Kozhikode district

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Kozhikode district
district
Feroke, Kozhikode
Feroke, Kozhikode
Kozhikode district is located in Kerala
Kozhikode district
Kozhikode district
Location in Kerala, India
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Country  India
State Kerala
Headquarters Kozhikode
Government
 • Collector N Prasanth I.A.S
Population (2001)
 • Total 2,878,498
 • Density 2,025/km2 (5,240/sq mi)
Languages
 • Official Malayalam, English
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
ISO 3166 code IN-KL-
Vehicle registration Calicut City-KL11, Vatakara-KL-18, Koylandy-KL-56, Koduvally-KL-57
Website www.kozhikode.gov.in

Kozhikode District is a district of Kerala state, situated on the southwest coast of India. The city of Kozhikode, formerly known as Calicut, is the district headquarters. The district is 38.25% urbanised. [1]

Kozhikode district is bordered by the districts of Kannur to the north, Wayanad to the east, and Malappuram to the south. The Arabian Sea lies to the west. It is situated between latitudes 11° 08'N and 11° 50'N and longitudes 75° 30'E and 76° 8'E.

In 2001 the district was divided into four talukas: Kozhikode, Vadakara, Koyilandy and Thamarassery; however, by the 2011 census there are twelve block panchayats: Balusseri, Chelannur, Koduvally, Kozhikode, Kunnamangalam, Kunnummal, Melday, Panthalayani, Perambra, Thodannur, Thuneri, and Vadakara.[1]

Administrative history

Present-day Kozhikode District was among the territories ceded to the British East India Company by Tipu Sultan of Mysore in 1792, at the conclusion of the Third Anglo-Mysore War. The newly acquired British possessions on the Malabar Coast were organized into Malabar District, which included present-day districts of Kannur, Kozhikode, Malappuram, Palakkad, and Wayanad. Kozhikode served as the administrative headquarters of the district. Malabar District was part of the Madras Presidency, a province of British India.

After India's Independence in 1947, Madras Presidency was renamed Madras State. When Madras state was divided along linguistic lines by the State Names Reorganisation Act, Malabar District was combined with the erstwhile state of Travancore-Cochin and Kasaragod District to form the state of Kerala on 1 November 1956.

Malabar District was considered too large for effective administration. It was divided into the districts of Kozhikode, Kannur, and Palakkad on 1 January 1957. The district had five taluks, Vadakara, Koyilandy, Kozhikode, Ernad, and Tirur. On 16 June 1969, Ernad and Tirur Taluks became part of the newly created Malappuram District. South Wayanad, which forms the southern portion of present-day Wayanad District, was added to Kozhikode for a time, but in 1980 became part of newly created Wayanad District.

History

The history of the district is inevitably intertwined with the history of the city of Kozhikode. Calicut is the anglicized form of Kalikooth, the name used by Arabs to refer to Kozhikode. It was also called the Cock Fort, a usage that may have come from kozhi (Rooster) kodu (fortified). According to the historian K.V. Krishnan Iyer, the word Kozhikode is derived from koyil (palace) kodu (fortified), meaning 'Fortified Palace'.

The ports of the Malabar Coast have participated in the Indian Ocean trade of spices, silk, and other goods for over two millennia. Kozhikode emerged as the centre of an independent kingdom in the 14th century, whose ruler was known as the Zamorin.

Admiral Zheng He's navigation chart from Hormuz to Calicut, 1430

During the Yong Le era of the Ming Dynasty of China, Admiral Zheng He and his treasure fleet visited Kozhikode. Their visits were documented by on-board Arab language translators Ma Huan, Fei Xin and Gong Zheng. Each one of them published a book documented their visits to various countries, including Calicut. Ma Huan's book "Ying yai Sheng lan" (translated into English as The Overall Survey of the Ocean Shores) contains the following observations of Kozhikode:

