article

The Indian renaming controversy is a result of a movement to rename cities and other locations to regional or pan-Indian names from their anglicised British names.

The debate is not unique to India as other former colonial territories also seek to reclaim part of their heritage by opting for traditional names. However, given that India is very multi-cultural, and was a British colony until relatively recently, the debate is particularly energetic and somewhat divisive there.

Major cities that have been renamed in recent years are,

  1. Mumbai formerly Bombay,
  2. Chennai formerly Madras,
  3. Khambhat formerly Cambay,
  4. Kochi formerly Cochin,
  5. Kolkata formerly Calcutta,
  6. Kozhikode formerly Calicut,
  7. Thiruvananthapuram formerly Trivandrum, and
  8. Kollam formerly Quillon.

On December 11 2005, chief minister Dharam Singh announced that the Karnataka state government accepted Jnanpith awardee U R Ananthamurthy's suggestion to rename Bangalore to its Kannada name, Bengaluru.

The new name will be effective from November 1, 2006. In most of these cases the 'new' names are simply the names by which these cities have always been known in the native language (Bengali, Tamil or Malayalam, as the case may be - thus local Kannada language newspapers announced that "Bengaluru is to be renamed as Bengaluru").

The renamings refer to English language usage, and it is not clear that Indian municipalities have the authority to enforce this, or that there was anything 'colonial' about the former mispronunciations and mis-spellings of local names which existed in English (as with the English 'Florence' and 'Venice', rather than the Italian Firenze and Venezia).

In the case of Bombay and Madras the derivation of the name was from Portuguese, not English. Furthermore the politics of some of these name changes are questionable, those in Bombay being in response to the demands of the Hindu Nationalist Shiv Sena party. 'Mumbai' is probably derived from the temple of Mumba-Devi in Bombay, and although there is no evidence that it was the name of a settlement before the arrival of the Portuguese, who called it Boa Baía (good bay), it has long been the name of the city in Marathi and Gujarati, whilst Hindi-speakers called it Bambai. Samuel Sheppard Bombay Place-Names and Street-Names (Bombay: The Times Press) 1917 pp104-5 However, some argue that as the renaming was part of the Shiv Sena's Bhumiputra (son of the soil) policy, it is an attempt to erase evidence of the city's cosmopolitanism and multi-lingual character.Sujata Patel "Bombay and Mumbai: Identities, Politics and Populism" in Sujata Patel & Jim Masselos (Eds.) Bombay and Mumbai. The City in Transition (Delhi: Oxford University Press) 2003 p4

Arguably the 'original' name for Bombay would be 'Colaba' or 'Kolaba', the southernmost island of the group now making up the Bombay peninsula, derived from the name of the Kola fishermen who originally lived here.

In many cases the older names continue to be used informally, or survive in the names of universities and other institutions. The Bombay High Court and Madras High Court were named after the erstwhile Bombay and Madras presidencies, and have not been renamed.

In certain cases, the effort has extended to buildings and institutions named by the former colonizers. For example, Mumbai's Victoria Terminus railway station has been renamed Chatrapati Shivaji Terminus after a 17th century Maratha warrior. Many colonial-era street names, particularly in Delhi, Calcutta and Bombay have been changed, but many, particularly in southern cities, continue to have British-era names. These renamings tend to be ignored by the local inhabitants.

See Also


List of renamed Indian public places

References


External links


Indian culture | Geography of India | Controversies | Konflikten om ändringar av stadsnamn i Indien

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Indian renaming controversy".

Home Pageartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsphysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld