued the Vijayanagara administrative system 40 and the provinces of Mangalore and Barkur continued to exist 59 42 The governor of Mangalore also acted as the governor of the Keladi army in his province 40 30 The Italian traveller Pietro Della Valle visited here in 1623 1624 60 In 1695 Arabs burnt the town in retaliation to Portuguese restrictions on Arab trade 50 In 1763 Hyder Ali the de facto ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore conquered Mangalore 61 which was brought under his administration until 1767 Mangalore was ruled by the British East India Company from 1767 to 1783 62 but Hyder Ali s son Tipu Sultan took it from their control in 1783 and renamed it Jalalabad 63 64 The Second Anglo Mysore War ended with the signing of the Treaty of Mangalore by Tipu Sultan and the British East India Company on 11 March 1784 65 After the defeat of Tipu at the Fourth Anglo Mysore War the city remained under British control South Canara district was the headquarters under the Madras Presidency 19 66 67 Francis Buchanan a Scottish physician who visited Mangalore in 1801 said the city was a prosperous port with plentiful trade 68 The main commodity of export was rice it went to Muscat Bombay Goa and Malabar 40 Supari Betel nut was exported to Bombay Surat and Kutch 40 Sandalwood and black pepper were exported to Bombay 40 Local capital was mainly invested in land and money lending leading to the regional development of banking because the British colonial government did not support industrialisation there 69 After European missionaries arrived in the early 19th century educational institutions and modern industries modelled on European ones were developed in the region 70 The opening of the Lutheran Swiss Basel Mission in 1834 was an important step towards industrialisation 71 Missionaries set up printing presses textile mills and factories that made Mangalore tiles 38 When Canara part of the Madras Presidency until this time was split into North Canara and South Canara in 1859 Mangalore became the headquarters of South Canara 72 5 which remained under Madras Presidency while in 1862 North Canara was transferred to the Bombay Presidency 72 6 Later modern and contemporary history On 23 May 1866 a municipal council for Mangalore with responsibility for civic amenities and urban planning was mandated by the Madras Town Improvement Act 1865 21 178 The Italian Jesuits who arrived in the city in 1878 played an important role in the city s education economy health and social welfare 73 Mangalore was linked to the Southern Railway in 1907 and the subsequent proliferation of motor vehicles in India further increased trade and communication between the city and the rest of the country 74 Mangalore was a major source of educated workers to Bombay Bangalore and the Middle East by the early 20th century 38 The States Reorganisation Act 1956 led to Mangalore being incorporated into the newly created Mysore State which was later renamed Karnataka 75 76 415 Mangalore is the seventh largest port of India giving the state access to the Arabian Sea coastline 38 77 Between 1970 and 1980 Mangalore experienced significant growth with the opening of New Mangalore Port in 1974 and commissioning of Mangalore Chemicals amp Fertilizers Limited in 1976 78 79 The late 20th and early 21st centuries saw Mangalore develop as a commercial and petrochemical hub 80 81 Geography Sunset at Netravati BridgeMangalore is located on the western coast of India at 12 52 N 74 53 E 12 87 N 74 88 E 12 87 74 88 in Dakshina Kannada district Karnataka state 82 It has an average elevation of 22 m 72 ft above mean sea level 83 The city is the administrative headquarters of Dakshina Kannada district and is the state s largest coastal urban centre 84 A schematic map showing the tourist places in Mangalore cityMangalore is bounded by the Arabian Sea to its west and by the Western Ghats to its east 82 As a municipal entity the city spans 170 km2 65 64 sq mi 3 The Netravati and Gurupura rivers encircle the city the Gurupura flows around the north and the Netravati flows around the south of the city 85 The rivers form an estuary in the south western region of the city from where they flow into the Arabian Sea 86 Coconut palm and ashoka trees comprise the primary vegetation of the city 85 The city s topography consists of a plain that stretches up to 30 km 18 64 mi from the coast and undulating hilly terrain towards the east near the Western Ghats 87 The local geology is characterised by hard laterite in hilly tracts and sandy soil along the seashore 84 The Geological Survey of India has identified Mangalore as a moderately earthquake prone urban centre and categorised the city in the Seismic III Zone 88 Climate Under the Koppen climate classification Mangalore has a tropical monsoon climate and is under the direct influence of the Arabian Sea branch of the