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MADRAS

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 292 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MADRAS  , the

capital of Madras
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presidency, and the chief seaport on the eastern coast of India, is situated in 130 4' N. and 80° 17' E . The city, with its suburbs, extends nine milesalong the sea and nearly four miles inland, intersected by the little
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river Cooum .
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Area, 27 sq. m.; pop . (1901), 509,346, showing an increase of 12-6% in the decade . Madras is the third city in India . Although at first sight the city presents a disappointing appearance, and possesses not a single handsome street, it has several buildings of architectural pretensions, and many spots of
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historical
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interest . It is spread over a very wide area, and many parts of it are almost rural in character . Seen from the roadstead, the fort; a row of merchants' offices, a few spires and public buildings are all that strike the eye . Roughly speaking, the city consists of the following divisions . (I) George
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Town (formerly Black Town, but renamed after the visit of the Prince of Wales in 1906), an
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ill-built, densely-populated block, about a mile square, is the business
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part of the town, containing the banks, custom house, high court, and all the mercantile offices . The last, for the most part handsome structures, lie along the
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beach . On the sea-face of George Town are the pier and the new harbour .

Immediately

south of George Town there is (2) an open space which contains Fort St George, the Marina, or fashionable drive and
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promenade by the seashore, Government House, and several handsome public buildings on the sea-face . (3) West and south of this
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lung of the city are crowded quarters known by native names—Chintadrapet, Turuvaleswarampet, Pudupak, Royapet, Kistnampet and Mylapur, which
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bend to the sea again at the old town of Saint Thome . (4) To the west of George Town are the quarters of Veperi and Pudupet, chiefly inhabited by Eurasians, and the suburbs of Egmore, Nangambakam,, and Perambur, adorned with handsome
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European mansions and their spacious " compounds " or parks, which make Madras a city of magnificent distances . (5) South-west and south lie the European quarters of Tanampet and aristocratic Adyar . Among the most notable buildings are the
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cathedral, Scottish church, Government House, Pachayappa's Hall, senate house, Chepauk palace (now the revenue board), and the Central railway station . Madras possesses no
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special
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industries . There are several cotton mills, large cement
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works, iron foundries and
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cigar factories . Large sums of
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money have from time to time been spent upon the harbour works, but without any
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great success . The
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port remains practically an open roadstead, protected by two breakwaters, and the P . & O. steamers ceased to call in 1898 . Passengers or cargo are landed or embarked in flat-bottomed masula boats . The sea bottom is unusually flat, reaching a
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depth of ten fathoms only at a mile from the
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shore .

The harbour is not safe during a

cyclone, and vessels have to put out to sea . Madras conducts about 56% of the
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foreign trade of the presidency, but a much smaller share of the
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coasting trade . As the capital of
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southern India, Madras is the centre on which all the great military roads converge . It is also the terminal station of two lines of railway, the Madras & Southern Mahratta
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line and the Madras &
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Tanjore section of the South
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Indian railway . The Buckingham canal, which passes through an outlying part of the city, connects South
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Arcot
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district with
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Nellore and the Kistna and
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Godavari
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system of canal navigation . The municipal government of the city was framed by an act of the Madras legislature passed in 1884 . The governing
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body consists of 32 commissioners, of whom 24 are elected by the ratepayers, together with a paid president . The Madras University was constituted in 1857, as an examining body, on the model of the university of
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London . The chief educational institutions in Madras city are the Presidency College; six missionary colleges and one native college; the medical college, the law college, the college of
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engineering, the teachers' college in the suburb of
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Saidapet, all maintained by government; and the government school of arts . The foundation of Madras
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dates' from 1640, when Francis Day, chief of the East India
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Company's settlement at Armagon, obtained a grant of the
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present site of the city from a native ruler . A fort—called Fort St George, presumably from having been finished on St George's Day (
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April 23)—was at once constructed, and a gradually increasing population settled around its walls . In 1653 Madras, which had previously been subordinate to the settlement of
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Bantam in
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Java, was raised to the rank of an
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independent presidency .

In 1702 Daud

Khan, Aurangzeb's general, blockaded the town for a few weeks, and in 1741 the
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Mahrattas unsuccessfully attacked the place . In 1746 La Bourdonnais bombarded and captured Madras . The settlement was restored to the
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English two years later by the Treaty of
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Aix-la-Chapelle, but the government of the presidency did not return to Madras till 1762 . In 1758 the French under Lally occupied the Black Town and invested the fort . The siege was conducted on both sides with great skill and vigour . After two months the arrival of an English
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fleet relieved the garrison, and the besiegers retired with some precipitancy . With the exception of the threatening approach of Hyder
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Ali's horsemen in 1769, and again in 178o, Madras has since the French siege been
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free from
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external attack . The town of Saint
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Thorne, now part of Madras city, was founded and fortified by the Portuguese in 1504, and was held by the French from 1672 to 1674 . See Mrs F . Penny, Fort St George (1900); W . Foster, Founding of Fort St George (1902) .

End of Article: MADRAS
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