India
Online Travel
» South India
Travel Guide
Chennai Travel Guide

Chennai
is a city where the traditional and the modern blend in life everywhere. From
traditional vegetarian fair to fast foods, from nine-yard sarees to the latest
in fashion, from ancient temple architecture to modern high-rise - with Indo-Saracenic
and Victorian as stops along the way - from classical music and dance to discos
throbbing to heady beats, Chennai has them all and many more vivid contrasts
that are a pleasant surprise.
And perhaps the most striking of them all is that here is a modern metropolis
with beaches, parks and even sanctuaries in the heart of the City. Chennai offers
a wealth of nature and a rich historic past to visitors in the ambience of a
city with every modern facility.
Modern Chennai grew out of a small village when in 1639 a fishing hamlet called
Madraspatnam was selected by early English merchants of the East India Company
as a site for the settlement.
Chennai is a gracious city that has a clear skyline, long sandy beaches, parks,
historic landmarks and tourist infrastructural facilities which make it a convenient
entry point or base to start your tour of Tamil Nadu and South India.
Chennai, the gracious capital city of Tamil Nadu is the fourth largest
metropolis in India. Located on a 17km stretch of the Coramandel coast, the
city is trisected by the waterways of Cooum and Adyar and the Buckingham Canal.
With a population of 6 million people, Chennai is a vibrant city ever growing,
expanding and changing every year. Popularly regarded as the "Gateway to the
South", Chennai presents culture that is distinctly different from that of northern
India. Music, dance and all other art forms of the South are cherished and nurtured
in this city which, though industrialized, continues to be traditional and conventional
in many ways.

The
region of Chennai was called Tondaimandalm in those days and had its military
headquarters at Puzhal, which is now a small and rather insignificant village
on the outskirts of the city.
Modern Chennai grew out of a small village when in 1639 a fishing hamlet called
Madraspatnam was selected by early English merchants of the East India Company
as a site for the settlement.
Chennai is a gracious city that has a clear skyline, long sandy beaches, parks,
historic landmarks and tourist infrastructural facilities which make it a convenient
entry point or base to start your tour of Tamil Nadu and South India. Where
religion is concerned, history has certainly left its mark on this city which
is believed to have been the place of St. Thomas, in the outskirt of the city.
There are a number of churches in Chennai that are connected with the life and
times of this apostle. There are also several ancient temples around Chennai,
and, within the city itself are two magnificent temples - a temple in Triplicane
and another in Mylapore.