The city's history dates back to around 890, as per the old Kannada stone inscription found at the Nageshwara Temple in Begur, Bengaluru. In 1537, Kempé Gowdā, a feudal ruler under the Vijayanagara Empire, established a mud fort, considered the foundation of modern Bengaluru and its oldest areas, or pétés, which still exist. After the fall of the Vijayanagara Empire, Kempe Gowda declared independence; in 1638, a large Adil Shahi Bijapur army defeated Kempe Gowda III, and Bengaluru came under Shahaji Bhonsle as a jagir, which later became his capital. The Mughals later captured Bengaluru and sold it to MaharajaDevaraja Wodeyar II of the Kingdom of Mysore.[14] When Haider Ali seized control of the kingdom, Bengaluru's administration passed into his hands.
The city was captured by the British East India Company after victory in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War (1799), which then returned administrative control of the city, along with the kingdom, to Maharaja Krishnaraja Wadiyar III. The old city developed under the dominions of the maharaja. In 1809, the British shifted their cantonment to Bengaluru, outside the old city, and a town grew up around it. Following India's independence in 1947, Bengaluru became the capital of Mysore State, and remained the capital when the state was enlarged and unified in 1956 and renamed Karnataka in 1973. The two urban settlements of Bengaluru, the town and the cantonment, which had developed as independent entities, merged into a single urban centre in 1949. The city was generally known as Bangalore in English until the existing Kannada name, Bengalūru, was declared the city's official name in 2006.
Bengaluru is considered to be one of the fastest-growing global major metropolises.[15][16] Recent estimates of the metro economy of its urban area has ranked Bengaluru as one of the most productive metro areas of India.[17][18] The city is considered the pivot for high-technology-based heavy manufacturing industry, with numerous large multinational technology corporations setting up their headquarters there. It is home to many top-tier engineering and research institutions. Bengaluru is known as the "Silicon Valley of India" because it is the nation's leading software exporter as well as a major semiconductor hub.[19] Several state-owned aerospace and defence organisations are in the city. The presence of numerous notable sporting arenas in Bengaluru makes it one of the country's sporting hubs.
Etymology
Bangalore is an anglicised version of the city's Kannada name Bengalūru. It was the name of a village near Kodigehalli in Bengaluru city today and was used by Kempe Gowda to name the city as Bengalūru at the time of its foundation in 1537. The earliest reference to the name "Bengalūru" was found in a ninth-century Western Ganga dynasty stone inscription on a vīra gallu (Kannada: ವೀರಗಲ್ಲು; lit.'hero stone', a rock edict extolling the virtues of a warrior). According to an Old Kannada inscription found in Begur, "Bengalūrū" was the place of a battle in 890 CE.[20][21]
It was also referred to as "Kalyānapura" or "Kalyānapuri" ("Auspicious City") and "Dēvarāyanagara" during the Vijayanagara times.[22]
An apocryphal story states that the twelfth-century Hoysala king Veera Ballala II, while on a hunting expedition, lost his way in the forest. Tired and hungry, he came across a poor old woman who served him boiled beans. The grateful king named the place "Benda-Kaal-uru" (literally, "town of boiled beans"), which eventually evolved into "Bengalūru".[20][23][24]Suryanath Kamath has put forward an explanation of a possible floral origin of the name as derived from benga, the Kannada term for Pterocarpus marsupium (also known as the Indian Kino Tree), a species of dry and moist deciduous trees that grows abundantly in the region.[25]
On 11 December 2005, the Government of Karnataka accepted a proposal by Jnanpith Award winner U. R. Ananthamurthy to rename Bangalore to Bengalūru.[26] On 27 September 2006, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) passed a resolution to implement the name change.[27] The government of Karnataka accepted the proposal and it was decided to officially implement the name change from 1 November 2006.[28][29] The Union government approved this request, along with name changes for 11 other Karnataka cities, in October 2014. Hence, Bangalore was renamed to "Bengaluru" on 1 November 2014.[30][31]
The region of modern-day Bengaluru was part of several successive South Indian kingdoms. Between the fourth and tenth centuries, the region was ruled by the Western Ganga dynasty of Karnataka, the first dynasty to set up effective control over the region.[34] According to Edgar Thurston, there were twenty-eight kings who ruled Gangavadi from the start of the Christian era until its conquest by the Cholas. The Western Gangas ruled the region initially as a sovereign power (350–550 CE), and later as feudatories of the Chalukyas of Badami, followed by the Rashtrakutas until the tenth century.[25] The Begur Nageshwara Temple was commissioned around 860, during the reign of the Western Ganga King Ereganga Nitimarga I, and extended by his successor Nitimarga II.[35][36] Around 1004, during the reign of Raja Raja Chola I, the Cholas defeated the Western Gangas under the command of the crown prince Rajendra Chola I, and captured Bengaluru.[35][37] During this period, the Bengaluru region witnessed the migration of many groups—warriors, administrators, traders, artisans, pastorals, cultivators, and religious personnel from Tamil Nadu and other Kannada-speaking regions.[34] The Chokkanathaswamy temple at Domlur, the Aigandapura complex near Hesaraghatta, Mukthi Natheshwara Temple at Binnamangala, Choleshwara Temple at Begur, Someshwara Temple at Ulsoor, date from the Chola era.[35]
