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Andhra Pradesh

Andhra Pradesh (English: /ˌɑːndrə prəˈdɛʃ/,[11] Telugu: [aːndʱrɐ prɐdeːʃ] abbr. AP) is a state in the southern coastal region of India. It is the seventh-largest state with an area of 162,970 km2 (62,920 sq mi)[5] and the tenth-most populous state with 49,577,103 inhabitants.[4] It shares borders with Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana and the Bay of Bengal. It has the second-longest coastline in India at about 974 km (605 mi).[5] After existence as Andhra State and unified Andhra Pradesh, the state took its present form on 2 June 2014, when the new state of Telangana was formed through bifurcation.[12] Amaravati is the capital of the state, with the largest city being Visakhapatnam. Water sharing disputes and asset division with Telangana are not yet resolved. Telugu, one of the classical languages of India used by the majority of people, is the first official language.

Andhra Pradesh
From top, left to right: Venkateswara temple at Tirumala, Undavalli caves at Vijayawada, and Vizag seaport
Etymology: State of Andhras
Motto
Satyameva Jayate (Truth alone triumphs)
Anthem: Maa Telugu Thalliki (To Our Mother Telugu)
Location of Andhra Pradesh in India
Coordinates: 16°31′N 80°31′E / 16.51°N 80.52°E / 16.51; 80.52
Country India
RegionSouth India
Before wasUnited Andhra Pradesh
Formation1 November 1956[1]
CapitalAmaravati
Largest cityVisakhapatnam
Largest metroAndhra Pradesh Capital Region Development Authority
Districts26
Government
 • BodyGovernment of Andhra Pradesh
 • GovernorS. Abdul Nazeer[2]
 • Chief ministerY. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy (YSRCP)
 • Deputy chief ministerKottu Satyanarayana (YSRCP)

Rajanna Dora Peedika (YSRCP)
Budi Mutyala Naidu] (YSRCP)
Amzath Basha Shaik Bepari (YSRCP)

K. Narayana Swamy (YSRCP)
 • Chief secretaryK S Jawahar Reddy, IAS[3]
State LegislatureBicameral
Andhra Legislature
 • CouncilAndhra Sasana Mandali (58 seats)
 • AssemblyAndhra Sasana Sabha (175 seats)
National ParliamentParliament of India
 • Rajya Sabha11 seats
 • Lok Sabha25 seats
High CourtAndhra Pradesh High Court
Area
 • Total162,970 km2 (62,920 sq mi)
 • Rank7th
Elevation
269 m (883 ft)
Highest elevation1,680 m (5,510 ft)
Population
 (2011) [4][5]
 • Total49,577,103
 • Rank10th
 • Density304/km2 (790/sq mi)
 • Urban
14,610,372
 • Rural
34,966,730
Demonym(s)Andhrulu, Teluguvaaru
Language
 • OfficialTelugu
 • Additional officialUrdu[6][7]
 • Official scriptTelugu script
GDP
(Advance estimates)
 • Total (2023–24)1,449,501 crore (US$180 billion)[8]
 • Per capita219,518 (equivalent to 230,000 or US$2,900 in 2023)[9]
Time zoneUTC+05:30 (IST)
ISO 3166 codeIN-AP
Vehicle registrationAP
HDI (2018) 0.649 Medium (27th)
Literacy (2011) 67.02% (31st)
Sex ratio (2011)993/1000 (20th)
Websiteap.gov.in
Symbols of Andhra Pradesh
SongMaa Telugu Thalliki (To Our Mother Telugu)
Foundation dayAndhra Pradesh Day
BirdRose-ringed parakeet[10]
FlowerJasmine
FruitBanginapalle Mango
MammalBlackbuck[10]
TreeAzadirachta indica
State highway mark
State highway of Andhra Pradesh
AP SH1 - AP SH240
List of Indian state symbols

As per the 8th century BCE Rigvedic text Aitareya Brahmana, the Andhras left North India off the banks of the Yamuna river and migrated to South India. In the third century BCE, Andhra was a vassal kingdom of Ashoka of the Mauryan Empire. After his death, it became powerful and extended its empire to the whole Maratha country and beyond under the rule of the Satavahana dynasty. After that, the major rulers included the Pallavas, Eastern Chalukyas, Kakatiyas, Vijayanagara Empire, Qutb Shahi dynasty, Nizam dynasty, East India Company, and British Raj.

The Eastern Ghats are a major dividing line separating coastal plains and peneplains. The coastal plains are part of Coastal Andhra. These are mostly delta regions formed by the Krishna, Godavari, and Penna rivers. Peneplains are part of Rayalaseema. 60% of the population is engaged in agriculture and related activities. Rice is the state's major food crop and staple food. The state contributes 10% of total fish production and over 70% of shrimp production in India. Industry sectors such as food products, non-metallic minerals, textiles, and pharmaceuticals are the top employment providers. The automotive sector accounts for 10% of India's auto exports. The state has about one-third of India's limestone reserves, large deposits of baryte and galaxy granite, and reserves of oil and natural gas.[13] Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), known as Sriharikota Range (SHAR), at the barrier island of Sriharikota in Tirupati district, is the satellite launching station of India.

Some of the unique products from the state are Banganapalle mangoes, Bandar laddu, Kondapalli toys, Tirupati laddu, and saris made in Dharmavaram and Machilipatnam. Kuchipudi is the official dance form. Many composers of Carnatic music, like Annamacharya, Kshetrayya, and Tyagaraja, were from this region. The Tirumala Venkateswara temple near Tirupati is the most visited Hindu religious place in the world. The state is home to a variety of other pilgrimage centres and natural attractions.

Etymology edit

Epigraphist Iravatham Mahadevan interprets the Sanskrit word 'āndʰra' as a corruption of the masculine nominative suffix '-anṟu' of Early Telugu language (c.800 BCE).[14]

According to the Sanskrit text Aitareya Brahmana (800–500 BCE), a group of people named Andhras left North India off the banks of the Yamuna and settled in South India.[15][16][17] The Satavahanas were mentioned by the names Andhra, Andhrara-jateeya, and Andhrabhrtya in the Puranic literature.[18][19] They did not refer to themselves as Andhra in any of their coins or inscriptions; it is possible that they were termed as Andhras because of their ethnicity or because their territory included the Andhra region.[20]

History edit

Early and medieval history edit

 
Ruins of the Buddhist Maha Stupa at Bhattiprolu, built during the 3rd century BCE–2nd century BCE

The Assaka mahajanapada, one of the sixteen Vedic mahajanapadas, included Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Telangana.[21] Archaeological evidence from places such as Bhattiprolu, Amaravathi, and Dharanikota suggests that the Andhra region was part of the Mauryan empire. Amaravathi might have been a regional centre under Mauryan rule. After the death of Emperor Ashoka, Mauryan rule weakened around 200 BCE and was replaced by several smaller kingdoms in the Andhra region.[22] One of the earliest examples of the Brahmi script, the progenitor of several scripts, including Telugu, comes from Bhattiprolu, where the script was used on an urn containing the relics of Buddha.[23]

The Satavahana dynasty dominated the Deccan plateau from the 1st century BCE to the 3rd century CE.[24] It had trade relations with the Roman Empire.[25] The later Satavahanas made Dharanikota, near Amaravathi, their capital. According to the Buddhists, Nagarjuna, the philosopher of Mahayana, lived in this region.[26][27][28] The Andhra Ikshvakus, with their capital at Vijayapuri, succeeded the Satavahanas in the Krishna river valley in the latter half of the 2nd century.[29] The Salankayanas were an ancient dynasty that ruled the Andhra region between Godavari and Krishna rivers with their capital at Vengi (modern Pedavegi) from 300 to 440 CE.[30] Telugu Cholas ruled present-day Rayalaseema from the fifth to the eleventh centuries from Cuddapa and Jammalamadugu. The Telugu inscription of Erikal Mutturaju Dhananjaya Varma, known as Erragudipadu sasanam(law), was engraved in 575 CE in the present Kadapa district. It is the earliest written record in Telugu.[31]

The Vishnukundinas were the first dynasty in the fifth and sixth centuries to hold sway over most of Andhra Pradesh, Kalinga, and parts of Telangana.[32] The Eastern Chalukyas of Vengi, whose dynasty lasted for around five hundred years from the 7th century until 1130 CE, eventually merged with the Chola dynasty. They continued to rule under the protection of the Chola dynasty until 1189 CE.[33] At the request of King Rajaraja Narendra, Nannaya, considered the first Telugu poet, took up the translation of the Mahabharata into Telugu in 1025 CE.[34]

Kakatiyas ruled this region and Telangana for nearly two hundred years between the 12th and 14th centuries. They were defeated by the Delhi sultanate.[35] Musunuri Nayaks and Bahamani sultanate took over when Delhi sultanate became weak. The Reddi kingdom ruled parts of this region in the early 14th century. They constructed Kondaveedu fort and Kondapalli fort.[36][37] After their rule, Gajpathis and Bahmani sultans ruled in succession before this region, along with most of present-day Andhra Pradesh, became part of the Vijayanagara empire.[38]

The Vijayanagara empire originated on the Deccan plateau in the early 14th century. It was established in 1336 by Harihara Raya I and his brother Bukka Raya I of the Sangama dynasty, who served as treasury officers of the Kakatiyas of Warangal.[39] During their rule, the Pemmasani Nayaks controlled parts of Andhra Pradesh and had large mercenary armies that were the vanguard of the empire in the 16th century.[40] The empire's patronage enabled fine arts and literature to reach new heights in Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, and Sanskrit, while Carnatic music evolved into its current form.[41] The Lepakshi group of monuments built during this period have mural paintings of the Vijayanagara kings, Dravidian art, and inscriptions. These are put on the tentative list of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee.[42]

Modern history edit

 
Dowleswaram Barrage built in 1850 by Arthur Cotton

Following the defeat of the Vijayanagara empire, the Qutb Shahi dynasty held sway over Andhra Pradesh.[43] This region passed under the rule of the Nizams under the Mughal Empire. Soon, Nizam established himself as the sovereign ruler.[44] In 1611, an English trading post by the name of British East India Company was established in Machilipatnam on India's east coast.[45] In the early nineteenth century, Northern Circars was ceded to the British East India Company and became part of its Madras Presidency.[46] Eventually, this region emerged as the Coastal Andhra region, the northern parts of which were later known as North Andhra. Later, the Nizam ceded five territories to the British, which eventually became the Rayalaseema region.[47] The local chieftains, known as Polygars, revolted in 1800 against the company's rule, which was suppressed by the company.[48] Raja Viziaram Raz (Vijayaram Raj) established a sovereign kingdom by claiming independence from the Kingdom of Jeypore in 1711. It formed alliances with the French and British East India companies to conquer the neighbouring principalities of Bobbili, Kurupam, Paralakhemundi, and the kingdom of Jeypore. It fell out with the British and, as a result, was attacked and defeated in the battle of Padmanabham. It was annexed as a tributary estate like other principalities and remained so until their accession to the Indian Union in 1949.[49] Following the Indian rebellion of 1857, the British crown ruled this region, until India became independent in 1947. The No Tax campaign in Chirala and Perala in 1919,[50] the Rampa revolt in 1921[51] are some of the protests against British rule.

Dowleswaram Barrage, built in 1850 by Arthur Cotton, brought unused lands in the Godavari river basin into cultivation and transformed the economy of the region.[52] Charles Philip Brown did pioneering work in transforming Telugu to the print era and introduced Vemana poems to English readers.[53] Kandukuri Veeresalingam is considered the father of the Telugu renaissance movement, as he encouraged the education of women and the remarriage of widows and fought against child marriage and the dowry system.[54] Gurajada Apparao, a pioneering playwright who used spoken dialect, wrote the play Kanyasulkam in 1892. It is considered the greatest play in the Telugu language.[55]

Post-independence edit

 
Potti Sreeramulu, whose fast unto death in 1952 led to the formation of Andhra State

In an effort to gain an independent state based on linguistic identity and to protect the interests of the Telugu-speaking people of Madras state, Potti Sreeramulu fasted to death in 1952. The Telugu-speaking area of Andhra state was carved out of Madras state on 1 October 1953, with Kurnool as its capital city. Tanguturi Prakasam became the first chief minister.[56] On the basis of the Gentlemen's Agreement of 1956, the States Reorganisation Act created Andhra Pradesh by merging the neighbouring Telugu-speaking areas of the Hyderabad state with Hyderabad as the capital on 1 November 1956.[57]

In the unified state, Indian National Congress (INC) enjoyed a monopoly in ruling the state till 1983. After that Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and INC ruled the state alternately.[58] Implementing land reforms and land ceiling acts and securing reservation for lower castes in politics were launched during the rule of P. V. Narasimha Rao.[59] During TDP rule, led by N. T. Rama Rao sub-district administration was transformed by forming mandals in place of earlier taluks, removing hereditary village heads, and appointing non-hereditary village revenue assistants.[60] E-governance through e-Seva centres was started in 2001 for paperless and speedy delivery of government services.[61] Chandrababu Naidu helped Hyderabad grew into an Information Technology hub.[62]

During its 58 years as a unified state, the state weathered separatist movements from Telangana (1969) and Andhra (1972) successfully.[63] When the union cabinet made a decision to consider the formation of Telangana state in 2009 heeding to the demand of relaunched Telangana movement, Samaikyandhra movement opposing it took shape and the state went through a turmoil.[64] Finally, the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act bill was passed by the parliament of India for the formation of the Telangana state, comprising ten districts, despite opposition by the state legislature.[65] The new state of Telangana came into existence on 2 June 2014 after approval from the president of India, with the residual state continuing as Andhra Pradesh.[66] TDP formed the first government of the residual state.[67] In 2017, the government of Andhra Pradesh began operating from its new greenfield capital, Amaravati, for which 33,000 acres were acquired from farmers through an innovative land pooling scheme.[68]

