Mahé
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Mahé
Puducherry • India |
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District(s) | Puducherry |
Time zone | IST (UTC+5:30) |
Population | 36,823 (2001) |
Mahé, a small town (9 km2) in the south of India on the Arabian Sea, has the official name of Mayyazhi in the local Malayalam language. The Kannur District of the state of Kerala surrounds the town on three sides.
Formerly a French colony, Mahé now forms a municipality in Mahe district of the Union Territory (the lands directly administered by the Union (federal) government of India) of Pondicherry (based on the east coast). Mahé has two members (MLAs) in the Pondicherry Legislative Assembly, representing Mahé and Pallur.
Mahé has an interesting church, the Saint Theresa Church.
The original name of Mahé, Mayyazhi, means "eyebrow of the sea".
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[edit] Demographics
As of 2001 India censusGRIndia, Mahé had a population of 36,823, predominantly speakers of Malayalam. Males constitute 47% of the population and females 53%. Mahé has an average literacy rate of 85%, higher than the national average of 59.5%, with male literacy at 86% and female literacy at 85%. In Mahé, 11% of the population consists of children under 6 years of age.
[edit] Naming
The name Mahé originated in honour of Bertrand François Mahé de La Bourdonnais (1699–1753), a key architect of French policy in India. One hypothesis suggests that the form of the word originated from Mayyazhi, which evolved to sound like Mayye, and which the French adopted as "Mahé".
An alternative account suggests that the Count de La Bourdonnais adopted the name of the Indian town as part of his own name, rather than vice versa.
[edit] History
The French East India Company constructed a fort on the site of Mahé in 1724, after an accord concluded between André Mollandin and the raja Vazhunnavar of Badagara three years earlier. In 1741, Mahé de La Bourdonnais retook the town after a period of occupation by the Marathas.
Mayyazhi remained under French jurisdiction until 13 June 1954, when a long independence struggle[citation needed] culminated in its joining the Indian Union.
Mahé consists of Mahé town and Naluthara, which includes four villages: Pandakkal, Pallur, Chalakara and Chembra. The ruler of Mysur from the 1760s, Hyderali (ca 1722–1782), gifted Naluthara to the French as a token of appreciation for the help they gave in opposing the English.
[edit] Education in Mahé
[edit] Schools
- Jawaharlal Nehru Govt Higher Secondary School, Mahé
- Govt Higher Secondary school, Mahé
- Govt Higher Secondary School, Palloor,
- Govt High School for Girls, Palloor
- Govt Higher Secondary School, Pandhakkal
- Chalakkara High School, Chalakkara
- Ecole Centrale et Cour Complimentaire, Mahe (French medium High School )
Many private schools also operate in Mahé. The St Theresa church, for example, runs Avila School.
[edit] College
Mahatma Gandhi Government Arts College, the premier college in Mahé, stands at Chalakkara hills, a short distance from Mahé Town.
[edit] See also
- French India
- French East India Company
- Municipal Administration in French India
- Causes for Liberation of French colonies in India
Union Territory of Puducherry [ ] Puducherry Topics | History | Economy | Geography | Culture | Tourism |
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Capital | Puducherry |
Districts | Puducherry • Karaikal • Mahe • Yanam |
Major Towns | Puducherry • Karaikal • Mahe • Yanam |
Languages | French • Tamil • Malayalam •Telugu |