Cochin
Cochin | |
---|---|
Presidency: Madras | |
Coordinates: | 9.9509843°N 76.251649°E |
Altitude: | |
Present Day Details | |
Place Name: | Kochi |
State/Province: | Kerala |
Country: | India |
Transport links | |
Cochin (now called Kochi) is a city in the modern state of Kerala. In the British era it was part of the Madras (Presidency). Kochi City comprises three municipalities in the Cochin area: Fort Cochin, Mattancherry and Ernakulam. Ernakulam is the largest urban area.
History
Cochin became the site of the earliest European settlement in India when the Portuguese landed in 1500. The Kingdom of Cochin (see Cochin State) agreed friendly relations with the Portuguese, who cemented their involvement in the city by winning a war with the rulers of Calicut. Although the Raja of Cochin was nominally in charge, the Portuguese effectively ruled the city from 1503-1663. The Dutch then conquered Cochin and ruled the territory until 1773 when Hyder Ali took possession. In 1814, the British acquired Cochin under the Anglo-Dutch Treaty in exchange for the island of Banca (in Indonesia).
Fort Cochin area
Built around the old Portuguese Fort Emmanuel, this area is the oldest part of Cochin, with Portuguese, Dutch and British buildings.
Churches
Interactive Map
<googlemap version="0.9" lat="9.9509843" lon="76.251649" zoom="13" controls="small"> (A) 9.965996, 76.241043, St Francis Church, Cochin
(B) 9.964236, 76.238312, Dutch Cemetery, Fort Kochi </googlemap>
The map to the right shows locations of interest in Kochi.
Hover your cursor over the markers on the map to reveal the places marked or use the below index.
Clicking on the markers also produces a balloon with further location details.
Locations index
File:Church-2.png A - St Francis Church, Napier Street
B - Dutch Cemetery, Fort Kochi
External links
- Wikipedia:
- British capture of Fort Cochin Google Books
- This India List post about mixed marriages mentions Cochin
Historical books online
The land of the Permauls: or Cochin, its past and its present by Francis Day 1863 (archive.org)