Geography edit

 
Andhra Pradesh relief map

The state is bordered by Telangana to the north and west, Chhattisgarh and Orissa to the north, the Bay of Bengal to the east, Tamil Nadu to the south, and Karnataka to the west. Yanam district, an enclave of Puducherry, is in the state bordering Kakinada district.[69] It has a coastline of around 974 kilometres (605 mi), which makes it the second-longest coastline in the nation.[5]

 
Eastern Ghats near Kadapa

The Eastern ghats are a major dividing line separating coastal plains and peneplains in the state's geography. These are discontinuous, and individual sections have local names. The ghats become more pronounced towards the south and extreme north of the coast. Some of these consist of the Horsley hills, the Seshachala hills,[70] the Nallamala hills, and the Papi hills.[71][72] Peneplains, part of Rayalaseema, slope towards the east.[73] The Eastern coastal plains comprise the area of coastal districts up to the Eastern ghats as their border along the Bay of Bengal, with variable width. These are, for the most part, delta regions formed by the Krishna, Godavari, and Penna rivers. Most of the coastal plains are put to intensive agricultural use.[74] The Kadapa basin, formed by two arching branches of the Eastern ghats, is a mineral-rich area.[75]

Flora and fauna edit

The total forest cover of the state is 29,784.3 square kilometres (11,499.8 sq mi), amounting to 18.28% of the total area.[76] The Eastern ghats region is home to dense tropical forests, while the vegetation becomes sparse as the ghats give way to the peneplains, where shrub vegetation is more common. The vegetation found in the state is largely of dry deciduous types, with a mixture of teak, Terminalia, Dalbergia, Pterocarpus, Anogeissus, etc. The state possesses some rare and endemic plants like Cycas beddomei, Pterocarpus santalinus, Terminalia pallida, Syzygium alternifolium, Shorea talura, Shorea tumburgia, Psilotum nudum, etc.[77] Coringa is an example of mangrove forests and salt-tolerant forest ecosystems near the sea. The area of these forests is 582 km2 (225 sq mi), accounting for about 9% of the local forest area of the state.[78]

The diversity of fauna includes tigers, leopards, dholes, black bucks, cheetals, sambars, sea turtles, and a number of birds and reptiles. The estuaries of the Godavari and Krishna rivers support rich mangrove forests with fishing cats and otters as keystone species.[77] The state has many sanctuaries and national parks, such as Coringa wildlife sanctuary, Nagarjunsagar-Srisailam tiger reserve, Kolleru bird sanctuary, and Nelapattu bird sanctuary.[79]

Mineral resources edit

 
Mangampet Barytes

The state, with its varied geological formations, contains a variety of industrial minerals and building stones. Major minerals found in significant quantities in the state include beach sand, bauxite, limestone, and diamonds. Minor minerals include barytes, calcite, and mica.[80] The largest reserves of uranium are in Tummalapalli village of YSR district. It has oil and natural gas to the extent of 698 million metric tonne of oil equivalent.[81] It is known for large exclusive deposits of galaxy granite.[82]

Climate edit

The climate varies considerably, depending on the geographical region. Summers last from March to June. In the coastal plain, the summer temperatures are generally higher than in the rest of the state, with temperatures ranging exceeding 40 °C (104 °F). July to September is the season for tropical rains from the southwest monsoon. During October to December, low-pressure systems and tropical cyclones form in the Bay of Bengal along with the northeast monsoon, bringing rains to the southern and coastal regions of the state. November to February are the winter months. Since the state has a long coastal belt, the winters are not very cold. The range of winter temperatures is generally 30 to 35 °C (86 to 95 °F) except in the north where it could fall below 15 °C (59 °F).[74] Lambasingi in Visakhapatnam district is nicknamed the "Kashmir of Andhra Pradesh" as its temperature ranges from 0 to 10 °C (32 to 50 °F).[83][84] The normal rainfall for the state is 966 mm (38.0 in), and the actual rainfall for June 2020–May 2021 was 1,191 mm (46.9 in).[85]

Demographics edit


Based on the 2011 Census of India, the population of Andhra Pradesh is 49,577,103, with a density of 304/km2 (790/sq mi). 70.53% of the population is rural, and 29.47% is urban.[5] The state has 17.08% Scheduled caste and 5.53% Scheduled tribe populations.[86] Children in the age group of 0–6 years number 5,222,384, constituting 10.6% of the total population. Among them, 2,686,453 are boys and 2,535,931 are girls. Adults in the age group of 18–23 account for 5,815,865 (2,921,284 males, 2,894,581 females).[87]

The state has a sex ratio of 997 females per 1000 males, higher than the national average of 926 per 1000. The literacy rate in the state stands at 67.35%. Erstwhile West Godavari district has the highest literacy rate of 74.32%, and erstwhile Vizianagaram district has the least with 58.89%.[5] The state ranks 27th of all Indian states in the Human Development Index (HDI) scores for the year 2018.[88] As of 1 January 2023, there are 39,984,868 voters (19,759,489 males, 20,221,455 females, and 3,924 third-gender voters). Kurnool district has the maximum number of voters at 1,942,233, while ASR district has the minimum at 729,085.[89]

Languages of Andhra Pradesh[a] (2011)[90]

  Telugu (89.21%)
  Urdu (6.55%)
  Tamil (1.04%)
  Others (3.20%)

Telugu is the first official language, and Urdu is the second official language of the state.[6] Telugu is the mother tongue of nearly 90% of the population.[90][91][92] Urdu, spoken by about 6% of the population, was a second official language in fifteen districts of united Andhra Pradesh[93] and was made the second official language on 17 June 2022.[7]

Tamil, Kannada, and Odia are spoken in the border areas. Lambadi, Koya, Savara, Konda, Gadaba, and a number of other languages are spoken by the Scheduled Tribes of the state.[94] 19% of the population aged 12+ years has the ability to read and understand English, as per the IRS Q4 2019 survey.[95]

Religion in Andhra Pradesh (2011)[96]

  Hinduism (90.89%)
  Islam (7.30%)
  Christianity (1.38%)
  Jainism (0.05%)
  Sikhism (0.02%)
  Buddhism (0.01%)
  Other (0.01%)
  Not Stated (0.34%)

According to the 2011 census, the major religious groups in the state are Hindus (90.89%), Muslims (7.30%), and Christians (1.38%).[b][96]

The National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5) 2019–21 data provides an insight into the economic and health status of households. 85% of households in the state have pucca houses. 76% of households (59% urban, 83% rural) own a house. Almost all houses have an electricity connection. 84% of households use clean fuel for cooking. 22% have piped water. 85% of all households (urban areas 97%, rural areas 80%) have access to a toilet facility. Almost all urban households (96%) and most rural households (89%) use a mobile phone. 96% of households use bank or post office savings accounts. 97% of childbirths during 2014–2019 happened in a health facility. The state health insurance scheme (Dr. YSR Arogya Sri), the employee health scheme, the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY), the employees' state insurance scheme (ESIS), and the central government health scheme cover 70% of households with at least one member covered.[97]

Administrative divisions edit

Andhra Pradesh comprises two regions, namely Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema. The northern part of Coastal Andhra is sometimes mentioned separately as North Andhra, particularly after the bifurcation to raise voice against underdevelopment.[98]

Districts edit

 
Andhra Pradesh districts

The state is further divided into 26 districts, with North Andhra comprising 6 districts, Coastal Andhra comprising 12 districts, and Rayalaseema comprising 8 districts.[99] These districts are made up of 76 revenue divisions,[100] 679 mandals[100] and 13,324 village panchayats as part of the administrative organisation.[101]

North Andhra:

Coastal Andhra:

Rayalaseema:

Cities and towns edit

There are 123 urban local bodies, comprising 17 municipal corporations, 79 municipalities, and 27 nagar panchyats, in the state. The urban population is 14.9 million (1.49 crores) as per the 2011 census.[102] There are two cities with more than one million inhabitants, namely Visakhapatnam and Vijayawada.[103]

Cities with the highest population in Andhra Pradesh, as per the 2011 Census[103]
Ciy/Town District(s) post 2022 reorg Population (2011)
Visakhapatnam Visakhapatnam, Anakapalli 1,728,128
Vijayawada NTR 1,476,931
Guntur Guntur 743,354
Nellore Nellore 558,548
Kurnool Kurnool 484,327
Rajahmundry East Godavari 560,756
Tirupati Tirupati 461,900
Kakinada Kakinada 443,028
Kadapa YSR 344,893
Anantapur Anantapur 340,613

Economy edit

GSDP at current prices for the year 2022–23 is estimated at 1,317,728 crore (US$170 billion) (advanced estimates) against 1,133,837 crore (equivalent to 12 trillion or US$150 billion in 2023) (first revised estimates) for the year 2021–22. The share of agriculture's contribution to the GSDP is at 36.19%, while industry is at 23.36%, and services are at 40.45%. The state posted a record growth of 7.02% at constant prices (2011–12) against the country's growth of 7%. GDP per capita is estimated at 219,518 (US$2,700).[5][104] AP achieved an overall 4th rank in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) India Report for the year 2020–21, with a first rank in SDG-7 (affordable energy) and a second rank in SDG-14 (life below water).[9]

In 2014–15, the first year after bifurcation, the state ranked eighth in GSDP at current prices, which stood at 520,030 crore (equivalent to 7.8 trillion or US$98 billion in 2023). It recorded 12.03% growth compared to the previous fiscal, which was 464,184 crore (equivalent to 7.4 trillion or US$93 billion in 2023).[105][106]

Agriculture edit

 
Lush green farms in Konaseema

The agricultural economy comprises agriculture, livestock, poultry farming, and fisheries.[85] Four important rivers in India, the Godavari, Krishna, Penna, and Tungabhadra, flow through the state and provide irrigation. 60% of the population is engaged in agriculture and related activities. Rice is the state's major food crop and staple food. The state has three agricultural export zones: the undivided Chittoor district for mango pulp and vegetables, the undivided Krishna district for mangoes, and the undivided Guntur district for chillies.[107] Besides rice, farmers grow jowar, bajra, maize, minor millet, many varieties of pulses, oil seeds, sugarcane, cotton, chilli pepper, mango, and tobacco. Crops used for vegetable oil production, such as sunflower and peanuts, are popular.[108]

The state contributes 10% of total fish production and over 70% of shrimp production in India.[109] The geographical location of the state allows marine fishing as well as inland fish production. The most exported marine products include Vannamei shrimp.[110]

Industries edit

As per the annual survey of industries 2019–20, the number of factories was 12,582 with 681,224 employees. The top 4 employment providers are food products (25.48%), non-metallic minerals (11.26%), textiles (9.35%), and pharmaceuticals (8.68%). Gross value added (GVA) contributed by the industrial sector is 55,035 crore (US$6.9 billion), of which food products (18.95%), pharmaceuticals (17.01%), and non-metallic minerals (16.25%) are the top 3 contributors. From a district perspective, the top three districts were undivided Visakhapatnam, Chittoor, and Krishna.[111]

The defence administered Hindustan Shipyard Limited built the first ship in India in 1948.[112] Sri City, located in Tirupati district, is an integrated business city that is home to several multinational companies.[113] The state has 36 big auto players, such as Ashok Leyland, Hero Motors, Isuzu Motors India, and Kia Motors, with investments of over US$2.8 billion. It accounts for 10% of India's auto exports.[114]

The mining sector contributed 3,390 crore (US$420 million) in revenue to the state during 2021–22.[115] As of April 2023, Ravva Block, in the shallow offshore area of the Krishna Godavari Basin, had produced nearly 311 million barrels of crude oil and 385 billion cubic feet of natural gas since its initial production in March 1994.[116] The state accounts for 2.7% of crude oil production in India, with 827.8 thousand metric tonnes from its Krishna Godavari basin.[117] 809 million metric standard cubic metres of natural gas are produced from onshore sites, which accounts for 2.4% of India's production.[118]

Services edit

 
IBM Software Campus, Visakhapatnam

The value of information technology exports from the state in 2021–22 was 926 crore (US$120 million), which is 0.14% of the IT exports from India. Exports have remained below 0.2% in the past five years.[119]

The state is ranked third in domestic tourist footfalls for the year 2021, with 93.2 million domestic tourists, which amounts to 13.8% of all domestic tourists in India. A major share of the tourists visit temples in Tirupati, Vijayawada, and Srisailam.[120]

Government and politics edit

 
Secretariat buildings hosting legislative assembly and council, Amaravati

There are a total of 175 assembly constituencies in the state.[121] The legislative council is the upper house with 58 members.[122] In the Parliament of India, the state has 11 seats in the Rajya Sabha and 25 seats in the Lok Sabha.[121]

In the 2019 elections, Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, leader of the YSR Congress Party, became the chief minister with a resounding mandate by winning 151 out of 175 seats.[123]

Government revenue and expenditure edit

For 2021–22, total receipts of the Andhra Pradesh government were 2.05 lakh crore (US$26 billion), inclusive of 53,284 crore (US$6.7 billion) of loans. States' own tax revenue was 70,979 crore (US$8.9 billion). The top three sources of non-tax revenue are state goods and services tax (GST) (23,809 crore (US$3.0 billion)), sales tax/value added tax (VAT) (20,808 crore (US$2.6 billion)), and state excise (14,703 crore (US$1.8 billion)).[104] The government earned a revenue of 7,345 crore (US$920 million) from 2.574 million transactions for registration services. Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, Guntur, and Tirupati are the top contributors to the revenue.[124] The government's total expenditure was ₹1,91,594 crore, which includes debt repayment of ₹13,920 crore. The fiscal deficit was ₹25,013 crore, which was 2.1% of the GSDP. Revenue expenditure was ₹1,59,163 crore and capital expenditure was ₹16,373 crore. Welfare expenditures got the maximum share. Education accounted for ₹25,796 crore, energy ₹10,852 crore, and irrigation ₹7,027 crore.[104] Outstanding debt was ₹3.89 lakh crore, an increase of almost ₹40,000 crore compared to the previous year. This accounts for 32.4 per cent of the GSDP.[125] The outstanding guarantee estimate was ₹1,38,875 crore, of which ₹38,473 are for the power sector, which equals 12% of GSDP.[104]