southwest monsoon 89 It receives about 95 percent of its total annual rainfall between May and September but remains extremely dry from December to March 89 Humidity is approximately 75 percent on average and peaks during June July and August 90 The maximum average humidity is 93 percent in July and average minimum humidity is 56 percent in January 90 Mangalore experiences moderate to gusty winds during day time and gentle winds at night 91 The driest and least humid months are from December to February 92 During this time of year temperatures during the day stay below 34 C 93 F and drop to about 19 C 66 F at night 93 The lowest temperature recorded at Panambur is 15 6 C 60 F on 8 January 1992 and at Bajpe it is 15 9 C 61 F on 19 November 1974 94 According to the India Meteorological Department IMD the temperature in Mangalore has never reached 40 C 104 F 95 The summer gives way to the monsoon season when the city experiences the highest precipitation of all urban centres in India due to the influence of the Western Ghats 96 The rains subside in September but there is occasional rainfall in October 97 The highest rainfall recorded in a 24 hour period is 330 8 mm 13 in on 22 June 2003 94 In 1994 Mangalore recorded its highest annual rainfall at 5 018 52 mm 198 in 98 Climate data for Mangalore India Panambur 1981 2010 extremes 1968 2012Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 9 98 4 38 2 100 8 38 1 100 6 35 9 96 6 36 8 98 2 34 9 94 8 32 5 90 5 31 8 89 2 33 8 92 8 35 9 96 6 36 8 98 2 36 9 98 4 38 2 100 8 Average high C F 32 5 90 5 32 3 90 1 32 6 90 7 33 3 91 9 33 0 91 4 29 9 85 8 28 8 83 8 28 7 83 7 29 5 85 1 30 6 87 1 32 3 90 1 32 9 91 2 31 4 88 5 Average low C F 21 1 70 0 22 0 71 6 23 9 75 0 25 3 77 5 25 4 77 7 23 8 74 8 23 4 74 1 23 4 74 1 23 6 74 5 23 6 74 5 23 0 73 4 21 5 70 7 23 3 73 9 Record low C F 15 6 60 1 17 5 63 5 18 7 65 7 19 2 66 6 20 3 68 5 19 8 67 6 19 6 67 3 20 1 68 2 20 1 68 2 19 1 66 4 16 6 61 9 15 6 60 1 15 6 60 1 Average rainfall mm inches 2 8 0 11 0 1 0 00 2 4 0 09 28 1 1 11 187 4 7 38 1 053 4 41 47 975 4 38 40 699 0 27 52 285 8 11 25 216 0 8 50 83 8 3 30 14 0 0 55 3 548 4 139 70 Average rainy days 0 2 0 0 0 3 1 7 7 0 23 7 26 6 24 6 14 0 9 5 3 8 0 5 111 7Average relative humidity at 17 30 IST 60 62 65 66 69 83 86 87 82 79 69 61 73Source India Meteorological Department 99 100 Climate data for Mangalore India Mangalore International Airport 1991 2020 extremes 1956 2012Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 8 98 2 38 2 100 8 39 8 103 6 37 8 100 0 38 0 100 4 36 4 97 5 33 3 91 9 33 3 91 9 35 4 95 7 35 2 95 4 36 6 97 9 36 0 96 8 39 8 103 6 Average high C F 33 2 91 8 33 6 92 5 34 0 93 2 34 3 93 7 33 5 92 3 30 0 86 0 28 7 83 7 28 8 83 8 30 0 86 0 31 2 88 2 32 8 91 0 33 1 91 6 31 9 89 4 Average low C F 21 0 69 8 22 0 71 6 23 8 74 8 25 0 77 0 25 0 77 0 23 6 74 5 23 0 73 4 23 1 73 6 23 2 73 8 23 3 73 9 22 8 73 0 21 6 70 9 23 1 73 6 Record low C F 16 1 61 0 17 3 63 1 18 8 65 8 19 7 67 5 20 4 68 7 20 5 68 9 19 8 67 6 19 4 66 9 20 2 68 4 19 1 66 4 15 9 60 6 16 1 61 0 15 9 60 6 Average rainfall mm inches 0 6 0 02 0 0 0 0 4 7 0 19 34 3 1 35 169 8 6 69 1 033 8 40 70 1 095 8 43 14 743 5 29 27 341 1 13 43 230 5 9 07 80 7 3 18 12 8 0 50 3 747 6 147 54 Average rainy days 0 1 0 0 0 3 2 1 6 3 23 5 28 1 25 4 15 0 9 9 4 0 0 8 115 5Average relative humidity at 17 30 IST 55 58 62 64 67 83 86 85 80 78 69 57 70Mean monthly sunshine hours 303 8 257 1 269 7 258 0 220 1 99 0 55 8 89 9 156 0 186 0 213 0 269 7 2 378 1Mean daily sunshine hours 9 8 9 1 8 7 8 6 7 1 3 3 1 8 2 9 5 2 6 0 7 1 8 7 6 5Source India Meteorological Department sun 1971 2000 99 100 101 Climate data for Mangalore 1961 1990 extremes 1901 1981 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 3 97 3 37 8 100 0 37 4 99 3 36 6 97 9 36 7 98 1 34 4 93 9 35 6 96 1 32 2 90 0 34 6 94 3 35 0 95 0 35 6 96 1 35 6 96 1 37 8 100 0 Average high C F 31 7 89 1 31 7 89 1 31 9 89 4 32 8 91 0 32 3 90 1 29 9 85 8 28 6 83 5 28 5 83 3 29 2 84 6 30 4 86 7 31 7 89 1 32 0 89 6 30 9 87 6 Average low C F 21 7 71 1 22 7 72 9 24 4 75 9 25 7 78 3 25 4 77 7 23 7 74 7 23 1 73 6 23 1 73 6 23 1 73 6 23 4 74 1 23 0 73 4 22 4 72 3 23 5 74 3 Record low C F 16 7 62 1 16 7 62 1 18 3 64 9 20 0 68 0 18 9 66 0 18 4 65 1 18 0 64 4 19 8 67 6 19 0 66 2 18 8 65 8 17 6 63 7 16 7 62 1 16 7 62 1 Average rainfall mm inches 0 2 0 01 3 6 0 14 2 5 0 10 35 0 1 38 199 5 7 85 955 8 37 63 1 160 3 45 68 792 6 31 20 331 5 13 05 184 0 7 24 75 2 2 96 33 9 1 33 3 774 1 148 59 Average rainy days 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 7 2 24 5 29 4 25 4 15 3 10 1 4 4 1 3 119 7Average relative humidity at 17 30 IST 65 68 70 71 73 82 86 85 83 80 71 67 75Source India Meteorological Department 100 102 EconomyMain article Economy of Mangalore Industrial commercial agricultural processing and port related activities comprise this city s economy 103 The New Mangalore Port is India s