In 1117, the Hoysala king Vishnuvardhana defeated the Cholas in the Battle of Talakad in south Karnataka, and extended its rule over the region.[35] Vishnuvardhana expelled the Cholas from all parts of the Mysore state.[38] By the end of the 13th century, Bengaluru became a source of contention between two warring cousins, the Hoysala ruler Veera Ballala III of Halebidu and Ramanatha, who administered from the Hoysala held territory in Tamil Nadu.[35] Veera Ballala III had appointed a civic head at Hudi (now within Bangalore Municipal Corporation limits), thus promoting the village to the status of a town. After Veera Ballala III's death in 1343, the next empire to rule the region was the Vijayanagara Empire, which itself saw the rise of four dynasties, the Sangamas (1336–1485), the Saluvas (1485–1491), the Tuluvas (1491–1565), and the Aravidu (1565–1646).[39] During the reign of the Vijayanagara Empire, Achyuta Deva Raya of the Tuluva dynasty raised the Shivasamudra Dam across the Arkavati river at Hesaraghatta, whose reservoir is the present city's supply of regular piped water.[40]
Foundation and early modern history
Modern Bengaluru was begun in 1537 by the chieftainKempe Gowda I, who aligned with the Vijayanagara Empire under Emperor Achyuta Deva Raya to campaign against Gangaraja (whom he defeated and expelled to Kanchi), and who built a mud-brick fort for the people at the site that would become the central part of modern Bengaluru. Kempe Gowda was restricted by rules made by the Emperor, who feared the potential power of Kempe Gowda and did not allow a stone fort. Kempe Gowda referred to the new town as his "gandubhūmi" or "Land of Heroes".[24] Within the fort, the town was divided into smaller divisions, each called a pētē (Kannada pronunciation:[peːteː]).[41] The town had two main streets—Chikkapētē Street and Doddapētē Street.[42] Their intersection formed the Doddapētē Square—the heart of Bengaluru. Kempe Gowda I's During the Vijayanagara rule, many saints and poets referred to Bengaluru as "Devarāyanagara" and "Kalyānapura" or "Kalyānapuri" ("Auspicious City").[43]
After the fall of the Vijayanagara Empire in 1565 in the Battle of Talikota, Kempe Gowda I declared independence. His successor, Kempe Gowda II, built four towers that marked Bengaluru's boundary.[44] Then in 1638, a large Adil Shahi Bijapur army led by Ranadulla Khan and accompanied by his second in command Shāhji Bhōnslē defeated Kempe Gowda III, and Bengaluru was given to Shāhji as a jagir (feudal estate). Around 1639, he ordered the reconstruction of the destroyed city and the building of new lakes to solve the water shortage in the region.[43] In 1687, the Mughal general Kasim Khan, under orders from Aurangzeb, defeated Ekoji I, son of Shāhji, and sold Bengaluru to Chikkadevaraja Wodeyar (1673–1704), the then ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore for three lakh rupees.[14] After the death of Krishnaraja Wodeyar II in 1759, Hyder Ali, Commander-in-Chief of the Mysore Army, proclaimed himself the de facto ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore. Hyder Ali is credited with building the Delhi and Mysore gates at the northern and southern ends of the city in 1760.[45] The kingdom later passed to Hyder Ali's son Tipu Sultan. Hyder and Tipu directed the building of the Lal BaghBotanical Gardens in 1760.[46] Under them, Bengaluru developed into a commercial and military centre of strategic importance.[43]
The Bengaluru fort was captured by British forces under Lord Cornwallis on 21 March 1791 during the Third Anglo-Mysore War and formed a centre for British resistance against Tipu Sultan.[48] Following Tipu's death in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War (1799), the British returned administrative control of the Bengaluru pētē to the Maharaja of Mysore and was incorporated into the Princely State of Mysore, which existed as a nominally sovereign entity of the British Raj. The old pētē developed in the dominions of the Maharaja of Mysore. The Residency of Mysore State was first established in Mysore City in 1799 and later shifted to Bengaluru in 1804.[49] It was abolished in 1843,[49] only to be revived in 1881 at Bengaluru and closed down permanently in 1947, with Indian independence.[50] The British found Bengaluru to be a pleasant and appropriate place to station their garrison and therefore moved their cantonment to Bengaluru from Seringapatam in 1809 near Ulsoor, about 6 km (4 mi) northeast of the city. A town grew up around the cantonment, by absorbing several villages in the area. The new centre had its own municipal and administrative apparatus, though technically it was a British enclave within the territory of the Wodeyar Kings of the Princely State of Mysore.[51] Two important developments which contributed to the rapid growth of the city, include the introduction of telegraph connections to all major Indian cities in 1853 and a rail connection to Madras (now Chennai), in 1864.[52]
In the 19th century, Bengaluru essentially became a twin city, with the "pētē", whose residents were predominantly Kannadigas and the cantonment created by the British.[53] Throughout the 19th century, the Cantonment gradually expanded and acquired a distinct cultural and political salience as it was governed directly by the British and was known as the Civil and Military Station of Bangalore. While it remained in the princely territory of Mysore, Cantonment had a large military presence and a cosmopolitan civilian population that came from outside the princely state of Mysore, including British and Anglo-Indians army officers.[54] The city was hit by a plague epidemic in 1898 that claimed nearly 3,500 lives. The crisis caused by the outbreak catalysed the city's sanitation process. Telephone lines were laid to help co-ordinate anti-plague operations. Regulations for building new houses with proper sanitation facilities came into effect. A health officer was appointed and the city divided into four wards for better co-ordination.[55] New extensions in Malleswaram and Basavanagudi were developed in the north and south of the pētē.[56]
In 1906, Bengaluru became one of the first cities in India to have electricity.[57] In 1912, the Bangalore torpedo, an offensive explosive weapon widely used in World War I and World War II, was devised in Bengaluru by British army officer Captain McClintock of the Madras Sappers and Miners.[58] Bengaluru's reputation as the "Garden City of India" began in 1927 with the silver jubilee celebrations of the rule of Krishnaraja Wodeyar IV. Several projects such as the construction of parks, public buildings and hospitals were instituted to improve the city.[59] Bengaluru played an important role during the Indian independence movement. Mahatma Gandhi visited the city in 1927 and 1934 and addressed public meetings here.[33] In 1926, the labour unrest in Binny Mills due to demand by textile workers for payment of bonus resulted in lathi charging and police firing, resulting in the death of four workers, and several injuries.[60] In July 1928, there were notable communal disturbances in Bengaluru, like when a Ganesh idol was removed from a school compound in the Sultanpet area of Bengaluru.[61] In 1940, the first flight between Bengaluru and Mumbai took off, which placed the city on India's urban map.[62]
After India's independence in August 1947, Bengaluru remained in the newly carved Mysore State of which the Maharaja of Mysore was the Rajapramukh (appointed governor).[63] The "City Improvement Trust" was formed in 1945, and in 1949, the "City" and the "Cantonment" merged to form the Bangalore City Corporation.[64] The Government of Karnataka later constituted the Bangalore Development Authority in 1976 to coordinate the activities of these two bodies.[65] Public sector employment and education provided opportunities for Kannadigas from the rest of the state to migrate to the city. Bengaluru experienced rapid growth in the decades 1941–51 and 1971–81, which saw the arrival of many immigrants from northern Karnataka. By 1961, Bengaluru had become the sixth-largest city in India, with a population of 1,207,000.[43] In the following decades, Bengaluru's manufacturing base continued to expand with the establishment of various public and private companies.[66]
By the 1980s, urbanisation had spilled over the current boundaries, and in 1986, the Bangalore Metropolitan Region Development Authority, was established to co-ordinate the development of the entire region as a single unit.[65] On 8 February 1981, a major fire broke out at Venus Circus in Bengaluru, where more than 92 people died, the majority of them children.[67] Bengaluru experienced a growth in its real estate market in the 1980s and 1990s, spurred by capital investors from other parts of the country who converted Bengaluru's large plots and colonial bungalows into multi-storied apartments.[68] Since the late 1980s, many information technology companies were set up in the city and by the end of the 20th century, Bengaluru had established itself as the Silicon Valley of India.[43] The population has increased significantly due to migration from other parts for work, and the city has become the third most populous city in 2011.[69][66] During the 21st century, Bengaluru has had major terrorist attacks in 2008, 2010, and 2013.[70][71][72]
There are no major rivers run in the city, though six rivers arise at the Nandi Hills, about 60 km (37 mi) to the north.[73][78] The Vrishabhavathi, a tributary of Arkavathi flows through the city. Arkavathi, Dakshina Pinakini and its tributary Chinnar, and Suvarnamukhi rivers water the fringes of the city.[73][79] Most of these rivers are polluted, and depleted due to sewage from the city.[80][81]Kaveri runs towards the southwest of the city, the water from which is used to cater to majority of the water requirements of the city.[82] The city has a considerable number of freshwater lakes and water tanks, most of which are seasonal and rain-fed.[73] The city had 265 lakes in the 1960s, which shrunk to 98 by the late 2010s, and most of the city's lakes are polluted.[83][84][85][86] The government began revival and conservation efforts in 2020.[87] Groundwater occurs in silty to sandy layers of the alluvial sediments, and are extracted through open wells.[73]
The soil in the city consist of red laterite and red, fine loamy to clayey soils.[88] The vegetation in the eastern and northern parts consists of scrubs interspersed with various water bodies, and the southern hilly region consists of scrubs and forests.[83] The city had a forest cover of 68.3% in the early 1970s, which reduced to less than 15% in the 2010s.[89] Trees are frequently felled to pave way for infrastructure development.[90][91] Though the city has been classified as a part of the seismic zone II (a stable zone), it has experienced earthquakes of magnitude as high as 4.5 on the Richter scale.[92]
Climate
Bengaluru has a tropical savanna climate (Köppen climate classificationAw) with distinct wet and dry seasons. Due to its high elevation, Bengaluru usually enjoys a more moderate climate throughout the year, although occasional heat waves can make summer somewhat uncomfortable.[93] The dry season extends from December to February followed by the summer season from March to May. The monsoon brings most of the rainfall from June to September, followed by a post-monsoon season in October and November.[73] April is the hottest month with an average high of 34.1 °C (93.4 °F), and January is the coolest month with an average low temperature of 15.1 °C (59.2 °F).[94] The highest temperature ever recorded in Bengaluru was 39.2 °C (103 °F), recorded 24 April 2016, corresponding with the strong El Niño in that year.[95] The lowest ever recorded is 7.8 °C (46 °F) in January 1884.[96][97] Winter temperatures rarely drop below 14 °C (57 °F), and summer temperatures seldom exceed 36 °C (97 °F).[73] Bengaluru receives rainfall from both the northeast and the southwest monsoons, and the wettest months is September, followed by October and August.[94] The summer heat is moderated by fairly frequent thunderstorms, which occasionally cause power outages and local flooding, such as in 2022.[98][99][100] Most of the rainfall occurs during the late afternoon or evening and rain before noon is infrequent.[101] The heaviest rainfall recorded in a 24-hour period is 179 mm (7 in) recorded on 1 October 1997.[102]
Climate data for Bengaluru (1991–2020, extremes 1901–present)
As per the 2011 census, Bengaluru had a population of 8,443,675, and was the third most populous city in India.[69] The urban agglomeration was home to 8,499,399 people, and was the fifth most populous urban agglomeration in India.[112][113] As per a 2016 estimate, the urban agglomeration had a population of about 10.45 million.[6] The city was amongst the fastest growing cities in the last two decades, with the population increasing substantially due to migration from rest of the country.[69][66] About 13.2% of the population belonged to scheduled castes, and scheduled tribes.[114] Residents of Bengaluru are referred to as "Bangaloreans" in English,[115]Bengaloorinavaru in Kannada,[116] and Banglori in Hindi or Urdu.[117]