Amaravati protests edit

In August 2020, the Andhra Pradesh legislative assembly passed the Andhra Pradesh decentralisation and inclusive development of all regions act. It provided for limiting Amaravati as legislative capital while naming Vizag as executive capital and Kurnool as judicial capital.[126] The events leading to this decision resulted in widespread and continuing protests by the farmers of Amaravati.[127] When the act was challenged in the Andhra Pradesh High Court, the court ordered to maintain status quo until the court completes its hearing. The government, led by Y. S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, withdrew the act when the High court hearing reached the final stage. The chief minister said that his government would bring a better and more complete bill.[128] The protesters under the banner of Amaravati Parirakshana Samithi and the Joint Action Committee of Amaravati received support from all the political parties barring the ruling YCP when they held their long marches across the state seeking support for their agitation.[129]

On 3 March 2022, the High Court ruled that the government could not abandon the development of Amaravati as the capital city after farmers parted with 33,000 acres of land against the agreement with Andhra Pradesh capital region development authority to develop it as the capital city and ₹15,000 crore was sunk in it over development expenditure. It asked the government to develop Amaravati within six months.[130] When the government appealed to the Supreme court, it got a stay on the judgement regarding developing the city within six months. The Supreme court is set to hear it in April 2024, following its decision on 3 January 2024 about the government's request for expedited hearing.[131][132]

Interstate disputes edit

Assets division with Telangana edit

There are 91 institutions under schedule IX with assets of ₹1.42 lakh crore, 142 institutions under schedule X with assets of ₹24,018.53 crore, and another 12 institutions not mentioned in the act with assets of ₹1,759 crore, which are to be split between Andhra Pradesh and Telangana following the bifurcation. An expert committee headed by Sheela Bhide gave a recommendation for bifurcation of 89 out of the 91 schedule IX institutions. Telangana selectively accepted the recommendations, while Andhra Pradesh asked for their acceptance in total. The division of the RTC headquarters and the Deccan Infrastructure and Landholdings Limited (DIL) with huge land parcels has become contentious. Despite several meetings of the trilateral dispute resolution committees, no progress was made. The Andhra Pradesh government filed a suit in the Supreme Court.[133]

Krishna river water sharing dispute edit

Andhra Pradesh and Telangana continue to dispute the water share of the Krishna River. In 1969, the Bachawat tribunal for the allocation of water shares among the riparian states allocated 811 tmcft of water to Andhra Pradesh. The Andhra Pradesh government of that time split it in a 512:299 tmcft ratio between Andhra Pradesh (including the basin area of Rayalaseema) and Telangana, respectively. It was based on the utilisation facilities established at that time. Though the tribunal recommended the use of the Tungabhadra Dam (a part of the Krishna Basin) to provide water to the drought-prone Mahabubnagar area of Telangana, this was not implemented. The bifurcation act advised the formation of the Krishna River Management Board (KRMB) and the Godavari River Management Board (GRMB) for resolving disputes between the new states. In 2015, the two states agreed to share water in the 66:34 (AP:Telangana) ratio as an interim arrangement in a meeting with the central water ministry, which is to be reviewed every year. This practice continued without further review. Telangana filed a suit in the Supreme Court for a 70% share. Following the assurance of the formation of a tribunal to resolve the issue, Telangana withdrew its suit. The centre formulated the terms of reference for KWDT-2 in Oct 2023.[134][135]

Godavari water sharing dispute edit

Andhra Pradesh got 1172.78 tmcft of Godavari water. Telangana is utilising 433 tmcft for its completed projects, while Andhra Pradesh's share is 739 tmcft. The Andhra Pradesh government has opposed Telangana submitting a detailed project report for additional utilisation through new or upgraded projects such as Kaleswaram, Tupakulagudem, Sitarama, Mukteswaram, and Modikunta lift irrigation projects.[136]

Five villages near Bhadrachalam edit

The 1.50-metre increase in the height of the Polavaram coffer dam to 44 metres raised the suspicion that it led to flooding of Bhadrachalam and nearby villages in Telangana along the Godavari river in 2022. Three mandals that were originally part of Andhra state were transferred back to Andhra Pradesh, excluding Bhadrachalam town, to support the Polavaram project, as those areas are likely to be submerged. Telangana would like to take back five villages on the river banks for ease of movement of its government machinery to provide rehabilitation support to its other villages beyond them, to which the Andhra Pradesh government is objecting.[137]

2024 Elections edit

Polling is scheduled for 13 May, while counting will be done on 4 June.[138] According to an analysis in the English media, special category status for state, capital issue, Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy’s murder, attack on Jagan Mohan Reddy,[139] and cases against N. Chandrababu Naidu are the key issues.[140]

Infrastructure edit

Transport edit

Roads edit

 
Vijayawada-Guntur section of NH 16

The state has a total major road network of 47,244.83 km (29,356.58 mi). This comprises 8,163.72 km (5,072.70 mi) of national highways, 12,595.60 km (7,826.54 mi) of state highways, and 26,485.51 km (16,457.33 mi) of major district roads.[141] NH 16, with a highway network of around 1,000 km (620 mi) in the state, is a part of the Golden Quadrilateral project undertaken by the National Highways Development Project. The proposed Anantapuram–Amaravati Expressway is changed to Anantapur–Guntur national highway 544D, with implementation expected to begin in January 2023.[142] The state government-owned Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) is the public bus transport provider. It is split into 129 depots across four zones. It has a fleet strength of 11,098 buses and a staff count of 49,544. It operates 1.11 billion kilometres and serves 3.68 million passengers daily.[143]

1.828 million transport vehicles and 13.7 million non-transport vehicles are registered in the state. In the transport category, 0.98 million are goods carriages, constituting 53.61%; 0.66 million are auto rickshaws, constituting 36.21%; and 0.109 million are cabs, constituting 5.96%. In the non-transport category, 12.2 million are motorcycles, constituting 89.5%, and 1.067 million are four-wheelers, constituting 7.29%.[144] The integrated road accident database project, an initiative of the Ministry Of Road Transport and Highways (MORTH) is under implementation in the state. Construction of institutes of driver training and research Facilities at Darsi, Praksam district, and Dhone, Nandyal district, in partnership with Maruti Suzuki and Ashok Leyland, respectively, is in progress.[145] Automation of driving test tracks in nine district capitals is expected to be completed by 31 March 2023.[146]

Railways edit

 
Train at Vijayawada railway station

Andhra Pradesh has a total broad-gauge railway route of 3,969 km (2,466 mi) with rail density at 24.36 km per 1000 square kilometres.[147][148] The railway network in Andhra Pradesh is under the South Central Railway,[149] East Coast Railway,[150] and South Western Railway zones.[151] During 2014–2022, 350 km of new lines were constructed at a rate of 44 km per year in Andhra Pradesh under the South Central Railway division. The rate of construction was only 2 km per year in the preceding five years.[152] The Nadikudi–Srikalahasti line of 308.70 km sanctioned at a budget of 22.89 billion (US$290 million) in 2011–12 as a joint project of the centre and state is progressing slowly, with only phase 1 of 46 km between New Piduguralla station and Savalyapuram completed in 2021–22.[153] There are three A1 and 23 A-category railway stations in the state, as per the assessment in 2017.[154] Visakhapatnam has been declared the cleanest railway station in the country, as per the assessment in 2018.[155] The railway station in Shimiliguda was the first broad gauge railway station at high altitude in the country.[156] A new railway zone South Coast Railway Zone (SCoR), with headquarters in Visakhapatnam, was announced as the newest railway zone of the Indian Railways in 2019, but is yet to be implemented.[157][158]

Airports edit

 
Airports in Andhra Pradesh


Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, and Tirupati airports are international airports in the state. The state has three domestic airports, namely Rajahmundry, Kadapa, and Kurnool.[159] A privately owned airport for emergency flights and chartered flights is at Puttaparthi.[160]

Sea ports edit

 
Operational Seaports excluding fishing harbors in Andhra Pradesh


 
Visakhapatnam seaport

The state has one major port at Visakhapatnam under the administrative control of the central government and 15 notified ports, including three captive ports, under the control of the state government.[161][162] The other famous ports are Krishnapatnam , Gangavaram, and Kakinada. Gangavaram port is a deep seaport that can accommodate ocean liners up to 200,000–250,000 DWT.[163]

Communication edit

As of January 2023, the AP statewide area network (APSWAN) connects 2,164 offices of state administration at 668 locations down to the level of mandal headquarters. The network supports both data and video communications. Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) and the National Knowledge Network (NKN) link district headquarters with state headquarters with a bandwidth of 34 Mbit/s. Mandal headquarters are connected with a bandwidth of 8 Mbit/s.[164][165] Andhra Pradesh state fiber net limited (APSFNL) operates an optical fibre network. This provides internet connectivity, telephony, and Internet protocol television (IPTV) with fibre to private and corporate users in Andhra Pradesh.[166]

Water edit

The state has 40 major and medium rivers and 40,000 minor irrigation sources. Godavari, Krishna, and Penna are major rivers. The total cultivable area is 19.904 million acres. Major, medium, and minor irrigation projects irrigate 10.311 million acres.[167] The Polavaram project under construction suffered setbacks with damage to its diaphragm wall during the 2022 floods.[168] The Veligonda project is delayed despite plan to commission by September 2023, as only the tunnels are completed in January 2024.[169][170] The Annamayya project, washed away in the 2021 floods, is set to be redesigned at a cost of 787 crore.[171][172]

Power edit

 
Rayalaseema thermal power station
 
Srisailam hydel power project

Thermal, hydel and renewable power plants supply power to the state. The installed capacity share of the state in the public sector generating stations was 7,245 MW. Private sector installed capacity was 9,370 MW, which includes independent power producer capacity of 1,961 MW. The total installed capacity was 16,615 MW. Peak power demand for the state in 2021–22 was 12,032 MW and per capita consumption was 1,285 kilowatt hours. The energy consumed is 68972 million units.[173]

Healthcare edit

The government is spending 7.3% of the state budget on healthcare, compared to an average of 4 to 4.5 per cent overall in the country.[174] The 108 service provides fast emergency management services by shifting patients to a nearby healthcare facility. The 104 service provides health care services at the doorstep of villages through mobile medical units that visit at least once a month.[175] All the poor families are covered by the free state health insurance scheme called Arogyasri up to a limit of 2,500,000 (US$31,000). The scheme serves 42.5 million people.[176] The services are provided in government and private hospitals under the network. During 2014–2018, though the nominal mean claim amount of Arogyasri beneficiaries went up significantly, it decreased after accounting for inflation. Mortality rates have significantly decreased, which indicates better outcomes are being achieved at a lower cost.[177]

Education edit


 
Andhra University, Visakhapatnam

Primary and secondary school education is imparted by government and private schools, regulated by the school education department of the state.[178][179] The government decided to stop financial aid to aided schools, forcing them to handover the schools with the aided staff to government or become private in 2021.[180] The government runs several residential schools including separate schools for BC and SC/ST categories.[181] As per the child info and school information report (2018–19), there were a total of 7,041,568 students[182] enrolled in 62,063 schools.[183] 616,615 students have appeared for the March 2024 secondary school certificate (SSC) exam in the regular stream. Parvathipuram-Manyam district achieved the highest pass percentage of 96.37 among districts. The overall pass percentage was 86.69%, an increase of 14.43% over the previous year, with 100% in 2,803 schools.[184] [185] 393,757 students appeared for intermediate second-year examinations held in March 2024. 78%, which is an increase of 7% over the previous year, were declared passed.[186][187]

The state initiated education reforms in 2020 by creating six types of schools: satellite foundation schools (pre-primary), foundational schools (pre-primary – class II), foundational school plus (pre-primary – class V), pre-high school (class III – class VII/VIII), high school (class III – class X), and high school plus (class III – class XII).[188] The transition to English-medium education in all government schools was started in the academic year 2020–2021. It is expected to reach completion by 2024–25. 1000 government schools are affiliated to the CBSE in the years 2022–23 as an initial step, and the bilingual text book scheme was adopted to ease the transition.[189] The state government is going ahead with the English medium based on the parents survey despite protests and court cases.[190] The state initiative is being funded in part by a loan from the World Bank to the tune of $250 million over 2021–2026 through the "Supporting Andhra's Learning Transformation" (SALT) project to improve the learning outcomes of children up to class II level.[191]

There are 169 government-aided degree colleges and 55 private-aided degree colleges in the state. 66 government colleges and 48 private-aided colleges have valid NAAC grades. There are 85 government-aided and 175 private polytechnic colleges with a sanctioned strength of 75,906 students.[192] The AP State council of higher education organises various entrance tests for different streams and conducts counselling for admissions.[193] The AP state skill development corporation is set up to support skill development and placement for the educated.[194]

There are a total of 36 universities, which comprise 3 central universities, 23 state public universities, 6 state private universities, and 4 deemed universities.[195] Andhra University is the oldest of the universities in the state, established in 1926.[196][197] The government established Rajiv Gandhi University of knowledge technologies (RGUKT) in 2008 to cater to the education needs of the rural youth of the state.[198] Dr. Y.S.R University of Health Sciences oversees medical education in 348 affiliated colleges spanning the entire range from traditional medicine to modern medicine.[199] The public universities, including the legacy universities such as Andhra, Sri Venkateswara, and Nagarjuna, are suffering from a severe fund crunch and staff shortage, managing with only 20% of sanctioned full-time staff.[200] Koneru Lakshmaiah Education Foundation University (KL College of Engineering) bagged the 50th rank, while Andhra university in Visakhapatnam bagged the 76th rank in the overall category of India rankings for 2023 as per the national institute ranking framework (NIRF) of the Union Ministry of Education. 2,478 institutions, including 242 institutions from the state, participated in the ranking.[201] The gross enrolment ratio (GER) in higher education for the age group 18–23 for the state is at 35.2% for the year 2019–20, which compares favourably with the GER for all of India at 27.1%. With a female GER of 35.3 and a male GER of 38.2, the Gender Parity Index is 0.84. The corresponding ratio for India is 1.01.[202]

There were 510 industrial training institutes (ITI) in the year 2020–21 in Andhra Pradesh, with 82 under government management and 417 under private management. The total available seats in 2021 were 93,280, out of which 48.90% were filled. 10,053 students completed ITI education in the year 2020.[203]

The state has 2,510 public libraries, including 4 regional libraries and 13 district central libraries under government management.[204] Saraswata Niketanam at Vetapalem in Bapatla district, one of the oldest libraries established under private management in 1918, is losing its attraction as the Internet spreads.[205] The government is planning to develop digital libraries at the village panchayat level.[206]

Science and technology edit

 
Chandrayaan 2 Module launch at SDSC, Sriharikota

As of 20 June 2023, there are 190 science and technology organisations in Andhra Pradesh, including 12 central labs and research institutions.[207] Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), known as Sriharikota Range (SHAR), on the barrier island of Sriharikota in Tirupati district, is a satellite launching station operated by the Indian Space Research Organisation.[208] It is India's primary orbital launch site. India's lunar orbiter Chandrayaan-1 was launched from the centre on 22 October 2008.[209]

Some notable scientists edit

Yellapragada Subba Rao, a pioneering biochemist hailing from the state, discovered the function of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) as an energy source in the cell and developed drugs for cancer and filariasis.[210][211] Yelavarthy Nayudamma, a chemical engineer, worked extensively for the Central Leather Research Institute in Chennai and rose to become the director general of the Center for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), India.[212] C. R. Rao was an Indian-American mathematician and statistician and an alumnus of Andhra University. His work on statistics influenced various sciences.[213]

Media edit

The total number of registered newspapers and periodicals in the state for the years 2020–21 was 5,798. There were 1,645 dailies, 817 weeklies, 2,431 monthlies, and 623 fortnightlies. 787 Telugu dailies had a circulation of 9,911,005. 103 English dailies had a circulation of 1,646,453.[214][215] Eenadu, Sakshi, and Andhra Jyothi are the top 3 Telugu daily newspapers in terms of circulation in India and are also the top 3 Telugu news sites.[216][217] BBC Telugu news was launched on 2 October 2017.[218][219] Several privately owned news media outlets are considered biased towards specific political parties in the state.[220][221]

There were 10 general entertainment channels, 23 news channels, 2 health channels, 6 religious channels, 2 other channels, and 2 cable distribution channels, for a total of 45 channels empanelled by the Andhra Pradesh information and public relations department.[222] As of 2019, Akashvani previously known as All India Radio, operates 3 MW, 17 FM transmitters from 14 locations in the state. It reaches 99% of the area and 99.5% of population. Akashvani's FM coverage alone reaches 36% of the area and 45% of population.[223] 5 private operators run 13 FM stations, with Red FM operating from 5 locations.[224]

Culture edit

Andhra Pradesh has 17 geographical indications in the categories of agriculture, handicrafts, foodstuffs, and textiles as per the Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999.[225][226] Some of the GI products are Banaganapalle mangoes,[227] Bandar laddu,[228] Kondapalli toys, Tirupati laddu, and saris made in Dharmavaram and Machilipatnam.[226]

Handicrafts edit

 
Kondapalli Toys at a house in Vijayawada

Machilipatnam and Srikalahasti Kalamkari are the two unique textile art forms practised in India.[229] There are other notable handicrafts present in the state, like the soft limestone idol carvings of Durgi.[230] Etikoppaka in Visakhapatnam district is notable for its lac industry, which produces lacquered wooden toys.[231] [232]

Literature edit

Nannayya, Tikkana, and Yerrapragada form the trinity who translated the Sanskrit epic Mahabharata into Telugu. Nannayya wrote the first treatise on Telugu grammar, called Andhra Shabda Chintamani in Sanskrit.[233] Pothana translated Sri Bhagavatam into Telugu as Andhra Maha Bhagavatamu. Vemana was an Indian philosopher. He wrote Telugu poems using simple language and native idioms on a variety of subjects, including yoga, wisdom, and morality. Potuluri Veerabrahmendhra swami, a clairvoyant and social reformer of 17th century, wrote Kalagnanam, a book of predictions.[234][235][236]

Telugu literature after Kandukuri Veeresalingam is termed Adhunika Telugu Sahityam (modern Telugu literature). He is known as Gadya Tikkana and was the author of the Telugu social novel Satyavati Charitam. Viswanatha Satyanarayana was conferred the Jnanpith Award. Sri Sri brought new forms of expressionism into Telugu literature.[237]

Festivals edit

Sankranti is the major harvest festival celebrated across the state.[238] It is celebrated for four days in the second week of January. On Bhogi, the day before Makara Sankranti, people throw old items into bonfires. Children are showered with jujube as a symbol of protection from evil. Sweet meats made of rice flour and sesame seeds called Arisalu are enjoyed. Next day, women and young girls make elaborate geometric patterns called Rangoli before the entrance to the house and decorate them with flowers. Children fly kites. On the subsequent two days, Kanuma and Mukkanuma, people feed cattle and offer prayers for a good harvest. The first day of Telugu New Year Ugadi which occurs during March/April is also a special festival with preparation and sharing of pickle (pachhadi) made from raw mangoes, neem flowers, pepper powder, jaggery and tamarind. Tasting this pickle which is mix of different tastes teaches the importance of taking positive/negative life experiences in one's stride. Celebrations end with the recitation of the coming year's astrological predictions called Panchanga sravanam. Vijaya Dasami known commonly as Dussera and Deepavali, the festival of lights are other major Hindu festivals.[239]

Eid is celebrated with special prayers. [240] Rottela Panduga is celebrated at Bara Shaheed Dargah in Nellore with participation across religious lines.[241]

Dance, music, and cinema edit

 
Kuchipudi dance

Kuchipudi, the cultural dance recognised as the official dance form of the state of Andhra Pradesh, originated in the village of Kuchipudi in Krishna district.[15] Many composers of Carnatic music like Annamacharya, Kshetrayya, Tyagaraja, and Bhadrachala Ramadas were of Telugu descent. Modern Carnatic music composers and singers like Ghantasala and M. Balamuralikrishna are of Telugu descent. The Telugu film industry hosted many music composers and playback singers, such as S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, P. Susheela, S. Janaki, and P. B. Sreenivas. Folk songs are very important and popular in the many rural areas of the state. Forms such as the Burra katha and Poli are still performed today.[242] Harikathaa Kalakshepam (or Harikatha) involves the narration of a story, intermingled with various songs relating to the story. Harikatha was originated in Andhra Pradesh.[243] Burra katha is an oral storytelling technique in which the topic is either a Hindu mythological story or a contemporary social issue.[244] Rangasthalam is an Indian theatre in the Telugu language, based predominantly in Andhra Pradesh.[245] Gurajada Apparao wrote the play Kanyasulkam in 1892, which is often considered the greatest play in the Telugu language.[246] C. Pullaiah is cited as the father of the Telugu theatre movement.[247][248]

Andhra Pradesh State Film, Television & Theatre Development Corporation offers incentives to promote the industry.[249] The government is asking the film industry to make Vizag its hub.[250] The Telugu film industry (known as "Tollywood"), which produces 300 films annually, is primarily based in Hyderabad, though several films are shot in Vizag.[251] Film producer D. Ramanaidu holds a Guinness record for the most films produced by a person.[252] In the years 2005, 2006, and 2008, the Telugu film industry produced the largest number of films in India, exceeding the number of films produced in Bollywood.[253][254] "Naatu Naatu" from the film RRR became the first song from an Indian film to win the Academy Award for Best Original Song and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, as well as the first song from an Asian film to win the former.[255][256]

Cuisine edit

 
Vegetarian Andhra meal, served on important occasions

Andhra meals are combinations of spicy, tangy, and sweet flavours. Chillies, which are abundantly produced in Andhra Pradesh, and curry leaves are used copiously in most preparations of curries and chutneys. Various types of Pappu are made using lentils in combination with tomatoes, spinach, gongura, ridge gourd, etc. Apart from curries, pulusu, a stew made using tamarind juice in combination with vegetables, sea food, chicken, mutton, etc., is popular. Pachchadi, a paste usually made with a combination of groundnuts, fried vegetables, and chillies, is a must in a meal. Pickles made using mangoes, gooseberries, lemons, etc. are enjoyed in combination with Pappu. Buttermilk and yoghurt mixed with rice and eaten towards the end of the meal soothe the body, especially after eating spicy food items earlier. Ariselu, Burelu, Laddu, and Pootharekulu are some of the sweets made for special festivals and occasions.[257][258]

Tourism edit

Some of the popular religious pilgrim destinations include Tirumala Venkateswara temple at Tirupati, Srikalahasti temple, Varaha Lakshmi Narasimha temple, Simhachalam, Shahi Jamia Masjid in Adoni, Gunadala Church in Vijayawada, and Buddhist centres at Amaravati and Nagarjuna Konda. Tirumala Venkateswara temple is the world's most visited Hindu temple, with footfalls of 30,000–40,000 daily and about 75,000 on New Year's Eve.[259] The region is home to a variety of other pilgrimage centres, such as the Pancharama Kshetras, Mallikarjuna Jyotirlinga, Kanaka Durga Temple and Kodanda Rama Temple. [260]

The state has several beaches in its coastal districts, such as Rushikonda, Mypadu, Suryalanka, etc.;[261] caves such as Borra Caves;[262] Indian rock-cut architecture depicting Undavalli Caves;[263] and the country's second-longest cave system, the Belum Caves.[264] The valleys and hills include Araku Valley, Horsley Hills, Papi Hills, and Gandikota Gorge.[265][266] Arma Konda, located in Visakhapatnam district, is the highest peak in the Eastern Ghats.[267]

Museums edit

 
Museums in Andhra Pradesh

The state has 32 museums,[268][c] which feature a varied collection of ancient sculptures, paintings, idols, weapons, cutlery, inscriptions, and religious artefacts. The Amaravati Archaeological Museum has several archaeological artefacts.[269] Visakha Museum and Telugu Samskruthika Niketanam in Visakhapatnam display historical artefacts of the pre-independence era. Bapu Museum in Vijayawada displays a large collection of artefacts. Advanced projection mapping with graphic, animation, and laser displays is used to tell the history of Kondapalli Fort, utilising the irregular landscapes, ruins, and buildings present in the fort as a screen. It was launched in 2019.[270]

The Archaeological Survey of India identified 135 centrally protected monuments in the state of Andhra Pradesh. These include the reconstructed monuments at Anupu and Nagarjunakonda.[271]

Sports edit

 
Dr. Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy ACA–VDCA Cricket Stadium in Visakhapatnam Dr PVG Raju ACA Sports Complex Vizianagaram

The Sports Authority of Andhra Pradesh is the governing body that looks after the infrastructure development, coaching, and administration of sports promotion schemes.[272] Dr. YSR Sports School, with classes for grades 4–10 and a focus on tapping rural sports talent, was established in Putlampalli, YSR district, in December 2006.[273]

The ACA-VDCA stadium in Visakhapatnam hosted ODI, T20I, and IPL matches.[274] Andhra Pradesh secured 16 medals at the 36th National Games held in 2022. It was ranked twenty-first in the competition. It won the most medals in athletics. Two silvers and one bronze were won in weightlifting.[275]

Karnam Malleswari is the first female Indian to win an Olympic medal.[276] Pullela Gopichand is a former Indian badminton player. He won the All England Open Badminton Championships in 2001, becoming the second Indian to win after Prakash Padukone.[277][278] Srikanth Kidambi, a badminton player, is the first Indian to reach the world championships final in 2021 in the men's singles and win a silver medal.[279]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Excluding districts and mandals which went to Telangana
  2. ^ The Christian population is significantly undercounted since SC reservation benefits are denied to Christians.
  3. ^ Two entries are repeated

References edit

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  2. ^ "Former Supreme Court judge Justice S Abdul Nazeer appointed as Governor of Andhra Pradesh". Bar and Bench. 12 February 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  3. ^ Raghavendra, V. (30 November 2022). "Jawahar Reddy takes over as Chief Secretary of Andhra Pradesh". The Hindu. from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  4. ^ a b DOP 2023, p. 430.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g DOP 2023, p. 3.
  6. ^ a b "AP Official Languages Act Amended to Recognise Urdu as Second Language". Sakshi Post. 7 March 2022. from the original on 26 March 2022. Retrieved 31 October 2023.
  7. ^ a b Pavan (17 June 2022). "AP govt. issues orders recognising Urdu as the official language". The Hans India. from the original on 27 July 2023. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  8. ^ Vipra, Tanvi (16 March 2023). "Andhra Pradesh Budget Analysis 2023-24" (PDF). PRS Legislative Research. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
  9. ^ a b M, Sambasiva Rao (16 March 2023). "Andhra Pradesh posts a growth of 16.22% over the previous year". The Hindu. from the original on 25 March 2023. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  10. ^ a b "Andhra Pradesh gets new state bird, state flower". Deccan Chronicle. 31 May 2018. from the original on 1 June 2018. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  11. ^ "Andhra Pradesh". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. from the original on 26 September 2023. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
  12. ^ ICLD 2014, p. 2.
  13. ^ MOPNG 2023.
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andhra, pradesh, andhra, redirects, here, other, uses, andhra, disambiguation, english, ɑː, telugu, aːndʱrɐ, prɐdeːʃ, abbr, state, southern, coastal, region, india, seventh, largest, state, with, area, tenth, most, populous, state, with, inhabitants, shares, b. Andhra redirects here For other uses see Andhra disambiguation Andhra Pradesh English ˌ ɑː n d r e p r e ˈ d ɛ ʃ 11 Telugu aːndʱrɐ prɐdeːʃ abbr AP is a state in the southern coastal region of India It is the seventh largest state with an area of 162 970 km2 62 920 sq mi 5 and the tenth most populous state with 49 577 103 inhabitants 4 It shares borders with Chhattisgarh Odisha Karnataka Tamil Nadu Telangana and the Bay of Bengal It has the second longest coastline in India at about 974 km 605 mi 5 After existence as Andhra State and unified Andhra Pradesh the state took its present form on 2 June 2014 when the new state of Telangana was formed through bifurcation 12 Amaravati is the capital of the state with the largest city being Visakhapatnam Water sharing disputes and asset division with Telangana are not yet resolved Telugu one of the classical languages of India used by the majority of people is the first official language Andhra PradeshStateFrom top left to right Venkateswara temple at Tirumala Undavalli caves at Vijayawada and Vizag seaportEmblem of Andhra PradeshEtymology State of AndhrasMotto Satyameva Jayate Truth alone triumphs Anthem Maa Telugu Thalliki To Our Mother Telugu Location of Andhra Pradesh in IndiaCoordinates 16 31 N 80 31 E 16 51 N 80 52 E 16 51 80 52Country IndiaRegionSouth IndiaBefore wasUnited Andhra PradeshFormation1 November 1956 1 CapitalAmaravatiLargest cityVisakhapatnamLargest metroAndhra Pradesh Capital Region Development AuthorityDistricts26Government BodyGovernment of Andhra Pradesh GovernorS Abdul Nazeer 2 Chief ministerY S Jagan Mohan Reddy YSRCP Deputy chief ministerKottu Satyanarayana YSRCP Rajanna Dora Peedika YSRCP Budi Mutyala Naidu YSRCP Amzath Basha Shaik Bepari YSRCP K Narayana Swamy YSRCP Chief secretaryK S Jawahar Reddy IAS 3 State LegislatureBicameral Andhra Legislature CouncilAndhra Sasana Mandali 58 seats AssemblyAndhra Sasana Sabha 175 seats National ParliamentParliament of India Rajya Sabha11 seats Lok Sabha25 seatsHigh CourtAndhra Pradesh High CourtArea Total162 970 km2 62 920 sq mi Rank7thElevation269 m 883 ft Highest elevation Arma Konda 1 680 m 5 510 ft Population 2011 4 5 Total49 577 103 Rank10th Density304 km2 790 sq mi Urban14 610 372 Rural34 966 730Demonym s Andhrulu TeluguvaaruLanguage OfficialTelugu Additional officialUrdu 6 7 Official scriptTelugu scriptGDP Advance estimates Total 2023 24 1 449 501 crore US 180 billion 8 Per capita 219 518 equivalent to 230 000 or US 2 900 in 2023 9 Time zoneUTC 05 30 IST ISO 3166 codeIN APVehicle registrationAPHDI 2018 0 649 Medium 27th Literacy 2011 67 02 31st Sex ratio 2011 993 1000 20th Websiteap wbr gov wbr inSymbols of Andhra PradeshEmblem of Andhra PradeshSongMaa Telugu Thalliki To Our Mother Telugu Foundation dayAndhra Pradesh DayBirdRose ringed parakeet 10 FlowerJasmineFruitBanginapalle MangoMammalBlackbuck 10 TreeAzadirachta indicaState highway markState highway of Andhra Pradesh AP SH1 AP SH240List of Indian state symbols As per the 8th century BCE Rigvedic text Aitareya Brahmana the Andhras left North India off the banks of the Yamuna river and migrated to South India In the third century BCE Andhra was a vassal kingdom of Ashoka of the Mauryan Empire After his death it became powerful and extended its empire to the whole Maratha country and beyond under the rule of the Satavahana dynasty After that the major rulers included the Pallavas Eastern Chalukyas Kakatiyas Vijayanagara Empire Qutb Shahi dynasty Nizam dynasty East India Company and British Raj The Eastern Ghats are a major dividing line separating coastal plains and peneplains The coastal plains are part of Coastal Andhra These are mostly delta regions formed by the Krishna Godavari and Penna rivers Peneplains are part of Rayalaseema 60 of the population is engaged in agriculture and related activities Rice is the state s major food crop and staple food The state contributes 10 of total fish production and over 70 of shrimp production in India Industry sectors such as food products non metallic minerals textiles and pharmaceuticals are the top employment providers The automotive sector accounts for 10 of India s auto exports The state has about one third of India s limestone reserves large deposits of baryte and galaxy granite and reserves of oil and natural gas 13 Satish Dhawan Space Centre SDSC known as Sriharikota Range SHAR at the barrier island of Sriharikota in Tirupati district is the satellite launching station of India Some of the unique products from the state are Banganapalle mangoes Bandar laddu Kondapalli toys Tirupati laddu and saris made in Dharmavaram and Machilipatnam Kuchipudi is the official dance form Many composers of Carnatic music like Annamacharya Kshetrayya and Tyagaraja were from this region The Tirumala Venkateswara temple near Tirupati is the most visited Hindu religious place in the world The state is home to a variety of other pilgrimage centres and natural attractions Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early and medieval history 2 2 Modern history 2 2 1 Post independence 3 Geography 3 1 Flora and fauna 3 2 Mineral resources 3 3 Climate 4 Demographics 5 Administrative divisions 5 1 Districts 5 2 Cities and towns 6 Economy 6 1 Agriculture 6 2 Industries 6 3 Services 7 Government and politics 7 1 Government revenue and expenditure 7 2 Amaravati protests 7 3 Interstate disputes 7 3 1 Assets division with Telangana 7 3 2 Krishna river water sharing dispute 7 3 3 Godavari water sharing dispute 7 3 4 Five villages near Bhadrachalam 7 4 2024 Elections 8 Infrastructure 8 1 Transport 8 1 1 Roads 8 1 2 Railways 8 1 3 Airports 8 1 4 Sea ports 8 2 Communication 8 3 Water 8 4 Power 8 5 Healthcare 9 Education 10 Science and technology 10 1 Some notable scientists 11 Media 12 Culture 12 1 Handicrafts 12 2 Literature 12 3 Festivals 12 4 Dance music and cinema 12 5 Cuisine 13 Tourism 13 1 Museums 14 Sports 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 17 1 Bibliography 18 External links 18 1 Government 18 2 General informationEtymology editEpigraphist Iravatham Mahadevan interprets the Sanskrit word andʰra as a corruption of the masculine nominative suffix anṟu of Early Telugu language c 800 BCE 14 According to the Sanskrit text Aitareya Brahmana 800 500 BCE a group of people named Andhras left North India off the banks of the Yamuna and settled in South India 15 16 17 The Satavahanas were mentioned by the names Andhra Andhrara jateeya and Andhrabhrtya in the Puranic literature 18 19 They did not refer to themselves as Andhra in any of their coins or inscriptions it is possible that they were termed as Andhras because of their ethnicity or because their territory included the Andhra region 20 History editMain article History of Andhra Pradesh Early and medieval history edit nbsp Ruins of the Buddhist Maha Stupa at Bhattiprolu built during the 3rd century BCE 2nd century BCE The Assaka mahajanapada one of the sixteen Vedic mahajanapadas included Andhra Pradesh Maharashtra and Telangana 21 Archaeological evidence from places such as Bhattiprolu Amaravathi and Dharanikota suggests that the Andhra region was part of the Mauryan empire Amaravathi might have been a regional centre under Mauryan rule After the death of Emperor Ashoka Mauryan rule weakened around 200 BCE and was replaced by several smaller kingdoms in the Andhra region 22 One of the earliest examples of the Brahmi script the progenitor of several scripts including Telugu comes from Bhattiprolu where the script was used on an urn containing the relics of Buddha 23 The Satavahana dynasty dominated the Deccan plateau from the 1st century BCE to the 3rd century CE 24 It had trade relations with the Roman Empire 25 The later Satavahanas made Dharanikota near Amaravathi their capital According to the Buddhists Nagarjuna the philosopher of Mahayana lived in this region 26 27 28 The Andhra Ikshvakus with their capital at Vijayapuri succeeded the Satavahanas in the Krishna river valley in the latter half of the 2nd century 29 The Salankayanas were an ancient dynasty that ruled the Andhra region between Godavari and Krishna rivers with their capital at Vengi modern Pedavegi from 300 to 440 CE 30 Telugu Cholas ruled present day Rayalaseema from the fifth to the eleventh centuries from Cuddapa and Jammalamadugu The Telugu inscription of Erikal Mutturaju Dhananjaya Varma known as Erragudipadu sasanam law was engraved in 575 CE in the present Kadapa district It is the earliest written record in Telugu 31 The Vishnukundinas were the first dynasty in the fifth and sixth centuries to hold sway over most of Andhra Pradesh Kalinga and parts of Telangana 32 The Eastern Chalukyas of Vengi whose dynasty lasted for around five hundred years from the 7th century until 1130 CE eventually merged with the Chola dynasty They continued to rule under the protection of the Chola dynasty until 1189 CE 33 At the request of King Rajaraja Narendra Nannaya considered the first Telugu poet took up the translation of the Mahabharata into Telugu in 1025 CE 34 Kakatiyas ruled this region and Telangana for nearly two hundred years between the 12th and 14th centuries They were defeated by the Delhi sultanate 35 Musunuri Nayaks and Bahamani sultanate took over when Delhi sultanate became weak The Reddi kingdom ruled parts of this region in the early 14th century They constructed Kondaveedu fort and Kondapalli fort 36 37 After their rule Gajpathis and Bahmani sultans ruled in succession before this region along with most of present day Andhra Pradesh became part of the Vijayanagara empire 38 The Vijayanagara empire originated on the Deccan plateau in the early 14th century It was established in 1336 by Harihara Raya I and his brother Bukka Raya I of the Sangama dynasty who served as treasury officers of the Kakatiyas of Warangal 39 During their rule the Pemmasani Nayaks controlled parts of Andhra Pradesh and had large mercenary armies that were the vanguard of the empire in the 16th century 40 The empire s patronage enabled fine arts and literature to reach new heights in Kannada Telugu Tamil and Sanskrit while Carnatic music evolved into its current form 41 The Lepakshi group of monuments built during this period have mural paintings of the Vijayanagara kings Dravidian art and inscriptions These are put on the tentative list of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee 42 Modern history edit nbsp Dowleswaram Barrage built in 1850 by Arthur Cotton Following the defeat of the Vijayanagara empire the Qutb Shahi dynasty held sway over Andhra Pradesh 43 This region passed under the rule of the Nizams under the Mughal Empire Soon Nizam established himself as the sovereign ruler 44 In 1611 an English trading post by the name of British East India Company was established in Machilipatnam on India s east coast 45 In the early nineteenth century Northern Circars was ceded to the British East India Company and became part of its Madras Presidency 46 Eventually this region emerged as the Coastal Andhra region the northern parts of which were later known as North Andhra Later the Nizam ceded five territories to the British which eventually became the Rayalaseema region 47 The local chieftains known as Polygars revolted in 1800 against the company s rule which was suppressed by the company 48 Raja Viziaram Raz Vijayaram Raj established a sovereign kingdom by claiming independence from the Kingdom of Jeypore in 1711 It formed alliances with the French and British East India companies to conquer the neighbouring principalities of Bobbili Kurupam Paralakhemundi and the kingdom of Jeypore It fell out with the British and as a result was attacked and defeated in the battle of Padmanabham It was annexed as a tributary estate like other principalities and remained so until their accession to the Indian Union in 1949 49 Following the Indian rebellion of 1857 the British crown ruled this region until India became independent in 1947 The No Tax campaign in Chirala and Perala in 1919 50 the Rampa revolt in 1921 51 are some of the protests against British rule Dowleswaram Barrage built in 1850 by Arthur Cotton brought unused lands in the Godavari river basin into cultivation and transformed the economy of the region 52 Charles Philip Brown did pioneering work in transforming Telugu to the print era and introduced Vemana poems to English readers 53 Kandukuri Veeresalingam is considered the father of the Telugu renaissance movement as he encouraged the education of women and the remarriage of widows and fought against child marriage and the dowry system 54 Gurajada Apparao a pioneering playwright who used spoken dialect wrote the play Kanyasulkam in 1892 It is considered the greatest play in the Telugu language 55 Post independence edit See also Andhra State Visalandhra movement and Andhra Pradesh 1956 2014 nbsp Potti Sreeramulu whose fast unto death in 1952 led to the formation of Andhra State In an effort to gain an independent state based on linguistic identity and to protect the interests of the Telugu speaking people of Madras state Potti Sreeramulu fasted to death in 1952 The Telugu speaking area of Andhra state was carved out of Madras state on 1 October 1953 with Kurnool as its capital city Tanguturi Prakasam became the first chief minister 56 On the basis of the Gentlemen s Agreement of 1956 the States Reorganisation Act created Andhra Pradesh by merging the neighbouring Telugu speaking areas of the Hyderabad state with Hyderabad as the capital on 1 November 1956 57 In the unified state Indian National Congress INC enjoyed a monopoly in ruling the state till 1983 After that Telugu Desam Party TDP and INC ruled the state alternately 58 Implementing land reforms and land ceiling acts and securing reservation for lower castes in politics were launched during the rule of P V Narasimha Rao 59 During TDP rule led by N T Rama Rao sub district administration was transformed by forming mandals in place of earlier taluks removing hereditary village heads and appointing non hereditary village revenue assistants 60 E governance through e Seva centres was started in 2001 for paperless and speedy delivery of government services 61 Chandrababu Naidu helped Hyderabad grew into an Information Technology hub 62 During its 58 years as a unified state the state weathered separatist movements from Telangana 1969 and Andhra 1972 successfully 63 When the union cabinet made a decision to consider the formation of Telangana state in 2009 heeding to the demand of relaunched Telangana movement Samaikyandhra movement opposing it took shape and the state went through a turmoil 64 Finally the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act bill was passed by the parliament of India for the formation of the Telangana state comprising ten districts despite opposition by the state legislature 65 The new state of Telangana came into existence on 2 June 2014 after approval from the president of India with the residual state continuing as Andhra Pradesh 66 TDP formed the first government of the residual state 67 In 2017 the government of Andhra Pradesh began operating from its new greenfield capital Amaravati for which 33 000 acres were acquired from farmers through an innovative land pooling scheme 68 Geography editMain articles Geography of Andhra Pradesh and List of rivers in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Andhra Pradesh relief map The state is bordered by Telangana to the north and west Chhattisgarh and Orissa to the north the Bay of Bengal to the east Tamil Nadu to the south and Karnataka to the west Yanam district an enclave of Puducherry is in the state bordering Kakinada district 69 It has a coastline of around 974 kilometres 605 mi which makes it the second longest coastline in the nation 5 nbsp Eastern Ghats near Kadapa The Eastern ghats are a major dividing line separating coastal plains and peneplains in the state s geography These are discontinuous and individual sections have local names The ghats become more pronounced towards the south and extreme north of the coast Some of these consist of the Horsley hills the Seshachala hills 70 the Nallamala hills and the Papi hills 71 72 Peneplains part of Rayalaseema slope towards the east 73 The Eastern coastal plains comprise the area of coastal districts up to the Eastern ghats as their border along the Bay of Bengal with variable width These are for the most part delta regions formed by the Krishna Godavari and Penna rivers Most of the coastal plains are put to intensive agricultural use 74 The Kadapa basin formed by two arching branches of the Eastern ghats is a mineral rich area 75 Flora and fauna edit Main article Natural vegetation and wildlife of Andhra Pradesh The total forest cover of the state is 29 784 3 square kilometres 11 499 8 sq mi amounting to 18 28 of the total area 76 The Eastern ghats region is home to dense tropical forests while the vegetation becomes sparse as the ghats give way to the peneplains where shrub vegetation is more common The vegetation found in the state is largely of dry deciduous types with a mixture of teak Terminalia Dalbergia Pterocarpus Anogeissus etc The state possesses some rare and endemic plants like Cycas beddomei Pterocarpus santalinus Terminalia pallida Syzygium alternifolium Shorea talura Shorea tumburgia Psilotum nudum etc 77 Coringa is an example of mangrove forests and salt tolerant forest ecosystems near the sea The area of these forests is 582 km2 225 sq mi accounting for about 9 of the local forest area of the state 78 The diversity of fauna includes tigers leopards dholes black bucks cheetals sambars sea turtles and a number of birds and reptiles The estuaries of the Godavari and Krishna rivers support rich mangrove forests with fishing cats and otters as keystone species 77 The state has many sanctuaries and national parks such as Coringa wildlife sanctuary Nagarjunsagar Srisailam tiger reserve Kolleru bird sanctuary and Nelapattu bird sanctuary 79 Mineral resources edit nbsp Mangampet Barytes The state with its varied geological formations contains a variety of industrial minerals and building stones Major minerals found in significant quantities in the state include beach sand bauxite limestone and diamonds Minor minerals include barytes calcite and mica 80 The largest reserves of uranium are in Tummalapalli village of YSR district It has oil and natural gas to the extent of 698 million metric tonne of oil equivalent 81 It is known for large exclusive deposits of galaxy granite 82 Climate edit The climate varies considerably depending on the geographical region Summers last from March to June In the coastal plain the summer temperatures are generally higher than in the rest of the state with temperatures ranging exceeding 40 C 104 F July to September is the season for tropical rains from the southwest monsoon During October to December low pressure systems and tropical cyclones form in the Bay of Bengal along with the northeast monsoon bringing rains to the southern and coastal regions of the state November to February are the winter months Since the state has a long coastal belt the winters are not very cold The range of winter temperatures is generally 30 to 35 C 86 to 95 F except in the north where it could fall below 15 C 59 F 74 Lambasingi in Visakhapatnam district is nicknamed the Kashmir of Andhra Pradesh as its temperature ranges from 0 to 10 C 32 to 50 F 83 84 The normal rainfall for the state is 966 mm 38 0 in and the actual rainfall for June 2020 May 2021 was 1 191 mm 46 9 in 85 Demographics editSee also Ethnic groups of Andhra Pradesh Demographics of Andhra Pradesh and Religion in Andhra Pradesh Based on the 2011 Census of India the population of Andhra Pradesh is 49 577 103 with a density of 304 km2 790 sq mi 70 53 of the population is rural and 29 47 is urban 5 The state has 17 08 Scheduled caste and 5 53 Scheduled tribe populations 86 Children in the age group of 0 6 years number 5 222 384 constituting 10 6 of the total population Among them 2 686 453 are boys and 2 535 931 are girls Adults in the age group of 18 23 account for 5 815 865 2 921 284 males 2 894 581 females 87 The state has a sex ratio of 997 females per 1000 males higher than the national average of 926 per 1000 The literacy rate in the state stands at 67 35 Erstwhile West Godavari district has the highest literacy rate of 74 32 and erstwhile Vizianagaram district has the least with 58 89 5 The state ranks 27th of all Indian states in the Human Development Index HDI scores for the year 2018 88 As of 1 January 2023 update there are 39 984 868 voters 19 759 489 males 20 221 455 females and 3 924 third gender voters Kurnool district has the maximum number of voters at 1 942 233 while ASR district has the minimum at 729 085 89 Languages of Andhra Pradesh a 2011 90 Telugu 89 21 Urdu 6 55 Tamil 1 04 Others 3 20 Telugu is the first official language and Urdu is the second official language of the state 6 Telugu is the mother tongue of nearly 90 of the population 90 91 92 Urdu spoken by about 6 of the population was a second official language in fifteen districts of united Andhra Pradesh 93 and was made the second official language on 17 June 2022 7 Tamil Kannada and Odia are spoken in the border areas Lambadi Koya Savara Konda Gadaba and a number of other languages are spoken by the Scheduled Tribes of the state 94 19 of the population aged 12 years has the ability to read and understand English as per the IRS Q4 2019 survey 95 Religion in Andhra Pradesh 2011 96 Hinduism 90 89 Islam 7 30 Christianity 1 38 Jainism 0 05 Sikhism 0 02 Buddhism 0 01 Other 0 01 Not Stated 0 34 According to the 2011 census the major religious groups in the state are Hindus 90 89 Muslims 7 30 and Christians 1 38 b 96 The National Family Health Survey NFHS 5 2019 21 data provides an insight into the economic and health status of households 85 of households in the state have pucca houses 76 of households 59 urban 83 rural own a house Almost all houses have an electricity connection 84 of households use clean fuel for cooking 22 have piped water 85 of all households urban areas 97 rural areas 80 have access to a toilet facility Almost all urban households 96 and most rural households 89 use a mobile phone 96 of households use bank or post office savings accounts 97 of childbirths during 2014 2019 happened in a health facility The state health insurance scheme Dr YSR Arogya Sri the employee health scheme the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana RSBY the employees state insurance scheme ESIS and the central government health scheme cover 70 of households with at least one member covered 97 Administrative divisions editAndhra Pradesh comprises two regions namely Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema The northern part of Coastal Andhra is sometimes mentioned separately as North Andhra particularly after the bifurcation to raise voice against underdevelopment 98 Districts edit Main article List of districts in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Andhra Pradesh districts The state is further divided into 26 districts with North Andhra comprising 6 districts Coastal Andhra comprising 12 districts and Rayalaseema comprising 8 districts 99 These districts are made up of 76 revenue divisions 100 679 mandals 100 and 13 324 village panchayats as part of the administrative organisation 101 North Andhra Alluri Sitharama Raju Anakapalli Parvathipuram Manyam Srikakulam Visakhapatnam Vizianagaram Coastal Andhra Bapatla Dr B R Ambedkar Konaseema East Godavari Eluru Guntur Kakinada Krishna NTR Palnadu Prakasam Sri Potti Sriramulu Nellore West Godavari Rayalaseema Anantapur Annamayya Chittoor YSR Kurnool Nandyal Sri Sathya Sai Tirupati Cities and towns edit There are 123 urban local bodies comprising 17 municipal corporations 79 municipalities and 27 nagar panchyats in the state The urban population is 14 9 million 1 49 crores as per the 2011 census 102 There are two cities with more than one million inhabitants namely Visakhapatnam and Vijayawada 103 Cities with the highest population in Andhra Pradesh as per the 2011 Census 103 Ciy Town District s post 2022 reorg Population 2011 Visakhapatnam Visakhapatnam Anakapalli 1 728 128 Vijayawada NTR 1 476 931 Guntur Guntur 743 354 Nellore Nellore 558 548 Kurnool Kurnool 484 327 Rajahmundry East Godavari 560 756 Tirupati Tirupati 461 900 Kakinada Kakinada 443 028 Kadapa YSR 344 893 Anantapur Anantapur 340 613Economy editMain article Economy of Andhra Pradesh GSDP at current prices for the year 2022 23 is estimated at 1 317 728 crore US 170 billion advanced estimates against 1 133 837 crore equivalent to 12 trillion or US 150 billion in 2023 first revised estimates for the year 2021 22 The share of agriculture s contribution to the GSDP is at 36 19 while industry is at 23 36 and services are at 40 45 The state posted a record growth of 7 02 at constant prices 2011 12 against the country s growth of 7 GDP per capita is estimated at 219 518 US 2 700 5 104 AP achieved an overall 4th rank in the Sustainable Development Goals SDG India Report for the year 2020 21 with a first rank in SDG 7 affordable energy and a second rank in SDG 14 life below water 9 In 2014 15 the first year after bifurcation the state ranked eighth in GSDP at current prices which stood at 520 030 crore equivalent to 7 8 trillion or US 98 billion in 2023 It recorded 12 03 growth compared to the previous fiscal which was 464 184 crore equivalent to 7 4 trillion or US 93 billion in 2023 105 106 Agriculture edit nbsp Lush green farms in Konaseema The agricultural economy comprises agriculture livestock poultry farming and fisheries 85 Four important rivers in India the Godavari Krishna Penna and Tungabhadra flow through the state and provide irrigation 60 of the population is engaged in agriculture and related activities Rice is the state s major food crop and staple food The state has three agricultural export zones the undivided Chittoor district for mango pulp and vegetables the undivided Krishna district for mangoes and the undivided Guntur district for chillies 107 Besides rice farmers grow jowar bajra maize minor millet many varieties of pulses oil seeds sugarcane cotton chilli pepper mango and tobacco Crops used for vegetable oil production such as sunflower and peanuts are popular 108 The state contributes 10 of total fish production and over 70 of shrimp production in India 109 The geographical location of the state allows marine fishing as well as inland fish production The most exported marine products include Vannamei shrimp 110 Industries edit nbsp Aerial view of Hindustan Shipyard Limited HSL Visakhapatnam nbsp Isuzu Motors India manufacturing plant aerial view Sri City As per the annual survey of industries 2019 20 the number of factories was 12 582 with 681 224 employees The top 4 employment providers are food products 25 48 non metallic minerals 11 26 textiles 9 35 and pharmaceuticals 8 68 Gross value added GVA contributed by the industrial sector is 55 035 crore US 6 9 billion of which food products 18 95 pharmaceuticals 17 01 and non metallic minerals 16 25 are the top 3 contributors From a district perspective the top three districts were undivided Visakhapatnam Chittoor and Krishna 111 The defence administered Hindustan Shipyard Limited built the first ship in India in 1948 112 Sri City located in Tirupati district is an integrated business city that is home to several multinational companies 113 The state has 36 big auto players such as Ashok Leyland Hero Motors Isuzu Motors India and Kia Motors with investments of over US 2 8 billion It accounts for 10 of India s auto exports 114 The mining sector contributed 3 390 crore US 420 million in revenue to the state during 2021 22 115 As of April 2023 update Ravva Block in the shallow offshore area of the Krishna Godavari Basin had produced nearly 311 million barrels of crude oil and 385 billion cubic feet of natural gas since its initial production in March 1994 116 The state accounts for 2 7 of crude oil production in India with 827 8 thousand metric tonnes from its Krishna Godavari basin 117 809 million metric standard cubic metres of natural gas are produced from onshore sites which accounts for 2 4 of India s production 118 Services edit nbsp IBM Software Campus Visakhapatnam The value of information technology exports from the state in 2021 22 was 926 crore US 120 million which is 0 14 of the IT exports from India Exports have remained below 0 2 in the past five years 119 The state is ranked third in domestic tourist footfalls for the year 2021 with 93 2 million domestic tourists which amounts to 13 8 of all domestic tourists in India A major share of the tourists visit temples in Tirupati Vijayawada and Srisailam 120 Government and politics editMain articles Government of Andhra Pradesh Politics of Andhra Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh Legislature nbsp Secretariat buildings hosting legislative assembly and council Amaravati There are a total of 175 assembly constituencies in the state 121 The legislative council is the upper house with 58 members 122 In the Parliament of India the state has 11 seats in the Rajya Sabha and 25 seats in the Lok Sabha 121 In the 2019 elections Y S Jagan Mohan Reddy leader of the YSR Congress Party became the chief minister with a resounding mandate by winning 151 out of 175 seats 123 Government revenue and expenditure edit For 2021 22 total receipts of the Andhra Pradesh government were 2 05 lakh crore US 26 billion inclusive of 53 284 crore US 6 7 billion of loans States own tax