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Kerala
(or Keralam, കേരളം)
is a state in South India. It is known for being the most literate state in India, with a literacy rate greater than 90%. It is also the only state in India with a sex ratio of more than 990 females/1000 males (the ratio for Kerala is 1058 females/1000 males), according to the 2001 census.
Administration
The State of Kerala was formed by the amalgamation of three regions: the Kingdom of Thiruvithamcoore (Travancore), the Kingdom of Kochi (Cochin), and the Province of Malabar. Thiruvithaamcoore and Kochi, former princely states, were merged to form Thiru-Kochi on July 1, 1949. Malabar was merged with Thiru-Kochi to form the State of Kerala on November 1, 1956, based on the recommendations of the State Reorganisation Commission set up by the Government of India.
Kerala is divided into 14 . They are (from north to south)
Kasargod,
Kannur (Cannanore),
Wayanad (Wynad),
Kozhikode (Calicut),
Malappuram,
Palakkad (Palghat),
Thrissur (Trichur),
Ernakulam,
Idukki,
Alappuzha (Alleppey),
Kottayam,
Pathanamthitta,
Kollam (Quilon) and
Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum)
Thiruvananthapuram is the capital of the state. Kozhikode and Kochi are the other major .
Demographics
More than 95% of the people in Kerala speak Malayalam.
The major religions followed in Kerala are Hinduism (58%), Islam (21%), and Christianity (21%). Kerala also has a tiny Jewish population, said to date from 587 BC when they fled the occupation of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar. The state has many famous temples, churches, and mosques. The synagogue in Kochi is the oldest in India.
Geography
Kerala occupies a narrow strip of India's southwestern coast. It is bounded by the Arabian Sea on the west and the Western Ghats on the east. The states of Karnataka in the north and Tamil Nadu in the east are Kerala's immediate neighbours. Mahe, a part of the union territory of Pondicherry, is an enclave within Kerala.
Politics
Kerala gained the distinction, in 1957, of having the first democratically elected Communist government anywhere in the world. Kerala has a reputation as being one of the most left-wing states in India. People of Kerala are very politically aware and are more active participants in the political process than those in the rest of the country.Today the political life of Kerala is dominated by two alliances, the United Democratic Front (led by the Indian National Congress) and the Left Democratic Front (led by CPI(M)). Currently UDF controls the government.
Following is the chronological list of Chief Ministers of Kerala
1957-1959 - E. M. S. Namboodiripad
1960-1962 - Pattom Thanupillai
1962-1964 - R. Sankar
1967-1969 - E. M. S. Namboodiripad, 2nd time
1969-1970 - C. Achutha Menon
1970-1977 - C. Achutha Menon, 2nd time
1977 (March-April) - K. Karunakaran
1977-1978 - A. K. Antony
1978-1979 - P.K. Vasudevan Nair
1980-1981 - E.K. Nayanar
1981-1982 - K. Karunakaran, 2nd time
1982-1987 - K. Karunakaran, 3rd time
1987-1991 - E.K. Nayanar, 2nd time
1991-1995 - K. Karunakaran, 4th time
1995-1996 - A. K. Antony, 2nd time
1996-2001 - E.K. Nayanar, 3rd time
2001-2004 - A. K. Antony, 3rd time
2004-present - Oommen chandy
Arts
Kerala has a rich tradition in the arts, both classical and folk. In addition to the classical upper-caste art forms like Koodiyattom (UNESCO Human Heritage Art), Kathakali, Mohiniyaattam and Thullal, Kerala has several folk art forms performed by non-upper-castes in various regions of the state. Both classical and folk art forms have become artefacts of the past as contemporary art forms weave their own identity according to changing needs. Mimicry and parody have gained considerable mass appeal in recent years. Though sometimes risque and often politically incorrect, these devices are used by artists to mock social luminaries. Malayalam Cinema is another mode of artistic expression, and films from Kerala are very distinct from films made in Bollywood or Hollywood.
Social scene
Kerala ranks highest in India with respect to social development indices such as primary education and healthcare. Kerala was declared the world's first "baby-friendly state" under WHO-UNICEF's Baby Friendly Hospital initiative. The state is known for Ayurveda, a traditional system of medicine which has found a new market in the growing tourist industry.
The literacy rate in Kerala is the highest among Indian states, but so is the unemployment rate. Education and early influences of Arabs and Portuguese have also made Kerala one of the most secular states in India. Ironically, Kerala is also noted as the state with the highest suicide rate in India.