  • Calicut was a large kingdom on the West Ocean, bordering Coimbatore kingdom to the east, Kochi to the south, and Honavar to the north.
  • The king of Calicut (Vana Vikraman) was a Brahmin and a Buddhist. His chiefs were Muslims (This we now know is an incorrect observation. The king of Calicut was always a Nair and a Hindu. His chiefs were both Muslims and Hindus).
  • The throne passes to the king's sister's son.
  • In the fifth year of Yong Le 1407, the emperor of Ming dynasty ordered Admiral Zheng He to deliver an imperial honor to King of Calicut, with grant of silver seal, and promoted the chiefs with titles and awards of hats and girdles of different grades.
  • Admiral Zheng He erected a pavilion with ceremonial stone tablet in Calicut to celebrate this event.
  • The king minted fanam (panam) coins of 60% gold and also silver coins as currency.
  • The people of Calicut were honest and trustworthy.
  • The people of Calicut made silk out of silkworm, and dyed silk into different colors.
  • The main produce of Calicut were turnips, onions, ginger, eggplants in four seasons; also red and white rice, but no wheat.
  • The king of Calicut ordered craftsmen to draw fifty ounces of gold into hair-like fine threads, and weaved them into ribbon to make a gold girdle embedded with pearls and precious stones of all sort of colors, and sent envoy Naina (Narayana) to present the gold girdle to the Ming emperor as tribute.
  • According to Ming dynasty Imperial Guard Recruitment Record, Nanking area town guard chief Shaban was a native of Calicut. He was recruited to join Zheng He's expedition, and was promoted on his return. Another officer Shasozu from Nanking military division was also a native from Calicut, who joined Zheng He's expedition and too was promoted. Admiral Zheng He later re-visited Calicut several times. On April of 1433 during his 6th and last expedition, he died in Calicut. The ceremonial stone tablet erected by Zheng He stood at least another two hundred years in Calicut; Jesuit Godinho de Eredia wrote that he saw this tablet in 1613.

Trade with several kingdoms of Asia, Africa and the middle- east made Kozhikode a popular trading center. Vasco da Gama landed at Kappad (18 kilometers north of Kozhikode) in May 1498, as the leader of a trade mission from Portugal and was received by the Zamorin himself. During the 16th century the Portuguese set up trading posts to the north in Kannur and to the south in Kochi. However, the Zamorin resisted the establishment of a permanent Portuguese presence in the city. In 1503 a Portuguese trading post was built in Chaliyam on the mouth of the river Chaliyar with the consent of the King of Vettat (Tirur). The fort was used by the Portuguese to attack Zamorin's interests. The Zamorins later allied with the Dutch to weaken the Portuguese and by the mid-17th century the Dutch had captured the Malabar Coast spice trade from the Portuguese. In 1766 Hyder Ali of Mysore captured Kozhikode and much of the northern Malabar Coast, and came into conflict with the British based in Madras, which resulted in four Anglo-Mysore Wars.

Climate

The district has a generally humid climate with a very hot season extending from March to May. The rainy season is during the South West Monsoon, which sets in the first week of June and extends up to September. The North East Monsoon extends from the second half of October through November. The average annual rainfall is 3266 mm. The best weather is found in towards the end of the year, in December and January — the skies are clear, and the air is crisp. The highest temperature recorded was 39.4 °C in March 1975. The lowest was 14 °C recorded on 26 December 1975.

Climate data for Kozhikode
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 31.6
(88.9)
32
(90)
32.7
(90.9)
33.1
(91.6)
32.4
(90.3)
29.4
(84.9)
28.4
(83.1)
28.3
(82.9)
29.5
(85.1)
30.6
(87.1)
31.3
(88.3)
31.6
(88.9)
30.9
(87.6)
Average low °C (°F) 22
(72)
23.4
(74.1)
25
(77)
26.1
(79)
25.8
(78.4)
24
(75)
23.5
(74.3)
23.5
(74.3)
24
(75)
24
(75)
23.6
(74.5)
22.7
(72.9)
23.8
(74.8)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 2.7
(0.106)
3.4
(0.134)
21.4
(0.843)
90.2
(3.551)
310.9
(12.24)
818.2
(32.213)
902.5
(35.531)
447.3
(17.61)
233.4
(9.189)
263.5
(10.374)
136.6
(5.378)
35
(1.38)
3,284.6
(129.315)
Source: [2]