revenue was 70 979 crore US 8 9 billion The top three sources of non tax revenue are state goods and services tax GST 23 809 crore US 3 0 billion sales tax value added tax VAT 20 808 crore US 2 6 billion and state excise 14 703 crore US 1 8 billion 104 The government earned a revenue of 7 345 crore US 920 million from 2 574 million transactions for registration services Visakhapatnam Vijayawada Guntur and Tirupati are the top contributors to the revenue 124 The government s total expenditure was 1 91 594 crore which includes debt repayment of 13 920 crore The fiscal deficit was 25 013 crore which was 2 1 of the GSDP Revenue expenditure was 1 59 163 crore and capital expenditure was 16 373 crore Welfare expenditures got the maximum share Education accounted for 25 796 crore energy 10 852 crore and irrigation 7 027 crore 104 Outstanding debt was 3 89 lakh crore an increase of almost 40 000 crore compared to the previous year This accounts for 32 4 per cent of the GSDP 125 The outstanding guarantee estimate was 1 38 875 crore of which 38 473 are for the power sector which equals 12 of GSDP 104 Amaravati protests edit Main article 2019 2023 Amaravati protests In August 2020 the Andhra Pradesh legislative assembly passed the Andhra Pradesh decentralisation and inclusive development of all regions act It provided for limiting Amaravati as legislative capital while naming Vizag as executive capital and Kurnool as judicial capital 126 The events leading to this decision resulted in widespread and continuing protests by the farmers of Amaravati 127 When the act was challenged in the Andhra Pradesh High Court the court ordered to maintain status quo until the court completes its hearing The government led by Y S Jagan Mohan Reddy withdrew the act when the High court hearing reached the final stage The chief minister said that his government would bring a better and more complete bill 128 The protesters under the banner of Amaravati Parirakshana Samithi and the Joint Action Committee of Amaravati received support from all the political parties barring the ruling YCP when they held their long marches across the state seeking support for their agitation 129 On 3 March 2022 the High Court ruled that the government could not abandon the development of Amaravati as the capital city after farmers parted with 33 000 acres of land against the agreement with Andhra Pradesh capital region development authority to develop it as the capital city and 15 000 crore was sunk in it over development expenditure It asked the government to develop Amaravati within six months 130 When the government appealed to the Supreme court it got a stay on the judgement regarding developing the city within six months The Supreme court is set to hear it in April 2024 following its decision on 3 January 2024 about the government s request for expedited hearing 131 132 Interstate disputes edit Assets division with Telangana edit There are 91 institutions under schedule IX with assets of 1 42 lakh crore 142 institutions under schedule X with assets of 24 018 53 crore and another 12 institutions not mentioned in the act with assets of 1 759 crore which are to be split between Andhra Pradesh and Telangana following the bifurcation An expert committee headed by Sheela Bhide gave a recommendation for bifurcation of 89 out of the 91 schedule IX institutions Telangana selectively accepted the recommendations while Andhra Pradesh asked for their acceptance in total The division of the RTC headquarters and the Deccan Infrastructure and Landholdings Limited DIL with huge land parcels has become contentious Despite several meetings of the trilateral dispute resolution committees no progress was made The Andhra Pradesh government filed a suit in the Supreme Court 133 Krishna river water sharing dispute edit Further information Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal Andhra Pradesh and Telangana continue to dispute the water share of the Krishna River In 1969 the Bachawat tribunal for the allocation of water shares among the riparian states allocated 811 tmcft of water to Andhra Pradesh The Andhra Pradesh government of that time split it in a 512 299 tmcft ratio between Andhra Pradesh including the basin area of Rayalaseema and Telangana respectively It was based on the utilisation facilities established at that time Though the tribunal recommended the use of the Tungabhadra Dam a part of the Krishna Basin to provide water to the drought prone Mahabubnagar area of Telangana this was not implemented The bifurcation act advised the formation of the Krishna River Management Board KRMB and the Godavari River Management Board GRMB for resolving disputes between the new states In 2015 the two states agreed to share water in the 66 34 AP Telangana ratio as an interim arrangement in a meeting with the central water ministry which is to be reviewed every year This practice continued without further review Telangana filed a suit in the Supreme Court for a 70 share Following the assurance of the formation of a tribunal to resolve the issue Telangana withdrew its suit The centre formulated the terms of reference for KWDT 2 in Oct 2023 134 135 Godavari water sharing dispute edit Further information Godavari Water Disputes Tribunal Andhra Pradesh got 1172 78 tmcft of Godavari water Telangana is utilising 433 tmcft for its completed projects while Andhra Pradesh s share is 739 tmcft The Andhra Pradesh government has opposed Telangana submitting a detailed project report for additional utilisation through new or upgraded projects such as Kaleswaram Tupakulagudem Sitarama Mukteswaram and Modikunta lift irrigation projects 136 Five villages near Bhadrachalam edit The 1 50 metre increase in the height of the Polavaram coffer dam to 44 metres raised the suspicion that it led to flooding of Bhadrachalam and nearby villages in Telangana along the Godavari river in 2022 Three mandals that were originally part of Andhra state were transferred back to Andhra Pradesh excluding Bhadrachalam town to support the Polavaram project as those areas are likely to be submerged Telangana would like to take back five villages on the river banks for ease of movement of its government machinery to provide rehabilitation support to its other villages beyond them to which the Andhra Pradesh government is objecting 137 2024 Elections edit Main articles 2024 Indian general election in Andhra Pradesh and 2024 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election Polling is scheduled for 13 May while counting will be done on 4 June 138 According to an analysis in the English media special category status for state capital issue Y S Vivekananda Reddy s murder attack on Jagan Mohan Reddy 139 and cases against N Chandrababu Naidu are the key issues 140 Infrastructure editTransport edit Main article Transport in Andhra Pradesh Roads edit nbsp Vijayawada Guntur section of NH 16 The state has a total major road network of 47 244 83 km 29 356 58 mi This comprises 8 163 72 km 5 072 70 mi of national highways 12 595 60 km 7 826 54 mi of state highways and 26 485 51 km 16 457 33 mi of major district roads 141 NH 16 with a highway network of around 1 000 km 620 mi in the state is a part of the Golden Quadrilateral project undertaken by the National Highways Development Project The proposed Anantapuram Amaravati Expressway is changed to Anantapur Guntur national highway 544D with implementation expected to begin in January 2023 142 The state government owned Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation APSRTC is the public bus transport provider It is split into 129 depots across four zones It has a fleet strength of 11 098 buses and a staff count of 49 544 It operates 1 11 billion kilometres and serves 3 68 million passengers daily 143 1 828 million transport vehicles and 13 7 million non transport vehicles are registered in the state In the transport category 0 98 million are goods carriages constituting 53 61 0 66 million are auto rickshaws constituting 36 21 and 0 109 million are cabs constituting 5 96 In the non transport category 12 2 million are motorcycles constituting 89 5 and 1 067 million are four wheelers constituting 7 29 144 The integrated road accident database project an initiative of the Ministry Of Road Transport and Highways MORTH is under implementation in the state Construction of institutes of driver training and research Facilities at Darsi Praksam district and Dhone Nandyal district in partnership with Maruti Suzuki and Ashok Leyland respectively is in progress 145 Automation of driving test tracks in nine district capitals is expected to be completed by 31 March 2023 146 Railways edit nbsp Train at Vijayawada railway station Andhra Pradesh has a total broad gauge railway route of 3 969 km 2 466 mi with rail density at 24 36 km per 1000 square kilometres 147 148 The railway network in Andhra Pradesh is under the South Central Railway 149 East Coast Railway 150 and South Western Railway zones 151 During 2014 2022 350 km of new lines were constructed at a rate of 44 km per year in Andhra Pradesh under the South Central Railway division The rate of construction was only 2 km per year in the preceding five years 152 The Nadikudi Srikalahasti line of 308 70 km sanctioned at a budget of 22 89 billion US 290 million in 2011 12 as a joint project of the centre and state is progressing slowly with only phase 1 of 46 km between New Piduguralla station and Savalyapuram completed in 2021 22 153 There are three A1 and 23 A category railway stations in the state as per the assessment in 2017 154 Visakhapatnam has been declared the cleanest railway station in the country as per the assessment in 2018 155 The railway station in Shimiliguda was the first broad gauge railway station at high altitude in the country 156 A new railway zone South Coast Railway Zone SCoR with headquarters in Visakhapatnam was announced as the newest railway zone of the Indian Railways in 2019 but is yet to be implemented 157 158 Airports edit See also List of airports in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Airports in Andhra Pradesh Visakhapatnam Vijayawada and Tirupati airports are international airports in the state The state has three domestic airports namely Rajahmundry Kadapa and Kurnool 159 A privately owned airport for emergency flights and chartered flights is at Puttaparthi 160 Sea ports edit See also List of ports and harbours of Andhra Pradesh nbsp Operational Seaports excluding fishing harbors in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Visakhapatnam seaport The state has one major port at Visakhapatnam under the administrative control of the central government and 15 notified ports including three captive ports under the control of the state government 161 162 The other famous ports are Krishnapatnam Gangavaram and Kakinada Gangavaram port is a deep seaport that can accommodate ocean liners up to 200 000 250 000 DWT 163 Communication edit As of January 2023 update the AP statewide area network APSWAN connects 2 164 offices of state administration at 668 locations down to the level of mandal headquarters The network supports both data and video communications Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited BSNL and the National Knowledge Network NKN link district headquarters with state headquarters with a bandwidth of 34 Mbit s Mandal headquarters are connected with a bandwidth of 8 Mbit s 164 165 Andhra Pradesh state fiber net limited APSFNL operates an optical fibre network This provides internet connectivity telephony and Internet protocol television IPTV with fibre to private and corporate users in Andhra Pradesh 166 Water edit The state has 40 major and medium rivers and 40 000 minor irrigation sources Godavari Krishna and Penna are major rivers The total cultivable area is 19 904 million acres Major medium and minor irrigation projects irrigate 10 311 million acres 167 The Polavaram project under construction suffered setbacks with damage to its diaphragm wall during the 2022 floods 168 The Veligonda project is delayed despite plan to commission by September 2023 as only the tunnels are completed in January 2024 169 170 The Annamayya project washed away in the 2021 floods is set to be redesigned at a cost of 787 crore 171 172 Power edit Main article Power sector of Andhra Pradesh nbsp Rayalaseema thermal power station nbsp Srisailam hydel power project Thermal hydel and renewable power plants supply power to the state The installed capacity share of the state in the public sector generating stations was 7 245 MW Private sector installed capacity was 9 370 MW which includes independent power producer capacity of 1 961 MW The total installed capacity was 16 615 MW Peak power demand for the state in 2021 22 was 12 032 MW and per capita consumption was 1 285 kilowatt hours The energy consumed is 68972 million units 173 Healthcare edit The government is spending 7 3 of the state budget on healthcare compared to an average of 4 to 4 5 per cent overall in the country 174 The 108 service provides fast emergency management services by shifting patients to a nearby healthcare facility The 104 service provides health care services at the doorstep of villages through mobile medical units that visit at least once a month 175 All the poor families are covered by the free state health insurance scheme called Arogyasri up to a limit of 2 500 000 US 31 000 The scheme serves 42 5 million people 176 The services are provided in government and private hospitals under the network During 2014 2018 though the nominal mean claim amount of Arogyasri beneficiaries went up significantly it decreased after accounting for inflation Mortality rates have significantly decreased which indicates better outcomes are being achieved at a lower cost 177 Education editMain articles Education in Andhra Pradesh and List of institutions of higher education in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Andhra University Visakhapatnam Primary and secondary school education is imparted by government and private schools regulated by the school education department of the state 178 179 The government decided to stop financial aid to aided schools forcing them to handover the schools with the aided staff to government or become private in 2021 180 The government runs several residential schools including separate schools for BC and SC ST categories 181 As per the child info and school information report 2018 19 there were a total of 7 041 568 students 182 enrolled in 62 063 schools 183 616 615 students have appeared for the March 2024 secondary school certificate SSC exam in the regular stream Parvathipuram Manyam district achieved the highest pass percentage of 96 37 among districts The overall pass percentage was 86 69 an increase of 14 43 over the previous year with 100 in 2 803 schools 184 185 393 757 students appeared for intermediate second year examinations held in March 2024 78 which is an increase of 7 over the previous year were declared passed 186 187 The state initiated education reforms in 2020 by creating six types of schools satellite foundation schools pre primary foundational schools pre primary class II foundational school plus pre primary class V pre high school class III class VII VIII high school class III class X and high school plus class III class XII 188 The transition to English medium education in all government schools was started in the academic year 2020 2021 It is expected to reach completion by 2024 25 1000 government schools are affiliated to the CBSE in the years 2022 23 as an initial step and the bilingual text book scheme was adopted to ease the transition 189 The state government is going ahead with the English medium based on the parents survey despite protests and court