seventh largest container port 77 It handles 75 percent of India s coffee exports and the bulk of its cashew nuts 104 The Mangalore Customs Commissionerate collected a revenue of 4 47 billion US 55 98 million during 2012 13 105 and 27 91 billion US 349 53 million during December 2018 update 106 During 2012 13 MRPL and MCF contributed 501 million US 6 27 million and 373 million US 4 67 million respectively to the state s revenue 105 Dakshina Kannada district has the highest percentage of workers employed in industry and the second highest industry to district GDP ratio in Karnataka 107 Imports through New Mangalore port include crude oil edible oil liquefied petroleum gas and timber 108 Cognizant campus in Mangalore 109 The city s major chemical industries include BASF 110 Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited MRPL Mangalore Chemicals and Fertilizers MCF Kudremukh Iron Ore Company Ltd KIOCL 111 Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd HPCL 112 Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd BPCL 113 Indian Oil Corporation Limited IOCL 114 Total Oil India Limited 115 and Hindustan Unilever 116 The Indian government has built 5 33 million tons of strategic crude oil storage at Mangalore and Padur to ensure energy security 117 118 Out of the 5 million metric tonnes MMT storage 1 5 MMT is stored at Mangalore 119 Bharati Shipyard Ltd BSL now known as Bharati Defence and Infrastructure Limited has established a shipbuilding site near Tannirbavi in Mangalore 120 121 Syndicate Bank at HampankattaMajor information technology IT and outsourcing companies like Infosys 122 Cognizant 123 and 124 have their offices at Mangalore 104 Mphasis Business Process Outsourcing BPO has a branch in this city 125 IT parks Export Promotion Investment Park EPIP at Ganjimutt 126 and Special Economic Zone SEZ near Mangalore University have been constructed 127 An IT park called Soorya Infratech park is situated in Mudipu 128 Tata Consultancy Services TCS has planned to invest 500 crore US 62 62 million and set up its office at Karnad near Mangalore 129 130 KEONICS has planned to build an IT park at Derebail in Mangalore similar to Electronic City spanning an area of 100 acres 131 132 133 Centre for Entrepreneurship Opportunities and Learning CEOL is a startup incubation centre situated in the city 134 Corporation Bank 135 Canara Bank 136 and Vijaya Bank 137 were the three nationalised banks established in Mangalore during the first half of the 20th century Mangalore is the headquarters of Corporation Bank and Karnataka Bank 138 The Mangalore Catholic Co operative Bank MCC Bank Ltd 139 Mangalore Cooperative Town Bank Ltd 140 and SCDCC Bank 141 were the scheduled banks established in Mangalore Syngene International which is a contract research arm of Biocon has set up its manufacturing plant at Mangalore 142 143 Old Mangalore Port is a fishing port located at Bunder Mangalore where a large number of mechanised boats anchor 144 The traffic at this port was 122 000 tonnes during the years 2003 04 145 New Mangalore Port handled over 100 000 Twenty foot equivalent units of containers during the years 2017 18 146 Fishing is a traditional occupation and the products are sold in the surrounding regions 147 Mangalorean firms have a major presence in the tile beedi coffee and cashew nut industries although the tile industry has declined because concrete is preferred in modern construction 104 103 The Albuquerque tile factory in Mangalore is one of India s oldest red roof tile manufacturing factories 148 149 The city s suburb Ullal produces hosiery and coir yarns while beedi rolling is an important source of revenue to many of the city s residents 103 DemographicsPopulation GrowthYearPop 192166 400 193173 600 10 8 194185 500 16 2 1951110 750 29 5 1961145 300 31 2 1971210 400 44 8 1981305 200 45 1 1991425 600 39 4 2001512 100 20 3 2011619 600 21 0 2021724 159 16 9 Source Census of India 1 150 151 Religions in Mangalore 2011 census Religion PercentHinduism 68 99 Islam 17 40 Christianity 13 15 Jainism 0 21 Other or not stated 0 12 Distribution of religions Includes Sikhism 0 08 Buddhism 0 05 Languages spoken as of 2011 152 Tulu 33 7 Konkani 14 03 Kannada 12 45 Malayalam 5 64 Others 34 18 In 2021 the population of Mangalore city was 724 159 1 According to the 2011 Indian census the male literacy rate was 96 49 percent and the female literacy rate was 91 63 percent 151 About 8 5 percent of the population was under the age of six years 151 The death rate and Infant mortality rate were at 3 7 percent and 1 2 percent respectively 153 About 7726 people lived in slums in Mangalore city which was 1 55 percent of the total population 154 155 The Human Development Index HDI of Mangalore city was 0 83 in 2015 update 6 Religions Hinduism is the largest religion in Mangalore and Devadiga Mogaveera Billavas Ganigas Bunts Vishwakarma