Religious Demographics

 % of Dt. Population Sex Ratio Literacy Rate(L.R) L.R Males L.R Females
Hindus 58.79 1049 94.5 97.3 91.9
Muslims 38.37 1058 91.6 95.3 88.1
Christians 2.7 1178 98.2 98.6 97.8
Jains 0.06 1003 97.7 99.3 96.1

(Details for 'Kozhikode Urban' retrieved from Census of India[3])

Demographics

Religions in Kozhikode District
Religion Percent
Hindus
  
56.2%
Muslims
  
39.2%
Christian
  
4.3%
Others
  
0.3%
Distribution of religions
Source: 2011 Census.

According to the 2011 census Kozhikode district has a population of 3,089,543,[4] roughly equal to the nation of Mongolia[5] or the US state of Iowa.[6] This gives it a ranking of 115th in India (out of a total of 640).[4] Among this the population of the Hindus increased to 17,34,958 (males: 8,37,824, females: 8,97,134) from the figure of 16,69,161 in the 2001 census. Muslim population grew to 12,11,131 (males: 5,64,489: females: 6,46,642) from the 2001 figure of 10,78,759 while the Christian population stood at 1,31,516 (males: 64,367 and females: 67,149). Its population a decade ago was 1,27, 468. The district has a population density of 1,318 inhabitants per square kilometre (3,410/sq mi) .[4] Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 7.31%.[4] Kozhikode has a sex ratio of 1097 females for every 1000 males,[4] and a literacy rate of 95.24%.[4]

The centuries of trade across the Indian Ocean has given Kozhikode a cosmopolitan population. Hindus constitute the majority of the population, followed by the Mopillas or Muslims and the Christians. Christianity is believed to have been introduced in Kerala in 52 CE, and the Christian population expanded with the presence of the Portuguese, Dutch, and British starting in the 16th century.

Legislative constituencies

Balussery, Beypore, Elathur, Koduvally, Koyilandy, Kozhikode North, Kozhikode South, Kunnamangalam, Kuttiyadi, Nadapuram, Perambra, Thiruvambady and Vadakara.

Media

Kozhikode occupies a prominent place in the history of Malayalam Journalism. The origin of journalism in this district can be traced back to 1880. The Kerala Pathrika is likely to be the earliest newspaper published from Kozhikode. Keralam, Kerala Sanchari and Bharath Vilasam are among the Other newspapers published from Kozhikode before 1893. The four major Malayalam newspapers, the Malayala Manorama, Mathrubhumi, Madhyamam, and the Chandrika bring out Kozhikode editions. One of the major national dailies in English, The New Indian Express also has its edition in the city. Another two national dailies The Hindu and Deccan Chronicle recently started their edition in the city.

The Kozhikode station of All India Radio was commissioned on 14 May 1950 and it has two transmitters, Kozhikode A of 10 kilowatt power and Kozhikode B (Vividh Bharathi) of 1 kilowatt power. A television transmitter has been functioning in Kozhikode from 3 July 1984, relaying programmes from Delhi and Thiruvananthapuram Doordarshan. Cable and satellite television are also available throughout the district.

In 2013, a news channel named MEDIA ONE started to telecast as it HQ and base station at Calicut. This is the first Malayalam Channel telecast from Calicut and it belongs to Madhyamam family.

Places of interest

CSI Church, Mananchira, Kozhikode
Mananchira, Kozhikode
View of Kappad beach

The temples and mosques of this district contain sculptures and inscriptions which are of considerable interest to the students of art. Kozhikode city itself has many temples, the most important of which are the Tali Temple, Thiruvannur Temple, Azhakodi Temple, Sree Valayanad Temple, Varakkal Temple, Bilathikulam Temple, Bhairagi Madam Temple, the Lokanarkavu Temple in Memunda near Vadakara, the Pisharikavu Temple in Kollam near Koyilandy, Sree Muthappan Payamkuty Mala in Memunda, The Sidda Samajam in Memunda, Sandbanks Vatakara.