cases 190 The state initiative is being funded in part by a loan from the World Bank to the tune of 250 million over 2021 2026 through the Supporting Andhra s Learning Transformation SALT project to improve the learning outcomes of children up to class II level 191 There are 169 government aided degree colleges and 55 private aided degree colleges in the state 66 government colleges and 48 private aided colleges have valid NAAC grades There are 85 government aided and 175 private polytechnic colleges with a sanctioned strength of 75 906 students 192 The AP State council of higher education organises various entrance tests for different streams and conducts counselling for admissions 193 The AP state skill development corporation is set up to support skill development and placement for the educated 194 There are a total of 36 universities which comprise 3 central universities 23 state public universities 6 state private universities and 4 deemed universities 195 Andhra University is the oldest of the universities in the state established in 1926 196 197 The government established Rajiv Gandhi University of knowledge technologies RGUKT in 2008 to cater to the education needs of the rural youth of the state 198 Dr Y S R University of Health Sciences oversees medical education in 348 affiliated colleges spanning the entire range from traditional medicine to modern medicine 199 The public universities including the legacy universities such as Andhra Sri Venkateswara and Nagarjuna are suffering from a severe fund crunch and staff shortage managing with only 20 of sanctioned full time staff 200 Koneru Lakshmaiah Education Foundation University KL College of Engineering bagged the 50th rank while Andhra university in Visakhapatnam bagged the 76th rank in the overall category of India rankings for 2023 as per the national institute ranking framework NIRF of the Union Ministry of Education 2 478 institutions including 242 institutions from the state participated in the ranking 201 The gross enrolment ratio GER in higher education for the age group 18 23 for the state is at 35 2 for the year 2019 20 which compares favourably with the GER for all of India at 27 1 With a female GER of 35 3 and a male GER of 38 2 the Gender Parity Index is 0 84 The corresponding ratio for India is 1 01 202 There were 510 industrial training institutes ITI in the year 2020 21 in Andhra Pradesh with 82 under government management and 417 under private management The total available seats in 2021 were 93 280 out of which 48 90 were filled 10 053 students completed ITI education in the year 2020 203 The state has 2 510 public libraries including 4 regional libraries and 13 district central libraries under government management 204 Saraswata Niketanam at Vetapalem in Bapatla district one of the oldest libraries established under private management in 1918 is losing its attraction as the Internet spreads 205 The government is planning to develop digital libraries at the village panchayat level 206 Science and technology edit nbsp Chandrayaan 2 Module launch at SDSC Sriharikota As of 20 June 2023 update there are 190 science and technology organisations in Andhra Pradesh including 12 central labs and research institutions 207 Satish Dhawan Space Centre SDSC known as Sriharikota Range SHAR on the barrier island of Sriharikota in Tirupati district is a satellite launching station operated by the Indian Space Research Organisation 208 It is India s primary orbital launch site India s lunar orbiter Chandrayaan 1 was launched from the centre on 22 October 2008 209 Some notable scientists edit Yellapragada Subba Rao a pioneering biochemist hailing from the state discovered the function of adenosine triphosphate ATP as an energy source in the cell and developed drugs for cancer and filariasis 210 211 Yelavarthy Nayudamma a chemical engineer worked extensively for the Central Leather Research Institute in Chennai and rose to become the director general of the Center for Scientific and Industrial Research CSIR India 212 C R Rao was an Indian American mathematician and statistician and an alumnus of Andhra University His work on statistics influenced various sciences 213 Media editThe total number of registered newspapers and periodicals in the state for the years 2020 21 was 5 798 There were 1 645 dailies 817 weeklies 2 431 monthlies and 623 fortnightlies 787 Telugu dailies had a circulation of 9 911 005 103 English dailies had a circulation of 1 646 453 214 215 Eenadu Sakshi and Andhra Jyothi are the top 3 Telugu daily newspapers in terms of circulation in India and are also the top 3 Telugu news sites 216 217 BBC Telugu news was launched on 2 October 2017 218 219 Several privately owned news media outlets are considered biased towards specific political parties in the state 220 221 There were 10 general entertainment channels 23 news channels 2 health channels 6 religious channels 2 other channels and 2 cable distribution channels for a total of 45 channels empanelled by the Andhra Pradesh information and public relations department 222 As of 2019 update Akashvani previously known as All India Radio operates 3 MW 17 FM transmitters from 14 locations in the state It reaches 99 of the area and 99 5 of population Akashvani s FM coverage alone reaches 36 of the area and 45 of population 223 5 private operators run 13 FM stations with Red FM operating from 5 locations 224 Culture editMain article Culture of Andhra Pradesh Andhra Pradesh has 17 geographical indications in the categories of agriculture handicrafts foodstuffs and textiles as per the Geographical Indications of Goods Registration and Protection Act 1999 225 226 Some of the GI products are Banaganapalle mangoes 227 Bandar laddu 228 Kondapalli toys Tirupati laddu and saris made in Dharmavaram and Machilipatnam 226 Handicrafts edit nbsp Kondapalli Toys at a house in Vijayawada Machilipatnam and Srikalahasti Kalamkari are the two unique textile art forms practised in India 229 There are other notable handicrafts present in the state like the soft limestone idol carvings of Durgi 230 Etikoppaka in Visakhapatnam district is notable for its lac industry which produces lacquered wooden toys 231 232 Literature edit Main article Telugu literature Nannayya Tikkana and Yerrapragada form the trinity who translated the Sanskrit epic Mahabharata into Telugu Nannayya wrote the first treatise on Telugu grammar called Andhra Shabda Chintamani in Sanskrit 233 Pothana translated Sri Bhagavatam into Telugu as Andhra Maha Bhagavatamu Vemana was an Indian philosopher He wrote Telugu poems using simple language and native idioms on a variety of subjects including yoga wisdom and morality Potuluri Veerabrahmendhra swami a clairvoyant and social reformer of 17th century wrote Kalagnanam a book of predictions 234 235 236 Telugu literature after Kandukuri Veeresalingam is termed Adhunika Telugu Sahityam modern Telugu literature He is known as Gadya Tikkana and was the author of the Telugu social novel Satyavati Charitam Viswanatha Satyanarayana was conferred the Jnanpith Award Sri Sri brought new forms of expressionism into Telugu literature 237 Festivals edit Sankranti is the major harvest festival celebrated across the state 238 It is celebrated for four days in the second week of January On Bhogi the day before Makara Sankranti people throw old items into bonfires Children are showered with jujube as a symbol of protection from evil Sweet meats made of rice flour and sesame seeds called Arisalu are enjoyed Next day women and young girls make elaborate geometric patterns called Rangoli before the entrance to the house and decorate them with flowers Children fly kites On the subsequent two days Kanuma and Mukkanuma people feed cattle and offer prayers for a good harvest The first day of Telugu New Year Ugadi which occurs during March April is also a special festival with preparation and sharing of pickle pachhadi made from raw mangoes neem flowers pepper powder jaggery and tamarind Tasting this pickle which is mix of different tastes teaches the importance of taking positive negative life experiences in one s stride Celebrations end with the recitation of the coming year s astrological predictions called Panchanga sravanam Vijaya Dasami known commonly as Dussera and Deepavali the festival of lights are other major Hindu festivals 239 Eid is celebrated with special prayers 240 Rottela Panduga is celebrated at Bara Shaheed Dargah in Nellore with participation across religious lines 241 Dance music and cinema edit Main articles Music of Andhra Pradesh Telugu theatre and Carnatic music See also Tholu bommalata nbsp Kuchipudi dance Kuchipudi the cultural dance recognised as the official dance form of the state of Andhra Pradesh originated in the village of Kuchipudi in Krishna district 15 Many composers of Carnatic music like Annamacharya Kshetrayya Tyagaraja and Bhadrachala Ramadas were of Telugu descent Modern Carnatic music composers and singers like Ghantasala and M Balamuralikrishna are of Telugu descent The Telugu film industry hosted many music composers and playback singers such as S P Balasubrahmanyam P Susheela S Janaki and P B Sreenivas Folk songs are very important and popular in the many rural areas of the state Forms such as the Burra katha and Poli are still performed today 242 Harikathaa Kalakshepam or Harikatha involves the narration of a story intermingled with various songs relating to the story Harikatha was originated in Andhra Pradesh 243 Burra katha is an oral storytelling technique in which the topic is either a Hindu mythological story or a contemporary social issue 244 Rangasthalam is an Indian theatre in the Telugu language based predominantly in Andhra Pradesh 245 Gurajada Apparao wrote the play Kanyasulkam in 1892 which is often considered the greatest play in the Telugu language 246 C Pullaiah is cited as the father of the Telugu theatre movement 247 248 Andhra Pradesh State Film Television amp Theatre Development Corporation offers incentives to promote the industry 249 The government is asking the film industry to make Vizag its hub 250 The Telugu film industry known as Tollywood which produces 300 films annually is primarily based in Hyderabad though several films are shot in Vizag 251 Film producer D Ramanaidu holds a Guinness record for the most films produced by a person 252 In the years 2005 2006 and 2008 the Telugu film industry produced the largest number of films in India exceeding the number of films produced in Bollywood 253 254 Naatu Naatu from the film RRR became the first song from an Indian film to win the Academy Award for Best Original Song and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song as well as the first song from an Asian film to win the former 255 256 Cuisine edit Main article Telugu cuisine nbsp Vegetarian Andhra meal served on important occasions Andhra meals are combinations of spicy tangy and sweet flavours Chillies which are abundantly produced in Andhra Pradesh and curry leaves are used copiously in most preparations of curries and chutneys Various types of Pappu are made using lentils in combination with tomatoes spinach gongura ridge gourd etc Apart from curries pulusu a stew made using tamarind juice in combination with vegetables sea food chicken mutton etc is popular Pachchadi a paste usually made with a combination of groundnuts fried vegetables and chillies is a must in a meal Pickles made using mangoes gooseberries lemons etc are enjoyed in combination with Pappu Buttermilk and yoghurt mixed with rice and eaten towards the end of the meal soothe the body especially after eating spicy food items earlier Ariselu Burelu Laddu and Pootharekulu are some of the sweets made for special festivals and occasions 257 258 Tourism editMain article Tourism in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Venkateswara temple Tirumala nbsp Kanaka Durga temple gopuram Vijayawada nbsp Varaha Lakshmi Narasimha temple Simhachalam nbsp Undavalli Caves are a monolithic example of Indian rock cut architecture nbsp Gandikota canyon in Kadapa district Some of the popular religious pilgrim destinations include Tirumala Venkateswara temple at Tirupati Srikalahasti temple Varaha Lakshmi Narasimha temple Simhachalam Shahi Jamia Masjid in Adoni Gunadala Church in Vijayawada and Buddhist centres at Amaravati and Nagarjuna Konda Tirumala Venkateswara temple is the world s most visited Hindu temple with footfalls of 30 000 40 000 daily and about 75 000 on New Year s Eve 259 The region is home to a variety of other pilgrimage centres such as the Pancharama Kshetras Mallikarjuna Jyotirlinga Kanaka Durga Temple and Kodanda Rama Temple 260 The state has several beaches in its coastal districts such as Rushikonda Mypadu Suryalanka etc 261 caves such as Borra Caves 262 Indian rock cut architecture depicting Undavalli Caves 263 and the country s second longest cave system the Belum Caves 264 The valleys and hills include Araku Valley Horsley Hills Papi Hills and Gandikota Gorge 265 266 Arma Konda located in Visakhapatnam district is the highest peak in the Eastern Ghats 267 Museums edit nbsp Museums in Andhra Pradesh The state has 32 museums 268 c which feature a varied collection of ancient sculptures paintings idols weapons cutlery inscriptions and religious artefacts The Amaravati Archaeological Museum has several archaeological artefacts 269 Visakha Museum and Telugu Samskruthika Niketanam in Visakhapatnam display historical artefacts of the pre independence era Bapu Museum in Vijayawada displays a large collection of artefacts Advanced projection mapping with graphic animation and laser displays is used to tell the history of Kondapalli Fort utilising the irregular landscapes ruins and buildings present in the fort as a screen It was launched in 2019 270 The Archaeological Survey of India identified 135 centrally protected monuments in the state of Andhra Pradesh These include the reconstructed monuments at Anupu and Nagarjunakonda 271 Sports editMain article Sports in Andhra Pradesh nbsp Dr Y S Rajasekhara Reddy ACA VDCA Cricket Stadium in Visakhapatnam Dr PVG Raju ACA Sports Complex Vizianagaram The Sports Authority of Andhra Pradesh is the governing body that looks after the infrastructure development coaching and administration of sports promotion schemes 272 Dr YSR Sports School with classes for grades 4 10 and a focus on tapping rural sports talent was established in Putlampalli YSR district in December 2006 273 The ACA VDCA stadium in Visakhapatnam hosted ODI T20I and IPL matches 274 Andhra Pradesh secured 16 medals at the 36th National Games held in 2022 It was ranked twenty first in the competition It won the most medals in athletics Two silvers and one bronze were won in weightlifting 275 Karnam Malleswari is the first female Indian to win an Olympic medal 276 Pullela Gopichand is a former Indian badminton player He won the All England Open Badminton Championships in 2001 becoming the second Indian to win after Prakash Padukone 277 278 Srikanth Kidambi a badminton player is the first Indian to reach the world championships final in 2021 in the men s singles and win a silver medal 279 See also editOutline of Andhra PradeshNotes edit Excluding districts and mandals which went to Telangana The Christian population is significantly undercounted since SC reservation benefits are denied to Christians Two entries are repeatedReferences edit Andhra celebrates Formation Day CM hoists tricolour Times of India 1 November 2020 Archived from the original on 23 June 2023 Retrieved 23 June 2023 Former Supreme Court judge Justice S Abdul Nazeer appointed as Governor of Andhra Pradesh Bar and Bench 12 February 2023 Retrieved 8 August 2023 Raghavendra V 30 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