There are about 597 slums in the city, housing roughly 16% of the city's population.[118][119] The city had a gini index of 0.64, indicating significant inequality.[114][120] Various studies have also indicated various inequalities in the infrastructure development across different parts of the city, and other urbanisation problems such as mass displacements, proliferation of slums, and public health crisis due to water shortage and sewage problems in poor and working-class neighbourhoods.[121] In the Ease of Living Index 2020 published by the Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs, the city was ranked the most livable Indian city with a population of over a million.[122]
Apart from the Kannadigas native to the region, Tamils, Telugus and Deccanis, form a significant population of the city.[128][129][130] In the 16th century, Tamil speakers, who also spoke Kannada, settled in the region for business.[131] Telugus came to the city on invitation of the Mysore royalty.[132] Since the late 20th century, there has been a steady migration of people from other states for study and work. [133] About 90% of the migrants came from the South Indian states, with the number of migrants from other parts of India increasing over the last few decades of the 20th century. Majority of the migration from non-South Indians states included Maharashtrians, Punjabis, Rajasthanis, Gujaratis, Bengalis, and from Uttar Pradesh.[66] Migrant communities from within the state include Tuluvas and Konkanis of coastal Karnataka, and Kodavas from the state's Kodagu district.[128] The city also had an Anglo-Indian population of about 10,000 people in 2006.[134]
Kannada is the official language of the government.[136] As per the 2011 census, Kannada is the language spoken by most of city's population with 3,574,226 (42.1%) speakers, followed by Tamil (1,388,305) Telugu (1,166,338), Urdu (1,104,124), Hindi (476,673), Malayalam (268,780), and Marathi (174,451). Other languages with a sizeable numbers of speakers include Konkani, Bengali, Marwari, Tulu, Odia, Gujarati, Kodagu, Punjabi, Lambadi, Sindhi and Nepali.[135]Bangalore Kannada is the local dialect of Kannada spoken in the region.[137][138]English is widely spoken by white-collar workers and is the principal business language.[136][139] With a diverse population speaking multiple languages, the city has often seen controversies and issues with respect to the usage of English and other vernacular languages. In 2023, the government mandated the usage of Kannada in the sign boards of all businesses, which led to protests.[140][141] There have also been court cases, protests, and diverse public opinion on the usage of different languages in the city.[142][143]
The city is governed by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP, "Greater Bengaluru Municipal Corporation"). The Bangalore Municipal Board was established on 27 March 1862, with a separate board formed later to manage the cantonment area of the city. In 1881, these were organized into Bangalore city municipality and Bangalore civil and military station municipality respectively. The two municipalities were merged in 1949, into a single municipal corporation with 70 members. In 2007, BBMP was established by merging the Bangalore Mahanagara Palike, with seven neighbouring city municipal councils, one town municipal council and 111 village panchayats around the city.[144] The Bengaluru corporation covers an area 741 km2 (286 sq mi), divided into ten zones covering 223 wards.[2][145] The corporation is headed by a mayor, elected by the councillors, who are elected through a popular vote by the residents.[144][146] The municipal commissioner is responsible for daily administration.[147]
The Bangalore Development Authority (BDA) was established in 1976, and is the nodal agency responsible for the planning and development of the city.[148] The BBMP works in conjunction with the BDA and the Agenda for Bangalore's Infrastructure and Development Task Force (ABIDe) to design and implement civic and infrastructural projects in the city.[144][149] The Bangalore Metropolitan Region Development Authority, established in 1985, is responsible for the planning of the metropolitan region.[76] As the capital of the state of Karntaka, the city houses the state executive and legislative headquarters in the Vidhana Soudha,[150] state ministries at Vikasa Soudha,[151][152] and the residence of the Governor at Raj Bhavan.[153]
Law and order
Karnataka High Court in Bengaluru is the highest judicial authority in the state, and manages a series of sub-ordinate civil and criminal courts.[154][155] The Bengaluru City Police (BCP) is the primary law enforcement agency in the city and is headed by a commissioner of police.[156] The city is divided into eight zones, each of which is headed by an assistant commissioner.[157] There are separate crime, intelligence, and administration wings of the police.[158] The police also operate special and armed units.[159] As of February 2024[update], the city police consisted of 18,308 civilian police working across 113 police stations, and 6,999 armed reserve personnel. The city had 191 cops per hundred thousand people, well below the United Nations standard of 673.[160]Bengaluru City Traffic Police (BCTP) is responsible for the traffic management in the city.[161] The traffic police operates 48 stations across three zones, each of which is headed by a joint commissioner.[158][162] As of 2021[update], the crime rate in the city was 27.2 per hundred thousand people.[163] The Bangalore Central Prison located at Parappana Agrahara, was established in 1997, and is the major prison in the city.[164][165]
Bengaluru's social and economic diversity is reflected in its cuisine.[177] Roadside vendors, tea stalls, and South Indian, North Indian, Chinese and Western fast food are all popular.[178]Udupi restaurants are popular and serve predominantly vegetarian, regional cuisine.[179] Bengaluru is also home to many vegan restaurants and vegan activism groups, and has been named as India's most vegan-friendly city by PETA's Indian branch.[180][181]
Art and literature
Bengaluru lacked a contemporary art scene until the 1990s, when several art galleries emerged, including the government-established National Gallery of Modern Art.[182] Bengaluru's international art festival, Art Bangalore, was established in 2010.[183]
Kannada literature flourished in Bengaluru even before Kempe Gowda laid the city's foundations. During the 18th and 19th centuries, Kannada literature was enriched by the Vachanas (a form of rhythmic writing) composed by the heads of the VeerashaivaMathas (monastery) in Bengaluru.[184][185] The headquarters of the Kannada Sahitya Parishat, a nonprofit organisation that promotes the Kannada language, is located in Bengaluru.[186] The city has its own literary festival, known as the "Bangalore Literature Festival", inaugurated in 2012.[187]
The Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath is an art gallery that showcases a collection of painting, sculptures, and various other forms of art.[188][189] The Indian Cartoon Gallery is located in the heart of Bengaluru, dedicated to the art of cartooning, and is the first of its kind in India. The gallery conducts fresh cartoon exhibitions of various professional as well as amateur cartoonists every month. The gallery has been organised by the Indian Institute of Cartoonists based in Bengaluru that serves to promote and preserve the work of eminent cartoonists in India. The institute has organised more than one hundred exhibitions of cartoons.[190]
Theatre, music, and dance
Bengaluru is home to the Kannada film industry, which produces about 200 Kannada feature films each year.[191] Bengaluru also has an active theatre culture; popular theatres include Ravindra Kalakshetra[192] and the Ranga Shankara.[193] The city has an active English- and foreign-language theatre scene; popular theatres include Ranga Shankara and Chowdiah Memorial Hall.[193]
Kannada theatre is popular in Bengaluru and consists mostly of political satire and light comedy. Plays are organised mostly by community organisations, but some by amateur groups. Drama companies touring India under the auspices of the British Council and Max Müller Bhavan also stage performances in the city frequently.[194] The Alliance Française de Bangalore also hosts numerous plays throughout the year.[195]
Bengaluru is also a major centre of Indian classical music and dance.[196] The cultural scene features a diverse set of music concerts, dance performances and plays. Performances of Carnatic (South Indian) and Hindustani (North Indian) classical music, and dance forms like Bharat Natyam, Kuchipudi, Kathakali, Kathak, and Odissi are very popular.[197]Yakshagana, a theatre art indigenous to coastal Karnataka is often played in town halls.[198] The two main music seasons in Bengaluru are April–May during the Ram Navami festival, and September–October during the Dusshera festival, when music activities by cultural organisations are at their peak.[197] Though both classical and contemporary music are played in Bengaluru, rock music dominates the music of urban Bengaluru; Bengaluru has its own subgenre of rock, "Bangalore Rock", an amalgamation of classic rock, hard rock and heavy metal, and some jazz and blues.[199] Notable bands from Bengaluru include Raghu Dixit Project, Kryptos, Inner Sanctum, Agam, All the fat children, and Swaratma.[citation needed] Bengaluru is sometimes called as the "Pub Capital of India" and the "Rock/Metal Capital of India" because of its underground music scene.[200]
Bengaluru is a major center for information technology (IT), and is consistently ranked amongst the world's fastest growing technology hubs. It is widely regarded as the "Silicon Valley of India", as the largest IT hub of the country.[214][215] The IT export from the city is estimated to be valued at $64 billion in 2024, and the city contributes to more than one third of India's total IT exports.[216][217] The IT industry in the city is divided into various business clusters and special economic zones such as Electronic City, International Tech Park, Software Technology Park, Bagmane Tech Park, Global Village Tech Park, World Trade Center, and Manyata Embassy Business Park amongst others.[218] The growth of IT industry has resulted in the migration of people from all over the country, which has resulted in the demand for improvement in the city's infrastructure and presented the city with other challenges.[214][219] The industry has been blamed for not favouring local employment development, increased land values, and closure of small enterprises.[220] The resistance from the city for further investments required to develop infrastructure, has forced some of the new and expanding businesses elsewhere.[221]
Bengaluru is also a major hub for Indian biotechnology-related industry, which was valued at nearly $25 billion in 2021-22.[222][223] The city is home to more than 40 biotech companies, and is termed as the "Biotech capital of India".[224][225] The city is a major export center for agricultural produce including fruits, and poultry.[226] Major crops include rice, maize, ragi, horse gram, oil seeds, coconuts, and fruits such as mango, papaya, banana, grapes, and pomegranate. Flowers such as roses are grown commercially.[207] The Rail Wheel Factory at Yelahanka is a major supplier of wheels and axles for Indian Railways.[227] State owned corporations BEML and Bharat Electronics are headquartered in the city, and manufacture aerospace components, power equipment, trainsets, armored vehicles, and electronics for both civilian and defence requirements.[207][228]
Infrastructure
Water supply
