Chennai - Gateway of South India
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Location :
In Tamil Nadu, South India |
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Go there for :
Beaches, Temples |
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Climate :
21-37°C (Sum); 20-30°C (Win) |
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When to Go:
Winters (Nov-Feb) |
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Local Tongue:
Tamil |
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Literacy :
80.14% |
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STD Code :
+91- 44 |
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Chennai, the Capital of Tamil Nadu and the fourth largest metro in
India, is a starking 368-year-old city that has wrapped up in its ambit much
more than history, a political race-course, industrial marvels, a phenomenal
automobile industry (also referred to as the Detroit of South Asia). The
erstwhile Madras, was rechristened Chennai, as a part of the Indianizing
spree of the Government. The tongue-twisting local language sounds
interesting to the ears and the lovely oiled braids of the local womenfolk
decorated with strings of flowers exude, both, an aura of mysticism and
beauty, one tends to remember for quiet sometime long after.
Tale of the City
Chennai, shoring the Bay of Bengal, is the historical gateway
through which the British first 'came, saw' and found the little fishing
village a paragon site for their first settlement. The city grew up around
the English settlement of Fort Saint George and gradually absorbed the
surrounding towns and villages. However, the strong British influence has
always been overridden with a stronger traditional lineage - so typically
South Indian-like.
Attractions
Chennai Beaches: Welcome to the second longest (13 km)
beach frill in the world - the Marina. What Marine beach is to Mumbai,
Marina is to Chennai - synonymous and so truly representing the very pulse
of the city. Early mornings are animated with the fishermen's hustle while
dusk is when the real fun begins with picnicking families, vendors, food
carts, couples, make it a living beehive. Knitted on the main-road flanking
the beach are very-British ancient buildings, an Aquarium House, the Chennai
Presidency College. About 40 km away from the bustling town is Covelong
beach, an interesting locale if you are looking forward to basking under the
sun unhindered watching fishermen in the distance Just 58 km, south of
Chennai lies Mahabalipuram or Mamallapuram with a sylvan beach, a crocodile
farm, snake venom extracting center, schools of art and sculpture making it
a popular venue. Elliot's Beach is spread along the coast down south from
Marina, near Besant Nagar. This is where the nocturnals head for a quiet
stroll along an equally quiet beach. Make sure to visit the Velankanni
church and the Ashtalakshmi temple once here.
Fort St George: It would not be an exaggeration to state that
Chennai grew around this first bastion of British power, built in 1640. The
cluster of gray and white colonial buildings with pillared neoclassical
facades now houses the Tamil Nadu State Legislature and the Secretariat. The
fort houses the St Mary's Church, the oldest Anglican church in India. Look
out for the numerous gravestones there, the oldest one being for the Latin
memorial to Mrs. Elizabeth Baker (1652), believed to be the oldest British
inscription in India. The Fort Museum (Sat-Thurs; 10am-5pm) has rare
weapons, uniforms, coins, costumes fo the colonial era.
Religious joints: The Pallava's Parthasarathy Temple (at Triplicane,
near Marina) is the oldest one at Chennai with some beautifully carved
gopurams (arched gateway). Another Pallava boon is the Kapaleeshwar Temple
(Malaypore), with a 120-ft gopuram painted vermillion red, blue and yellow
and with Puranic legends sculpted on the sanctum sanctorum, giving it that
'awesome' look. And in case your visit is timed during the Arupathumoovar
Festival (lasting 10 days in March), consider yourself lucky - best sights
of the South Indian religious fervor guaranteed.
South of it is the Mylapore's Basilica of San Thomas (Open daily, 6am-6pm),
where Saint Thomas, a famed Jesus Christ disciple, breathed his last. This
neon-lit 16th century building was made a basilica by the Portuguese in
1896. The 14 wooden plaques depicting scenes from the last days of Christ
and the 3 ft. High statue of the Virgin, believed to have been imported from
Portugal, make it a feast for the eyes. Atop St. Thomas Mount, is another
16th century Portuguese church - the Church of our Lady of Expectations.
Head for the sprawling 270-acre garden housing the Theosophical Society,
founded by Madam Blavatsky and Colonel Olcott in New York in 1875, whose
headquarters were moved to Chennai in 1882. And don't miss out the Adayar
Banyan tree.
Kalakshetra: Beyond Elliot's beach, in Thiruvanmiyur, is this
Rukmini Devi Arundale's Gurukul - a center for dance, music, arts and crafts
- that has disciples from across the globe. Reputed scholars and musicians
like Tiger Varadachariar, Veenai Sambasiva Iyer, Mysore Vasudevachariar and
Papanasam Sivan, an arts college, a senior secondary school and a craft
education and research center - make it the 'Temple of Art'.
Hangouts: HFO (Hell Freezes Over) with 6000 sq. feet of floor space,
2500 watts of music, a billiards table, choicest spirits for the spirited,
guest DJs from across the nation and some great music make it a perfect
hangout. Dublin (Hotel Park Sheraton and Towers), Pasha (The Park, 601 Anna
Salai), Leather Bar (The Park hotel), Distil (the Taj Connemara), Zaras
Tapas (74 Cathedral Rd.) - are some of the best stages where you can
stress-buster your hectic days and 'chillax' with a 'kewl' drink amidst a
'super-kewl' crowd.
Shopping
Right from the swanky malls to the roadside vendors, the typical
South Indian influence is unmistakably prominent. When you go sight-seeing
the traditional buys make excellent souvenirs.
Pattamara Mats and
the leaf and palmyra-fiber handicrafts from Tirunellveli,
bronze
and brass castings and
traditional jewelry from Kumbakonam,
metal
works from Tanjavur,
stone carvings from Mamallapuram, Silks
from Kanchipuram - are terminologies to remember. They appear as beautiful
to the eyes are their names sound to the ears. Visit
Cottage Emporium,
Poompuhar Emporium and
Victoria Technical Institute all of which are
at Anna Salai. For
Kanjeevaram silk sarees Nalli's Rasi and Kumaran
silks at T Nagar are the best bets.
SIPA'S Craftlink (Kodambakkam
High Rd) has indigenous articles made by local people.
Burma Bazaar
has very interesting imported goods at reasonable rates. Head for the
shopping plazas or the malls if you want to check out the branded stuffs.
Cuisine
Idly(steamed rice cakes),
dosai (a pancake made
from a batter of rice),
vada (deep fried doughnuts),
pongal
(a mish mash of rice and lentils boiled together and seasoned with ghee,
cashew nuts, pepper and cummin seed),
uppuma (cooked semolina
seasoned in mustard oil) - mouth watering isn't it? There are several
variations of the dishes mentioned above which are eaten with
coconut
chutney, sambar (seasoned lentil broth) and
mulaga podi (a
powdered mix of several dried lentils eaten with oil). And
filter coffee
is the favorite beverage. The coffee beans are first roasted and ground, and
elaborate rituals follow till it is becomes the ideal frothy cup of filter
coffee.
For a lip-smacking South Indian fare go to
Dakshin Restaurant at
the Park Sheraton, Raintree at Taj Connnemara's Verandah or walk into any
one of
Saravana Bhavan's 17 restaurants strewn across the city.
Amravathi
specializes in Andhra cuisine, while, Kaaraikudi (Radhakrishna Salai) has
scrumptious
grilled stuffed pomfret and the special chicken pepper
fry with appams.
Those flavored with a 'difference' are
Senor Pepes (its coffee is
awesome),
Buhari (Anna Salai, for Russian Chicken) and as for the
rest, let your taste buds do the exploring - Chennai is full of foodie
stop-overs.
Getaways
Mahabalipuram (58 km): Ancient heritage is covetously
preserved at some places and the coastal-town of Mahabalipuram or
Mammallapuram is just a case for example. This 7th century Pallava joint (a
World Heritage site), has 9 rock cut temples and 5 monolithic temple, four
out of five Pancha Pandava Rathas are supposed to have been carved out of a
single rock. Today, the Dravidian shore temple, the largest bas-relief in
the world called Arjuna's Penance and the famous and beautiful mandapams has
made this town world famous.
Kanchipuram (75 km): The Coromandel Coast's Golden Triangle has
Chennai, Mahabalipuram and Kanchipuram clubbed together. Kanchipuram,
literally means the Golden City, and true to its name, the weavers here
craft some of the world's best and most exotic silk fabric. It is also one
of the seven sacred cities of India, fondly called City of Thousand temples,
with some exquisite reminders of the Dravidian architecture in the form of
temples and gopurams.
Widlife: A 72 acres Vedanthangal Bird Sanctuary, located at about 86
km from Chennai, has some rare 24 species of local and migratory birds.
About 28 km from Chennai is the Vandalur Zoo or the Anna Zoological Park,
the biggest in South Asia with natural environs and a good conglomeration of
wild animals. At 44 km from Chennai, not far from Mamallapuram, is the famed
Crocodile Bank - crocodile breeding and research center where several
species of Indian and African crocodiles and alligators are bred in
captivity. Some hundreds of those large black bodies, one atop the other,
basking in the sun is quite a spine-chilling sight.
Backwaters: If the idea of angling and some quiet backwater cruising
turns you on, head for Pulicat (54 km). At the little fishing village of
Annamalai Cheri see if you can persuade the fishermen to include you in
their fishing venture. The ancient Dutch cemetery with its well-preserved
tombstones repletes the eerie quietude of the place. Another joint is
Muttukadu (16 km), a Tamil Nadu tourism spot where water sports enthusiasts
make a beeline to participate in the various competitions.
Cholamandal Artist's Village (18 km): Artists and sculptors have
conjoined to produce and also sell their wares in this antique village. The
open-air auditorium here hosts a plethora of avant-garde theater,
poetry-reading, dance recitals and the gallery here has a very rare
collection of contemporary paintings and sculptures.
Hop Next To: Bangalore
(334 km),
Pondicherry (162 km),
Kanyakumari (683 km),
Kochi
(684 km),
Mysore (470 km),
Tirupati (154 km).