Kerala has an ancient solar calendar called the Malayalam calendar which is used by various communities primarily for religious functions. Kerala has its own form of martial art, kalarippayattu. Theyyam and Poorakkali are popular ritual arts of North Malabar, the northern part of Kerala.
Onam, associated with the legend of Mahabali is declared the state festival, but Keralites celebrate many other religious and secular festivals, including Eid-ul-Fitr, Easter, Deepavali and Vishu.
Economy
Kerala's economy can be best described as a socialistic welfare economy.
However, Kerala's emphasis on social welfare also resulted in slow economic progress. There are few major industries in Kerala, and the per capita GDP is lower than the national average of 360 USD per year (1998). Remittances from Keralites working abroad, mainly in the Middle East, make up over 60% of the state's GDP.
Agriculture is the most important economic activity. Coconut, tea and coffee are grown extensively, along with rubber, cashew and spices. Spices commonly cultivated in Kerala include pepper, cardamom, vanilla, cinnamon and nutmeg.
Tourism
Kerala is a popular tourist destination for both domestic and foreign travellers. Among the tourist attractions are great beaches (Kovalam and Varkala), serene hill stations (Ponmudi and Munnar), wildlife sanctuaries (Periyar and Eravikulam) and beautiful backwaters (Kumarakom and Punnamada), sandy beaches with lagoons and floating houses(Pozhiyoor andPoovar). The tourism department of the state calls it God's Own Country. National Geographic Society described Kerala as one of the 50 must-see destinations of a lifetime.Kochi, the commercial capital of the state is considered as the Queen of the Arabian Sea, Alapuzha, the first planned town in Kerala is also known as the Venice of the East. Tourism plays an important role in the state's economy.
Livestock sector
Livestock sector plays a vital role in the economy of Kerala. This sector has high potential for alleviating poverty and unemployment in rural areas. The majority of livestock owning farmers are either small and marginal or even landless. In view of its suitability for combining with crop subsector and its sustainability as a household enterprise with the active involvement of the farm women, livestock rearing is emerging as a very popular supplementary vocation in the small farm segment. Rural women play a significant role in the development of the livestock subsector
and are involved in operations like feeding, milking, breeding, management, health care and running micro-enterprises. It is estimated that about 32 lakh (3.2 million) out of the total number of 55 lakh (5.5 million) households in Kerala are engaged in livestock rearing for supplementing their income. The homestead settlement pattern, the relatively high level of literacy particularly among women, the highly favourable agroclimatic conditions conducive for biomass production and the long tradition in livestock rearing are inherent strengths which the Kerala economy possesses in favour of livestock rearing.
Road Network
India has more than 3.1 million km of road network at present making it one of the largest in the world. Length of roads in Kerala is 4.2 percent of that in the country. Kerala has 4.34 km of road per thousand population, against the national figure of 2.99 km. Road network in Kerala has the distinction of achieving connectivity to all the villages in Kerala. But as the villages are relatively large compared to other states, the development has not ensured connectivity of all the habitats. Main arterial roads are built and maintained by the Kerala Public Works Department.
Traffic on the roads in Kerala has been growing at a rate of 10 to 11 percent every year, resulting in excessive pressure on the roads. Total road length in Kerala increased by 9.82 percent during 2002-2003. The road density in Kerala is nearly four times the national average, and is a reflection of the unique settlement patterns in the State.
National Highways form the prime arterial routes in India, spanning 58,112 km throughout the country and cater to about 45 percent of the total road transport demand. The National Highway network in Kerala is 1524 km, only 2.6 percent of the national total. There are eight National Highways in the State.
A major challenge has been taken by the state government for the upgradation and expansion of important roads to the standards prescribed by the Indian Road Congress for each category of road. Upgradation and maintenance of 1600 km of state highways and major district roads have been taken up under the Kerala State Transport Project (KSTP).
History
The Sanskrit epic Aitareya Aranyaka has the earliest specific mention of Kerala. Katyayana (4th century BC) and Patanjali (2nd century BC) show their acquaintance with the geography of Kerala. Pliny the Elder mentions Muziris (modern Kodungallur) as the first port in India (N.H. 6.26); slightly later in time, the unknown author of the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea notes that both Muziris and Nelkunda (modern Kattayam) are "now busy places."