Water supply is provided by the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB), which was established in 1964.[229] The city receives an average of 800 million liters of water per day from rainfall.[230] In the 16th century, Kempe Gowda constructed lakes such as the Kempambudhi Kere to store the rain water.[231] As of 2021[update], the city had a daily water demand of 2100 million liters, of which 1,450 million liters is catered to by the corporation. While the city drew water from the Arkavathy River earlier, the increasing demands led to the establishment of the Cauvery water supply scheme in 1964. Majority of the water supply to the city is drawn from the Kaveri, with the amount of water drawn increasing from 135 million liters in 1974 to 1,450 million liters per day in 2014.[232] A 2015 report indicated that one-third of the slum clearance projects lacked basic water service connections, 60% of slum dwellers lacked complete water supply lines and used a shared water supply.[233] The city does face water shortages, especially during summer and in years with low rainfall.[234]
Waste management and pollution
Waste collection and management is done by the city corporation. Pollution regulation and issuance of waste management guidelines is carried out by the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB), which comes under the aegis of Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), and is headquartered in the city.[235][236] As of 2022, Bengaluru produced around 6000 metric tonnes of solid waste per day.[237] The wastes are segregated, compacted, and transported to any of the three garbage processing plants in Bingipura, Mavallipura, or Kudlu.[238] As per a 2024 study, the three garbage processing plants were found to be violating environmental regulations, and emitted high levels of particulate matter, causing damage to the local environment and increasing the pollution levels of the city.[239] As of 2024[update], the corporation operated seven wet waste processing plants, 13 bio methane generation plants, and a land fill.[240] The corporation earlier operated three more landfill sites at Mavallipura, Mandur, and Doddaballapura, which were closed after complaints from local residents, and reports of diseases due to unsanitary conditions.[241] In 2024, the government identified four new locations for the construction of new landfill sites.[242] As part of the waste management guidelines, the government of Karnataka has authorised specific companies to manage biomedical and e-wastes in the city.[243] However, a report in October 2024 indicated that some of these companies were not disposing of the wastes in the prescribed manner, and are involved in re-selling.[244]
The city has considerable pollution due to vehicle and industrial exhausts, and unscientific waste disposal.[245][246] The pollution level varies across localities, with higher concentrations of particulate matter reported in industrial and high traffic zones. A random sampling of the air quality index (AQI) of twenty stations within the city suggested heavy to severe air pollution around areas of high traffic.[247] While the average air quality was at acceptable levels, the PM 2.5 levels exceeded the 60 μg/m³ threshold set by the CPCB in certain areas.[248] A evaluation of Bengaluru's physical, biological and socioeconomic parameters indicated that the city's air quality and noise pollution were poor.[249]
Power
In 1905, Bengaluru was among the first cities to have electric power.[66] The city was powered by hydro power generated by the hydroelectric plant in Shivanasamudra.[57] Electricity in the city is regulated through the Bangalore Electricity Supply Company (BESCOM).[250] The power consumption has steadily increased over the last decade and in 2022-23, the city had a peak demand of 3,632 Mw per day.[251][252] As of March 2024[update], the city had a power requirement of about 157 million Kwh, and consumed nearly 40% of the power in the state.[253] The city draws power from the state grid, which receives power from a mixture of fossil fuels and renewable sources.[254] In 2024, BESCOM initiated the process of moving overhead lines to underground in the city.[255]
Health and sanitation
In the early 19th century, healthcare services were provided by local physicians. In 1834, English doctors were appointed, to take care of vaccination, and control the spread of epidemics. The first public clinic was established in Bangalore Fort in 1835, and a small hospital was added in 1839 in Pete area. In 1846, a large hospital was opened, with a leper colony added in 1845, and a mental hospital in 1850.[256][66] The Victoria Hospital was inaugurated in 1900 .[55] As of 2024[update], the Bangalore corporation managed one major general hospital, six referral hospitals, 26 maternity homes, and 230 outpatient clinics.[257][258] There are many private clinics, and tertiary care hospitals in the city.[259] The city has been growing as a center of medical tourism due to the availability of more than 50 tertiary care hospitals.[260] Vaccination such as polio vaccine is administered by the corporation on behalf of the government.[261]
Sanitation facilities are provided by the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board.[229] The underground drainage and sewerage disposal system was introduced in 1922. As of 2024[update], about 1,400 million liters of waste water is generated daily, which flows through a network of nearly 8,387 km (5,211 mi) of sewage pipes to any of the 33 sewage treatment plants.[232] Encroachment, and damages to the sewerage system, has resulted in wastewater entering the lakes, and polluting the water sources.[232][262] As of 2024[update], the corporation operated 401 public toilets and 17 community toilets across the city.[240]
Communication
The first post office in the city was established in 1800.[263] Postal services are provided by the government owned India Post, which operated 247 post offices across four zones in 2024.[264][265] In 1853, telegraph was introduced for long distance communication and about 538 km (334 mi) of telegraph lines existed in the city by 1856.[256]Telephone services were introduced in 1928.[66] In the early 1990s, STPI provided wired internet services for offices, and VSNL started providing dial up connections for individual homes in the city.[266][267] Bengaluru has a high internet usage and is amongst the top cities in India in terms of internet penetration.[268]