Padmashali Brahmins and Daivadnyas are the major communities among Hindus 156 157 Christians form a sizeable section of Mangalorean society Mangalorean Catholics comprise the city s largest Christian community 158 Protestants in Mangalore typically speak Tulu and Kannada 159 Anglo Indians were also part of the Mangalorean Christian Community 160 Mangalore has one of the highest percentage of Muslims in Karnataka cities 161 Most Muslims in Mangalore are Bearys who speak the Beary language 162 Most of them follow the Shafi i school of Fiqh Islamic Jurisprudence 163 Mangalore also has a small group of Urdu speaking Dakhini Muslims 164 The Masjid Zeenath Baksh at Mangalore is one of the oldest mosques in the Indian subcontinent 36 32 33 34 35 Languages Mangalore is a multi lingual city where several prominent regional languages such as Tulu Konkani Kannada and Beary are spoken 23 The city is known as Kudla in Tulu Kodial in Konkani Maikala in Beary Mangalapuram in Malayalam and Mangaluru in Kannada 23 Among most of the residents of the city Kudla is the most commonly used name to refer to it 23 There are also smaller communities of Tuluva Jains 165 Gujaratis 38 Tamils 166 and Marathis 167 Tulu is a predominant language in Mangalore and Kannada is the administrative language of Mangalore but the city is multi cultural According to the 2011 census Tulu is spoken as a first language by 33 7 of the population Konkani by 14 03 Kannada by 12 45 Malayalam by 5 64 and other languages are spoken by 34 18 152 Unlike other cities in Karnataka where Kannada is a primary language Kannada is the third most spoken language Tulu is predominant language in Mangalore and Konkani is the second most spoken language in Mangalore Government and public servicesCivic administration Main article Mangalore City Corporation Mangalore City Corporation at LalbaghMangalore has a city area of 170 km2 65 64 sq mi 3 Municipal limits begin at Surathkal in the north Netravati River bridge in the south the western coast and Vamanjoor in the east 168 Mangalore City Corporation MCC came into existence in 1980 it is the municipal corporation in charge of the city s civic and infrastructural assets 169 The MCC council consists of 60 elected representatives which are called corporators one from each of the city s 60 wards 170 171 A corporator from the ruling majority party is selected to be the mayor 172 MCC s headquarters are at Lalbagh 168 Mangalore Urban Development Authority MUDA manages the planning urban growth and expansion of the city 173 174 175 The District Commissioner is the chairperson of MUDA 176 The 44 projects which are listed as part of the Smart Cities Mission programme are managed by Mangalore Smart City Limited MSCL 177 Until the Delimitation commission s revised the Lok Sabha and the legislative constituencies Mangalore contributed two members to the Lok Sabha one for the southern part of the city that fell under the Mangalore Lok Sabha constituency and another for the northern part of the city that fell under the Udupi Lok Sabha constituency 178 After the delimitation of parliamentary constituencies in 2008 Mangalore Lok Sabha constituency was replaced with Dakshina Kannada Lok Sabha constituency resulting in Mangalore being represented by one Member of Parliament MP 179 180 Additionally Mangalore sends three members to the Karnataka Legislative Assembly from Mangalore City South Mangalore City North and Mangalore 181 The Mangalore City Police Department is headed by a Commissioner of Police 182 Mangalore is also the headquarters of the Western Range Police which covers the western districts of Karnataka and is headed by an Inspector General of Police IGP 183 Healthcare KMC Hospital in Mangalore 184 The city is served by various hospitals such as the KMC Hospitals Father Muller Charitable Institutions FMCI 185 AJ Hospital and Wenlock Hospital 186 Wenlock Hospital a teaching hospital of KMC Mangalore has around 1000 beds and caters to the healthcare needs of the neighboring districts 187 Mangalore is a hub for medical tourism and receives patients from foreign countries 188 From 2017 to 2019 around 240 foreign nationals were treated in three hospitals across the city 188 Approximately 50 per cent of the patients the foreign nationals arrived in 2018 and 2019 KMC AJ and Yenepoya Hospitals have received the highest number of foreign patients including those from the United States 188 At Yenepoya Hospital 68 foreign nationals have availed treatment during 2017 19 188 The largest inflow of foreign patients into Mangalore is from the Gulf countries Deralakatte is a main healthcare hub of Mangalore 188 Utility services In Mangalore electricity is regulated by the Karnataka Power Transmission Corporation Limited KPTCL and distributed through Mangalore Electricity Supply Company MESCOM 189 190 191 Major state owned enterprises such as Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited MRPL and Mangalore Chemicals amp Fertilizers MCF operate their own captive power plants 192 193 Potable water is supplied to the city from a vented dam that was constructed across the Netravati River at Thumbe 14 km 9 mi from Mangalore 194 195 196 The Karnataka Urban Development and Coastal Environment Management Project KUDCEMP aims to improve safe water supply systems also reducing leakage and losses in the city s distribution system 195 The distribution and rehabilitation of the drinking water in the city are handled by the French company Suez Environnement 197 198 Mangalore s official refuse disposal site is in Vamanjoor 199 The city generates an average of 175 tonnes per day of waste which is handled by the MCC s health department 200 Mangalore is the headquarters of the Dakshina Kannada Telecom District the second largest telecom district in Karnataka 201 Fixed line telecom services are provided alongside GSM and Code division multiple access CDMA mobile services 202 Prominent broadband internet service providers in the city include Airtel and DataOne by Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited 203 EducationMain article List of educational institutions in Mangalore National Institute of Technology Karnataka NITK in Surathkal is among the premier institutes of IndiaThe districts of Dakshina Kannada and Udupi are considered to be a major education corridor in India Deralakatte is a university and Medical town in Mangalore where Universities like Mangalore University Nitte Yenepoya Father Mullers and Kanachur are situated 204 In schools and colleges which are below university level the media of instruction are mostly English and Kannada and English is used for teaching in universities 205 Schools and colleges in Mangalore are either government run or are operated by private trusts and individuals 206 207 Schools are affiliated with either the Karnataka State Board Indian Certificate of Secondary Education ICSE 208 the Central Board of Secondary Education CBSE 209 or the National Institute of Open Schooling NIOS boards 210 Here are some of the earliest schools and colleges established in Mangalore and their years of establishmentBasel Evangelical School 1838 211 Milagres School 1848 212 Rosario High School 1858 213 University College 1868 214 St Ann s High School 1870 215 St Aloysius College 1879 216 Canara High School 1891 217 St Agnes PU College 1921 218 St Agnes College Autonomous 1921 219 Sacred Hearts School 1943 220 Cascia High School 1946 221 Carmel School 1951 222 Kasturba Medical College which was established in 1953 was India s first private medical college and Manipal College Of Dental Sciences MCODS was established in the city in 1987 223 A public library run by the Corporation Bank is located at Mannagudda 224 Mangalore University was established on 10 September 1980 225 to fulfil the higher education needs of Dakshina Kannada Udupi and Kodagu districts 226 It is a National Assessment and Accreditation Council NAAC accredited four star level institution 227 NITK houses South India s first Regional Academy Centre for Space RAC S which was launched by ISRO 228 TransportMain article Transport in Mangalore Mangalore is the only city in Karnataka to have all modes of transport air road rail and sea 229 Jet bridge at the Mangalore International AirportMangalore International Airport IATA IXE ICAO VOML is located near Bajpe Kenjar and about 13 km 8 mi north east of Mangalore city centre 230 It operates regular scheduled flights to major cities in India and the Middle East 231 232 It is the second largest and second busiest airport in Karnataka 233 234 New terminals and runways at the airport accommodate both cargo and passenger requirements 235 This airport is accredited by the Airports Council International ACI under the Airport Health Accreditation AHA programme 236 State government run buses connect the city with the airport 237 Five National Highways pass through Mangalore 238 NH 66 previously known as NH 17 239 which runs from Panvel Maharashtra to Kanyakumari Tamil Nadu passes through Mangalore in a north south direction 240 NH 75 previously known as NH 48 runs eastward to Bangalore and Vellore 241 NH 169 previously known as NH 13 runs north east from Mangalore to Shimoga 242 NH 73 a 315 km 196 mi long National Highway connects Mangalore to Tumkur 243 NH 275 also connects Mangalore with Bangalore via Mysore 244 National Highways Authority of India NHAI is upgrading the national highways connecting New Mangalore Port to Surathkal on NH 66 and BC Road junction on NH 75 245 Under the port connectivity programme of the National Highways Development Project NHDP a 37 5 km 23 mi stretch of these highways will be widened from two lanes to four 246 Mangalore s city bus service is dominated by private operators which operate routes that extend beyond the city s boundary Bus services from Mangalore are operated by the Dakshina Kannada Bus Operators Association DKBOA and Canara Bus Operators Association CBOA 247 248 Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation KSRTC also runs bus services in the city 249 Two distinct sets of routes for the buses exist city routes are covered by city buses while intercity routes are covered by service and express buses 250 KSRTC also operates long distance bus services that connect Mangalore with other parts of the state 251 KSRTC JnNurm green city buses operate within the city limits 252 Clock Tower to Nehru Maidan RoadRail connectivity in Mangalore was established in 1907 253 the city was the starting point of India s longest rail route 74 The city has three railway stations Mangalore Central at Hampankatta Mangalore Junction at Padil and Surathkal railway station 254 A railway track built through the Western Ghats connects Mangalore with Sakleshpur and Hassan 255 The broad gauge track connecting Mangalore to Bangalore via Hassan was opened to freight traffic in May 2006 256 and passenger traffic in December 2007 257 Mangalore is also connected to Chennai Mumbai Pune Bhatkal Karwar Surat Ajmer and Margao through the Konkan Railway 258 259 Mangalore Harbour has shipping storage and logistical services New Mangalore Port handles dry bulk and fluid cargoes 260 and is equipped to handle petroleum oil lubricants crude products and LPG containers 261 The Indian Coast Guard has a station at New Mangalore Port 262 The artificial harbour is India s seventh largest container port and the only major port in Karnataka 263 77 Electronic visa e visa facilities are available for travellers arriving in India at New Mangalore Port 264 CultureMain article Culture of Mangalore World Konkani Centre in MangaloreMusic and dance Many classical dance forms and folk art are practised in Mangalore Yakshagana is a night long dance and drama performance 265 while Pilivesha tiger dance a folk dance unique to the city is performed during Dasara and Krishna Janmashtami 266 Karadi Vesha bear dance is another well known dance that is performed during Dasara 267 Paddanas ballad like epics passed on verbally through generations are sung by a community of impersonators in Tulu and are usually accompanied by the rhythmic drum beats 267 The Bearys unique traditions are reflected in folk songs such as Kolkai sung during Kolata a valour folk dance during which sticks are used as props Unjal Pat traditional lullaby Moilanji Pat and Oppune Pat sung at weddings 268 The Evkaristik Purshanv Konkani Eucharistic procession is an annual Catholic religious procession that is held on the first Sunday of each year 267 Festivals Most of the popular Indian festivals are celebrated the most important are Dasara Diwali Christmas Easter Eid and Ganesh Chaturthi 269 270 Kodial Theru also known as Mangaluru Rathotsava chariot festival is unique to the Goud Saraswat Brahmin community and is celebrated at the city s Sri Venkatramana Temple 271 The Mangalore Catholic community s unique festivals include Monti Fest Mother Mary s feast which celebrates the Nativity feast and the blessing of new harvests 272 The Jain Milan a committee that consists of Jain families organises the annual Jain food festival 273 while Mosaru Kudike curd pots feast which is part of Krishna Janmashtami festival is celebrated by the whole community 274 Special night prayers called Taraveeh rest and relaxation are offered in mosques during the month of Ramadan 275 Aati a festival worshiping Kalenja a patron spirit of the city is during the Aashaadha month of Hindu calendar 276 Festivals such as Karavali Utsav coastal festival and Kudlotsava Tulu festival of Mangalore are celebrated with national and state level performances in dance drama and music 277 Bhuta Kola spirit worship is usually performed by the Tuluva community at night 278 Bhuta Kola is similar to Theyyam in Kerala 279 280 Nagaradhane snake worship is performed in praise of Naga Devatha the serpent king who is said to be the protector of all snakes 281 Kori Katta an ancient ritual associated with the Hindu temples in rural areas 282 283 a religious and spiritual cockfight is held at the temples when permission is given by police 284 Cuisine Main article Mangalorean cuisine Neer dosa a variant of dosa and pundi rice ball are native to MangaloreMangalorean cuisine is largely influenced by South Indian cuisine several local cuisines are unique to the diverse communities of the region 285 Coconut curry leaves ginger garlic and chili are common ingredients in Mangalorean curries 286 Well known Mangalorean dishes include kori rotti neer dosa pundi rice ball patrode golibaje and Mangalore buns 287 Mangalorean cuisine is also known for fish and chicken dishes like bangude pulimunchi spicy sour silver grey mackerels boothai gasi sardine