People have lived in the region now known as Kerala since ancient times. Regional identity developed in the 14th century with the development of the Malayalam language.
Vasco da Gama's voyage to Kerala from Portugal in 1498 was largely motivated by Portuguese determination to break the Kerala Muslims' control over the trade between local spice producers and the Middle East.
He established India's first Portuguese fortress at Cochin (Kochi) in 1503 and from there, taking advantage of rivalry existing between the royal families of Calicut and Cochin, managed to destroy the monopoly. The dispute between Calicut and Cochin, however, provided an opportunity for the Dutch to come in and finally expel the Portuguese from their forts.
The Portuguese were surprised to discover, when they arrived in Kerala, that Christianity was already established. The history of Christianity in Kerala dates back to the arrival of St. Thomas the Apostle at Kodungallur in A.D. 52. A Christian-Jewish community was founded by a contingent of Syriac-Nasranis who arrived in 192 via Baghdad.
The Dutch would, in turn, be routed by the Thiruvithamcoore ruler Marthanda Varma at the Battle of Kulachal in 1741. The British moved into the area in the form of the British East India Company and were firmly established in Kerala by the beginning of the seventeenth century. Tipu Sultan attempted to encroach on British-held territory in 1792, but was defeated and the British remained in control until independence.
Organised expressions of discontent with the British rule were relatively infrequent in Kerala. Uprisings of note include the Mappila Rebellion of 1921 and the Punnapra-Vayalar revolt of 1946. Mass protests were mainly directed at
established social evils such as untouchability and unapproachability. The non-violent and largely peaceful Vaikom Satyagraha of 1924 was instrumental in securing entry to the public roads adjacent to the Vaikom temple for people belonging to backward castes. In 1936, Sree Chithira Thirunal Balaramavarma Maharaja, ruler of Thiruvithamcoore issued the Temple Entry Proclamation, declaring the temples of his kingdom open to all worshippers, irrespective of caste.
Modern Kerala was created in 1956 from Malabar, which had been part of the Madras Presidency, and from Travancore and Kochi. The latter two were princely states, somewhat unique among their kind in that they had concerned themselves with the education and provision of basic services to the residents of their territories.
List of famous Keralites
Abraham Kovoor - Wellknown rationalist
Abu Abraham - cartoonist, worked for The Guardian and The Observer.
Adi Sankara (788 - 820) - saint, poet, thinker and reviver of Hinduism in India. Propounded the doctrine of Advaita (non-duality), which identified the Supreme with the Self.
Adoor Gopalakrishnan - internationally acclaimed director. Movies include Elipathayam (The Mousetrap) and Mathilukal (Walls).
Ajitha - former naxalite and women's rights activist.
Anju George - only Indian to win a medal at the World Athletics Championships.
G. Aravindan - noted director and cartoonist. Movies include Kanchana Seeta, Kummatty (Bogeyman) and Chidambaram.
Arundhati Roy - writer, awarded the Booker Prize in 1997 for The God of Small Things
Ayyankali - social activist who fought for dalit rights.
O. Chandumenon - author of the first Malayalam novel Indulekha.
Changampuzha Krishna Pillai (1911-1948) - poet, author of the pastoral elegy Ramanan (1936) which sold over 100,000 copies, a record that still holds.
Cherusseri Namboodiri - Mahaakavi (great poet), part of the old Kavithrayam (triad of poets), with Ezhuthachan and Kunchan Nambiar. Author of Krishnagaadha (The Song of Krishna).
Chembai Vaidyanatha Bhagavatar (1896-1974) - legendary Carnatic vocalist.
K. S. Chitra - renowned playback singer and winner of several state and national awards.
Dr K.K. Damodaran nuclear physicist and former Head of Training at BARC
Thunchathu Ramanujan Ezhuthachan - architect of modern Malayalam. Mahaakavi, part of the old Kavithrayam. Penned the first Malayalam rendition of Ramayana and Mahabharata.
A. Hariharan - singer of ghazal, film and pop songs. Co-founder of Colonial Cousins, whose eponymous album broke records, made history and changed the face of Indian pop.
Jayan - film actor who died at the height of his popularity in a helicopter accident during the filming of one of his movies.
M. C. Joseph - rationalist, founding editor of Yukthivadi.
Kamala Das - English poet and feminist, born Madhavikkutty. Asian Poetry Prize, 1964, Kent Award, 1965.