Bengaluru was the first city in India to have access to fourth generationcellular services.[269] As of 2023[update], four mobile phone service companies operate GSM networks including Bharti Airtel, BSNL, Vodafone Idea and Reliance Jio offered fourth and fifth generation mobile services. Wired broadband services are offered by five major operators and smaller local operators.[270] Namma Wifi is a free municipal wireless network launched on 24 January 2014 by the Government of Karnataka, and is available in select areas in the city.[271]
Media
The first printing press in Bengaluru was established in 1840 by the Wesleyan Christian Mission.[272][273] Around 1860, the English newspaper Bangalore Herald and Kannada newspaper Mysore Vrittanta Bodhini started circulation in Bengaluru.[256][66] P. R. Ramayya established the Bangalore Press in 1927 and launched the Kannada newspaper Tayi Nadu and English newspaper Daily News later.[274] Bengaluru has several newspapers and magazines published in various languages including Kannada, English, Urdu, and Tamil.[275] As of 2022[update], the major dailies with a circulation of more than 100,000 copies per day include The Times of India, Vijaya Karnataka, Prajavani, and Vijayavani.[276] Several local newspapers, and periodicals also bring out editions from the city.[277] Local online news sites like Explocity provide local news updates.[278]
The government run Doordarshan broadcasts terrestrial and satellite television channels from its Bengaluru centre set up on 1 November 1981. A production centre was established in the Doordarshan's Bengaluru office in 1983, thereby allowing the introduction of a news program in Kannada on 19 November 1983.[285] A 140 m (460 ft) high television tower was commissioned on 1 March 1985 for the broadcast of television programmes.[286] Doordarshan launched DD Chandana, a Kannada satellite channel, on 15 August 1990.[285][287] In September 1991, Star TV was the first private satellite channel to be launched in the city.[288] Since the late 2000s, Direct To Home (DTH) services became available in Bengaluru.[289]
As of 2024[update], Bengaluru does not have a suburban railway network. The first line of Bengaluru Commuter Rail is expected to be operational in 2025.[309]Namma Metro is a rapid transit rail system in the city that was opened in 2011, and was the first operational metro in South India.[310][311] As of 2024[update], the metro system consists two operational lines stretching 76.95 km (47.81 mi), and is the second-longest operational metro network in India.[312][313] Three more lines are under construction as a part of expansion.[314][315]
Intra-city bus services is handled by the Bengaluru Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC), which was established in 1997.[330] As of 2024[update], BMTC operates 57,667 daily trips on 5,766 routes with a fleet of 6,340 buses. There are 48 bus stations, and 50 depots for intra-city bus services.[331] BMTC introduced air-conditioned buses in 2005, which operate on major routes and as shuttle services from various parts of the city to airport.[332] It also operates a fleet of more than 1,100 electric vehicles.[331] Apart from single journey tickets, BMTC issues various passes for frequent users.[333] Inter-city bus transport is handled by the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC), owned by the Government of Karnataka. KSRTC operates various classes of services connecting other major cities in Karnataka, and other neighboring states.[334] The major bus stations in the city include Kempegowda Bus Station, Shantinagar Bus Station, and Mysuru Road Bus Station.[335][336] The other means of road transport in the city include vans, auto rickshaws, on-call metered taxis and tourist taxis.[337][338]
Motor vehicles were introduced in Bengaluru in 1903.[339] As of March 2022[update], an average of 1,530 vehicles were registered daily in Regional Transport Offices (RTOs) in the city.[340][341] As of 2023[update], the city had nearly ten million vehicles including 7.5 million two-wheelers.[342] The rapid growth of vehicles and unplanned nature of growth has created several administrative problems relating to traffic congestion and infrastructure, resulting in massive traffic gridlocks. The flyovers and one-way traffic systems introduced to address the concerns, were only moderately successful.[343] The city also has considerable air pollution due to vehicle exhaust, and a 2016 study found that over 36% of diesel vehicles operating in the city exceeded the standard limit for emissions.[245][344]
Bengaluru is a major educational hub and home to some of the premium educational institutions in the country.[345] The city has a 90.33% literacy rate and ranks second among the major Indian metropolitan city centres.[346] As per the 2011 national census, Bengaluru urban had a literacy rate of around 87.7%.[347][348] Until the early 19th century, education in Bengaluru was mainly run by religious leaders and restricted to students of that religion.[349] In 1841, two native language schools were established by a London mission, and in 1842, Mummadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar established the first English School under the Wesleyan mission, which expanded to five schools by 1954. In 1857, a public education department was established, and the education was formulated as per the Indian educational policy at the time.[256][66] The Bangalore Military School was established in 1945.[350]
Bengaluru has a mix of public and private schools with the public school system managed by the school education department of Government of Karnataka.[351][352] Public schools run by the Bengaluru Corporation are all affiliated with the Karnataka Board of Secondary Education, while private schools may be affiliated with either of Karnataka Board of Secondary Education, Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (ICSE) or National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS).[353] As of 2024[update], there are 142 public schools run by the Bengaluru Corporation.[354]
The city also has a significant number of international schools due to cater to expats and people employed in the technology sector.[355] School education starts with two years of Kindergarten from age three onwards and then follows the Indian 10+2 plan, ten years of school and two years of pre-university course or higher secondary education.