semi gravy anjal fry Mangalorean Chicken Sukka and Chicken Ghee Roast 288 289 Due to Mangalore being a coastal city fish is a staple of most people s diet 290 The Konkani Hindu community s specialties include daali thoy lentil curry bibbe upkari tender cashew nut curry val val coconut milk based curry ambat vegetable based coconut curry 291 avnas ambe sasam pineapple mango fruit salad kadgi chakko raw jackfruit coconut curry paagila podi spine gourd fries and chane gashi chickpea curry 292 293 Mangalorean Catholics dish sanna dukra maas sanna idli fluffed with toddy or yeast dukra maas pork pork bafat sorpotel 294 and mutton biryani of the Beary Muslims are well known dishes 295 Pickles such as happala sandige and puli munchi are unique to Mangalore 296 297 Shendi toddy which is a country liquor prepared from coconut flower sap is popular 267 Vegetarian cuisine also known as Udupi cuisine is known throughout the state and region 298 Media All India Radio s FM tower at KadriMangaluru Samachara the first ever newspaper in Kannada was published in 1843 by Hermann Mogling of the Basel Mission 299 300 The first Kannada to English dictionary was published in Mangalore by Ferdinand Kittel in 1894 301 Major national English language newspapers such as Times of India The Hindu The New Indian Express Deccan Herald and Daijiworld 302 303 publish localised Mangalore editions 304 305 Madipu Esteem Mogaveera Samparka Contact and Saphala Success are the well known Tulu periodicals in Mangalore 306 Popular Konkani language periodicals published in the city are Raknno Guardian Konknni Dirvem Konkani Treasure and Kannik Offering 304 Beary periodicals published in Mangalore include Jyothi Light and Swatantra Bharata Independent India 304 Kannada language newspapers are Udayavani Morning Voice by Manipal Press Ltd Vijaya Karnataka Victory of Karnataka and Vijayavani Voice of Victory 307 by VRL Group Prajavani Voice of the People Kannada Prabha Kannada Radiance Varthabharathi Indian News Samyukta Karnataka United Karnataka and Hosa Digantha New Horizon 304 308 The city s evening newspapers include Karavali Ale Waves from the Coast Mangaluru Mitra Friend of Mangalore Sanjevani Evening Voice and Jayakirana Rays of Victory are also published in the city 309 The Konkani language newspaper Kodial Khabar Mangalore News is published fortnightly 304 Malayalam newspapers such as Malayala Manorama Malayalam Entertainer and Madhyamam Medium publish localised Mangalore editions 310 The state run nationally broadcast television channel Doordarshan provides national and local television coverage 311 Cable television also provides channels from independently owned private networks 312 Canara TV and V4 Digital infotech network local Multi System Operators transmits daily video news channels live events and cultural programmes to the city through local channels 313 Multiple local television channels broadcast programmes and news in Tulu Konkani Beary and Kannada 314 these include Namma TV V4 News and Spandana 315 Tulu channels are Namma Kudla 316 and Posa Kural 317 All India Radio AIR has a studio at Kadri and broadcasts to Mangalore on 100 3 MHz 318 Mangalore s private FM stations include Radio Mirchi 98 3 FM Big 92 7 FM 319 and Red 93 5 FM 320 Radio SARANG 107 8 is a community radio station that is run by St Aloysius College 321 Mangalore is home to the Tulu film industry which releases one film per month on average 322 Popular Tulu films include Kadala Mage Son of the Sea and Suddha The Cleansing Rites 323 Tulu dramas which are mostly played in the Town Hall at Hampankatta are very popular 223 Mangalore hosted the Tulu film festivals in 2006 and 2015 324 325 Sports and pastimesMain article Sports in Mangalore Mangalore Golf Course at PilikulaCricket is a popular sport in Mangalore 326 Local cricket stadia include Mangala Stadium and B R Ambedkar Cricket Stadium near NMPT 327 328 The Sports Authority of India SAI has a sports training centre at Mangala Stadium 329 Mangalore United is a Karnataka Premier League KPL franchise owned by Fiza Developers 330 Mangalore Premier League MPL is a cricket tournament organised by Karnataka Regional Cricket Academy 331 Nehru Maidan is an important local venue that hosts domestic inter school and intercollegiate tournaments 332 Mangalore Sports Club MSC has been elected as the institutional member for the Mangalore Zone of the Karnataka State Cricket Association KSCA 333 334 Lokesh Rahul commonly known as KL Rahul and Budhi Kunderan a former Indian wicket keeper are from Mangalore 335 Ravi Shastri who represented India for several years in international cricket as an all rounder and captained the team is of Mangalorean descent 336 Football is also a popular sport in the city and is usually played in the maidans grounds the Nehru Maidan is the most popular venue for domestic tournaments 337 Dakshina Kannada District