V. R. Krishna Iyer - legislator and jurist, human rights activist.
M. Krishnan Nair - literary critic, whose column Sahithyavaraphalam has long served as a window to contemporary world literature.
V. K. Krishna Menon - former Defence Minister of India and renowned statesman. Delivered an eight-hour-long speech on Kashmir at a U.N. Security Council meeting in 1957.
Kumaran Asan - Mahaakavi, part of the new Kavithrayam, with Ulloor and Vallathol.
Kunchan Nambiar - Mahaakavi, part of the old Kavithrayam. Founder of the art form Ottan Thullal.
E. M. S. Namboodiripad - first Chief Minister, the head of the first Communist government in the world to come to power through democratic elections.
K. R. Narayanan - President of India (1997-2002).
M.T. Vasudevan Nair - writer and cinema personality. Jnanpith Award, 1995.
Madhava - 14th century mathematician.
Manoj Night Shyamalan - Hollywood film director whose movies include The Sixth Sense, Unbreakable and Signs.
G. Madhavan Nair - chairman of ISRO.
Mata Amritanandamayi - self-proclaimed godwoman, renowned humanitarian and winner of UN's 2002 Gandhi-King award.
V. P. Menon - the right-hand man of Sardar Patel in the unification of princely states during the formation of the Indian Union.
Mohanlal - winner of the national award for Best Actor in 1992 (Bharatham) and 2000 (Vaanaprastham).
Mohan Sivanand - English journalist, painter and Deputy Editor of Reader's Digest.
Mrinalini Sarabhai - danseuse, born Mrinalini Swaminathan. Wife of late Indian physicist, Dr. Vikram Sarabhai, and mother of Mallika Sarabhai.
M. Mukundan - novelist, author of Mayyazhippuzhayude Theerangalil (On the Banks of Mayyazhi) and Deyvathinte Vikruthikal (Pranks of God).
Sree Narayana Guru (1856-1928) - social reformer, scholar, teacher and founder of SNDP, an organisation created for the upliftment of the low-caste communities of Kerala.
Nityachaitanya Yati - scholar, monk
K. M. Panikkar - eminent historian. India's first ambassador to China.
P. Padmarajan (1945-1991) - popular director, affectionately known as 'Pappan', whose films often blurred the line between artistic and commercial cinema.
M. P. Parameswaran - scientist turned social activist, involved with Kerala Sastra Sahitya Parishad.
Keralavarma Pazhassi Raja - feudal lord and ruler of Wynad who waged a heroic guerilla war against the British.
K. N. Raj - economist who played a key role in India's first five year plan, one of the founding fathers of the Delhi School of Economics.
Raja Ravi Varma (1848-1906) - world famous painter whose work was exhibited in Vienna and Chicago. First Indian painter to use the oil medium.
Sir C. Sankaran Nair - president of Indian National Congress in 1897. The only Keralite to hold the post.
Shaji N. Karun - noted director, whose movies include Piravi (Birth), Swam and Vaanaprastham.
K. Shankar Pillai (1902-1989) - the patron saint of Indian cartoonists. Founder of Shankar's Weekly and the International Dolls Museum, New Delhi.
Shashi Tharoor - novelist, Commonwealth Writers Prize, 1991; Under-Secretary-General (Communication and Public Information) of the United Nations.
Shobhana - exponent of South Indian dance form called Bharathanathyam and prominent malayalam film actress.
Swathi Thirunal - erstwhile king of Travancore and a great musician.
P. T. Usha - arguably India's greatest athlete, who missed out on a bronze medal by 0.01 seconds in the 400 m hurdles event in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
Vaikom Muhammad Basheer - writer, philosopher.
Ulloor - Mahaakavi, part of the new Kavithrayam. Author of Umakeralam.
Vallathol - Mahaakavi, part of the new Kavithrayam. Author of Sahithyamanjari. Founder of Kerala Kalamandalam, the state's flagship institution for the promotion of performing arts.
Verghese Kurien - architect of India's Milk Revolution.
Vayalar Ramavarma - arguably the greatest lyricist in the history of Malayalam cinema.
O. V. Vijayan - novelist, cartoonist. Author of Khasakkinte Ithihaasam (The Legends of Khasak) and Dharmapuranam (The Saga of Dharmapuri).
K. J. Yesudas - singer of devotional and film songs, exponent of Carnatic music and disciple of the great Chembai.
External links
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Category:States and territories of India
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