There is an art gallery and Krishna Menon Museum located at East Hill in Kozhikode. Lalitha Kala Academy also has an art gallery adjacent to the Kozhikode town hall. The Indian Business Museum is also located in Kozhikode. There is a planetarium, situated in the heart of the city near Jaffer Khan Colony. Kozhikode Beach and Mananchira Square and the recently developed Sarovaram park are other popular gathering spots.

Thusharagiri Falls, a very beautiful Waterfall is about 55 km from Kozhikode Railway Station. Thusharagiri is served by a KTDC (Kerala Tourism Development Corporation) hotel.

Nadakkave, this is heart of Kozhikode, situated just 10 km from the City, this area is famous for Automobile spare parts, you can get spare part of almost any kind of vehicles, residents here are mostly business people, doctors and middle-class people. The Regional Passport office, Regional Work shop KSRTC (Transport Corporation), Sales Tax Office are situated here.

"Kuttiyadi Dam" is one of the biggest and beautiful dams in Kerala.

"Kappad Beach" is the place where Vascodagama reached first time in India.

"Beypore Port" is another attraction of Kozhikode. It has a prominent place in the history of the Malabar Trade. It is the only place in kerala where "Uru"s(Arabian Trading Vessel) are made.

Culture and cuisine

In the field of Malayalam Language and literature Kozhikode has made significant contributions. The district is famous for folk songs or ballads known as Vadakkan Pattukal. The most popular songs among them are those which celebrate the exploits of Thacholi Othenan. Mappilapattu and Oppana are cultural heritages of the Muslims. The intellectual debate for vedic scholars to win the position of Pattathanam takes place at Thali temple during the month of Thulam. Kozhikode also has strong associations with ghazals and football. The football game has a huge fan following here, and the Football World Cup is followed great enthusiasm.

The city has a strong mercantile streak to it, with the major hub of commerce being the Mithai Theruvu, a long street crammed with shops that sell everything from sarees to cosmetics, and house hotels to sweetmeat shops. The name Mithai Theruvu or SM Street comes from the sweet Kozhikode Halwa which was often called as Sweetmeat by European traders. The multi cultural mix of Kozhikode ensures that Onam, Christmas, and Id-ul-Fitr (the festivals of the Hindus, Christians, and Muslims) are celebrated with equal pomp.

kozhikode has rich tradition of folklore art.'Thirayattam" is a tripical ritualistic performing art form of kozhikode.Thirayattam is one of the most outstanding folk art form of kerala.This vibrant folk art form enacted in courtyards of "kaavukal"(groves)and temples of kozhikode & malappuram (south malabar)districts.


Kozhikode also offers a fare for every palate. Vegetarian fare includes the sadya (the full-fledged feast with rice, sambhar, papadum, and seven different curries). The non-vegetarian food offered in the city is a unique mix of Muslim and Christian preparations. This include both fish and meat cuisine. The people of kozhikode are also very fond of chicken biriyani, A dish cooked with the combination of chicken and Basmati rice mixed with the rich Malabar spices.

Educational institutions

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There are many premier institutes in this city. They are IIM(Indian institute of Management), NIT(National institute of Technology),NIRDESH (National institute of research and development in defence shipping) first of its kind in India,IISR(Indian institute of spices research),NIELIT(national institute of electronics and information technology).FDDI(footwear design and development institute is upcoming in kozhikode. ZSI(Zoological survey of India)'s western ghat centre is at kozhikode. There are also many state government undertaking institutes in this city .They are MBGIPS(Malabar botanical garden and institute for plants),CWRDM(Center for water resources and development and management),IMHANS(Institute of mental health and Neurosciences),SIHM(State institute of hospitality management) and Kerala institute of mathematics

district court of calicut

district court of calicut is the pioneer judicial institution in malabar. it has a long history and it is there before indipendance and the formation kerala or present calicut district[7]

discriptive seal of district court of calicut in 1890.

See also

References

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  3. http://www.censusindiamaps.net/page/Religion_WhizMap1/housemap.htm
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  7. http://ecourts.gov.in/kozhikode/history

External links

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