After completing their secondary education, students either attend a pre-university course or continue an equivalent high school course in one of three streams – arts, commerce or science – in various combinations.[356] Alternatively, students can enrol in diploma courses and upon completing the required coursework, students enroll in general or professional degrees in universities through lateral entry.[357][358]
Bengaluru is known as the "Garden City of India" because of its greenery.[369][370] In May 2012, Lonely Planet listed the city as one of the world's top ten cities to visit.[371] As of 2024, Bengaluru has 1,288 public parks maintained by the corporation.[372] The Lal Bagh was established in the 1760s, and was later expanded into a 240 acres (97 ha) botanical garden in the 19th century. It incorporates a hillock made of gneiss, formed billions of years ago, and is a declared national geological monument. The garden has a watch tower built in the 16th century by Kempe Gowda, a glass house built in 1889 on the model of The Crystal Palace in London, old hero stones, and houses many exotic species of plants.[373] A biannual flowershow is held at the gardens during the weeks of India's Republic Day and Independence Day.[374][375]
Elgin Talkies, built in 1896, was the first theatre in Bengaluru.[380] In the later half of the 20th century, the city had 149 single screens, most of them situated along the Kempegowda Road near the Kempegowda Bus Station.[381] In the 21st century, large multiplexes with multiple screens began replacing the single screen theaters, and the city is now home to a large number of multiplexes.[382][383] Stage plays and dramas of different genres and languages are enacted in theatres across the city.[384][385]
Bengaluru has consulates of France,[434]Germany,[435] Israel,[436] and Japan,[437] and a virtual consulate of the United States.[438] The city also hosts a British deputy High Commission,[439] and honorary consulates of Finland,[440] Ireland,[441] Maldives,[442] Peru,[443] and Switzerland.[444] Canada has a trade office in the city.[445]
Bengaluru has a sister city relationship with the following cities:
^Swaminathan, Jayashankar M. (2009). Indian Economic Superpower: Fiction Or Future?. Vol. 2 of World Scientific series on 21st century business. World Scientific. p. 20. ISBN9789812814661. ISSN1793-5660.
^"Raj Bhavan, Karnataka". The Homepage of Raj Bhavan, Government of Karnataka. Archived from the original on 6 February 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
^Boland-Crewe, Tara; Lea, David (2004). The Territories and States of India. Psychology Press. p. 135. ISBN978-0-203-40290-0. When the new, extended Mysore was created on 1 November 1956 (by the addition of coastal, central and northern territories), Wodeyar became Governor of the whole state, which was renamed Karnataka in 1973.
^Roy, Ananya; Ong, Aihwa (2011). "Speculating on the Next World City". Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments and the Art of Being Global. Vol. 42 (illustrated ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN978-1-4443-4678-7.
^Gayer, Laurent; Jaffrelot, Christophe (2012). Muslims in Indian Cities: Trajectories of Marginalisation (illustrated ed.). Hurst Publishers. p. 290. ISBN978-1-84904-176-8.
^Brown, Keith; Ogilvie, Sarah (2010). Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World (revised ed.). Elsevier. p. 577. ISBN978-0-080-87775-4.
^Lindsay, Jennifer (2006). Between Tongues: Translation And/of/in Performance in Asia (illustrated, reprint, annotated ed.). NUS Press. p. 52. ISBN978-9-971-69339-8.
^"Bangalore Karaga". The Hindu, dated Monday, 2 April 2007. Chennai, India. 2 April 2007. Archived from the original on 27 October 2008. Retrieved 1 May 2009.
^"Explore the continent". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 11 June 2007. Archived from the original on 26 February 2013. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
^
Sharma, Sharath M. (22 August 2010). "It's Yakshagana season". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
^"Environmental impact analysis"(PDF). Bangalore Metropolitan Rapid Transport Corporation Limited, Government of Karnataka. 2006. Archived from the original(PDF) on 20 March 2006. Retrieved 11 June 2012.
Srinivas, Smriti (2004). Landscapes of Urban Memory: The Sacred and the Civic in India's High-tech City (revised ed.). Orient Blackswan. ISBN978-8-12502-254-1.