Football Association DKDFA annually organises the Independence Day Cup which is played on Independence Day at district football grounds adjacent to Nehru Maidan 338 Schools and colleges from across Dakshina Kannada Udupi and Kodagu districts participate and the matches are conducted under seven categories for children and young adults in education 339 Chess is a popular indoor pastime in the city 340 Mangalore is the headquarters of South Kanara District Chess Association SKDCA which has hosted two All India Open Chess tournaments 341 342 343 Other sports such as tennis squash billiards badminton table tennis and golf are played in clubs and gymkhanas in Mangalore 344 Pilikula Nisargadhama an integrated theme park has an 18 hole golf course 345 at Vamanjoor 346 U S Mallya Indoor Stadium offers sporting facilities for badminton and basketball players 347 TourismMain article Tourist attractions in Mangalore Panambur Beach St Aloysius CollegeMangalore lies between the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats 348 The city s temples and buildings include the Mangaladevi Temple Kadri Manjunath Temple St Aloysius Chapel the Rosario Cathedral Milagres Church Dargah of Hazrat Shareef ul Madni at Ullal and the Zeenath Baksh Jumma Masjid in Bunder 349 350 The city is known for beaches such as Panambur Tannirbhavi NITK beach Sasihithlu beach Someshwara beach Ullal beach Kotekar beach and Batapady beach 348 351 352 353 Panambur and Thannirbhavi beaches attract tourists from across the country 354 Panambur beach has facilities including food stalls jet ski rides boating and dolphin viewing 355 trained beach lifeguards and patrol vehicles ensure the safety of visitors 356 357 358 Dome of the Swami Vivekananda 3D Planetarium 359 Saavira Kambada Basadi is situated in Moodabidri 34 km 21 mi north east of Mangalore 360 The Sultan Battery watch tower built by Tipu Sultan is situated in Boloor on the banks of Gurupura River 361 visitors can take the ferry across the river to Tannirbhavi Beach 362 Adyar waterfalls is on the city s outskirts about 12 km 7 5 mi from Mangalore city centre 363 The city has developed and maintains public parks such as Pilikula Nisargadhama 364 Kadri Park Tagore Park 365 at Light House Hill Mahatma Gandhi Park 366 at Gandhinagar in Mannagudda 367 Tannirbavi Tree Park 368 Arise Awake Park at Karangalpady 369 and Corporation Bank Park at Nehru Maidan Pilikula which occupies 370 acres 150 ha 346 370 has a zoo botanical garden lake water park manasa 371 Swami Vivekananda Planetarium 372 science centre 373 and a 50 acre 20 ha 18 hole golf course 345 374 375 376 377 Swami Vivekananda Planetarium is the first 3D planetarium in India with an 8K resolution display 372 Mangalore Dasara a ten day festival held at Sri Gokarnatheswara temple attracts devotees from across India 378 Mangaladevi Temple attracts devotees from all over the country during Navaratri 379 Sister citiesMangalore is twinned with two Canadian cities Hamilton Canada since 1968 380 Delta Canada since 2010 381 References a b c Population of cities in India 2021 Statistics Times Retrieved 30 January 2023 Jayanand of BJP elected new Mayor of Mangaluru a b c Mangaluru City Corporation Mangaluru Smart City Retrieved 7 July 2020 Shenoy Jaideep 16 February 2017 Surathkal all set to get a new RTO in next 20 days The Times of India Retrieved 13 March 2020 Kumar T K Anil Primary census abstract data highlights PDF censuskarnataka gov in p 69 Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b Sastry Anil Kumar 2 January 2016 Human Development Index DC exhorts officials to aim high The Hindu Retrieved 18 February 2016 Cities having population 1 lakh and above Census 2011 PDF censusindia gov in Retrieved 4 October 2015 Census of India Language censusindia gov in Retrieved 7 May 2021 a b Variyar Mugdha 18 October 2014 Bangalore Mysore Other Karnataka Cities to be Renamed on 1 November International Business Times Retrieved 26 February 2020 Bengaluru tops in per capita income survey in Karnataka Hindustan Times 7 March 2022 Retrieved 31 May 2023 Daithota Madhu 7 April 2017 Kudla is on world s top cities list The Times of India Retrieved 21 March 2021 Kameshwar G 2004 Tulu tales a soota chronicle Rupa amp Co p 8 ISBN 978 81 291 0427 4 Sadasivan S N 2000 A social history of India APH Pub Corp pp 207 208 ISBN 81 7648 170 X a b c d Atmashraddhananda Swami 2013 A Pilgrimage To Western Ghats Temples in Karnataka Sri Ramakrishna Math Chennai ISBN 978 8178836157 a b c New names invoke a hoary past The Times of India 19 October 2014 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a b Census of India 1971 Vol Part 6 Issue 1 Office of the Registrar General Government of India 1973 p 268 Kudva Venkataraya Narayan 1972 History of the Dakshinatya Saraswats Samyukta Gowda Saraswata Sabha p 260 ASIN 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