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Attingal
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Key Information

Attingal is a municipal town in Thiruvananthapuram metropolitan area in Thiruvananthapuram district of Kerala state, India. It was the location of the Attingal kingdom, under Travancore. It is the headquarters of Chirayinkeezhu Taluk, and the important government institutions of the taluk such as the Taluk office, court complex, office of the deputy superintendent of Police, civil station, and treasuries are situated in Attingal. It is one of the oldest municipalities of Kerala which was constituted prior to its independence in 1924. In 1914 itself Attingal Town Improvement Authority (TIA) was formed which was the term used before the municipality regulation act of 1922. Attingal Town is located 25 kilometres (16 mi) north of Thiruvananthapuram. Attingal is the 3rd densely populated municipality in the district.
Demographics and History
[edit]
According to the 2011 census,[2] Attingal has a population of 37,346. Males constitute 17,009 of the population and females 20,337. Attingal has an average literacy rate of 88.9% of the population is under the age of 6. The town is famed for its cleanliness in recent years. The municipality has undertaken many plans which have been successful. The municipality has also achieved a couple of awards for its success.
History
Attingal and anchuthengu Kalapam are the historical first riot against British government in Kerala.
Anchuthengu Kalapam/riot is at 1697 for selling the pepper issues made by British government it was the first riot in Kerala against British. Then Attingal Outbreak are done in 1721 were the first organised riot against British government, it settled by Venadu agreement.
Politics
[edit]The Attingal assembly constituency is part of Attingal (Lok Sabha constituency).[3] [4]
Attingal Loksabha sabha constituency election 2024 elected by United Democratic Front (Kerala) candidate and present MP Sri. Adv.Adoor Prakash. In Attingal legislative assembly election 2021 elected by Left Democratic Front MLA Smt. O. S. Ambika. In local body election 2021 Attingal Municipality government formed by Left Democratic Front.
Tourism
[edit]Attingal Palace
[edit]Koyikkal Palace is the maternal home of the Travancore royal family. The great rulers of the kingdom, including Anizham Thirunal Marthanda Varma, were brought up in this palace situated at Kollampuzha, Attingal. [5] The palace, built in stone and wood, according to Kerala architecture stands in a nearly 10-acre wide plot, a portion of which is privately owned now. The palace has four temples inside it, including the 700-year-old sanctorum that houses the Palliyara Bhagavathy. The temple of the family deity, Thiruvarattukavu Devi, is also seated in a temple inside the palace complex. [6] The historically important palace, built in an 'ettukettu' structure. The temples and the palace is currently under the control of the Devaswom Board. One of the entrance gates here, ' Chavadipura', was reconstructed recently by the royal family. [7]
Anchuthengu Fort
[edit]The historical fort of Anchuthengu is about 10 km from Attingal town and the famous Siva temple Avanavanchery Sri Indilayappan Temple and Veerakeralapuram Sreekrishna Swami Temple are within the Attingal Municipal area.
Kumaran ashan Smarakam
The historical museum of Kerala renaissance leader and poet Kumaran Asan situated in Thonnakkal, Attingal have Kumaran ashan home made with grass and his works and belongings are showed in museum.[1]
Transport
[edit]Attingal is one of the important hubs of the Thiruvananthapuram district. Kanyakumari-Panvel Highway(National Highway 66 (India)) along with SH 46 and SH 47 connecting the town to Kilimanoor and Nedumangadu, passes through the town.SH46 joins the Town at Alamcode and SH47 at Munumukku. Both KSRTC and private buses have frequent services to nearby towns like Varkala, Kilimanoor, Kallambalam, Chirayinkeezhu, Kadakkavoor, Venjarammoodu, Nedumangad, Karette, Vamanapuram, Madathara and to the cities like Trivandrum, Kollam, Ernakulam etc. The nearest railway stations are Chirayinkeezhu Railway station(7 km) and Kadakkavoor Railway station (8 km)and Varkala railway station which is 15 km away. Thiruvananthapuram International Airport (33 km) is the nearest airport. Two dedicated bus depots are available in the forms of a Kerala State Road Transport Corporation(KSRTC) bus depot which is one among the 28 Main depots of KSRTC and one Private Bus Terminal, both in the heart of the town. Currently as part of NH66 4laning Attingal Bypass is planning to construction from mamom to ayamkonam.
Notable people
[edit]- K. Chinnamma, social worker and founder of Hindu Mahila Mandiram[8]
- Prem Nazir, film actor
- G. K. Pillai (actor), film actor
- Kumaran Asan, poet
- Marthanda Varma, Travancore King
- Umayamma Rani, Senior Rani of Attingal and Regent of Travancore
- Bharat Gopy, Film Actor (also producer and director)
- Murali Gopy, Film Actor (also screenwriter, author, singer, and former journalist)
- Sukumar (writer)
Educational institutions and Transportation
[edit]
Regular Educational institutions include:
- College of Engineering(IHRD), Attingal
- Government College, Attingal
- District Institute of Education and Training, Attingal
- Rajadhani Institute of Engineering and Technology, Nagaroor, Attingal
- Government Polytechnic college, Attingal
- Government ITI, Attingal
- Government Model Higher secondary and vocational higher secondary school, Attingal
- Government Town UP school, Attingal
- Government High School Avanavanchery, Attingal
- Government Girls HSS, Attingal
- Trivandrum International School, Edackode PO, Korani, Attingal
- Sr. Elizabeth Joel CSI EM HSS, Attingal
- NAVABHARATH HIGHER SECONDARY SCHOOL
- Christ Nagar Public School (CBSE)
- Jyothis Public School ( CBSE), Attingal.
Attingal have lots of private non regular training institutes for PSc, SSC, coaching centres and School, degree tuition centres are available.
Transportation( How to reach)
• KSRTC Bus station Attingal
• Private bus station Attingal
• Railway Station, Chirayinkeezhu ( far 9 km)
• Railway Station, Varkala sivagiri ( Far 16 km)
• International and domestic Airport, Trivandrum ( Far 30 km)
References
[edit]- ^ "ആമുഖം". Archived from the original on 8 November 2015. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ "Census of India: Search Details".
- ^ "Assembly Constituencies - Corresponding Districts and Parliamentary Constituencies" (PDF). Kerala. Election Commission of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 October 2008. Retrieved 21 October 2008.
- ^ "Attingal Constituency".
- ^ "Attingal Palace History".
- ^ "Attingal Palace".
- ^ "Attingal Palace Restoration". Archived from the original on 9 June 2023.
- ^ "ഇത് ചിന്നമ്മയുടെ കഥ, പൂജപ്പുര മഹിളാ മന്ദിരത്തിന്റേയും". Mathrubhumi.[permanent dead link]
External links
[edit]Attingal
View on GrokipediaGeography
Location and Topography
Attingal is a municipal town situated in the Thiruvananthapuram district of the southern Indian state of Kerala, within the Chirayinkeezhu taluk.[6] It lies approximately 30 kilometers north of Thiruvananthapuram city, the state capital, and is positioned inland from the Arabian Sea coast, contributing to its role as a regional hub in the coastal lowlands.[7] The town's geographic coordinates are approximately 8°42′N latitude and 76°49′E longitude.[8] The topography of Attingal features predominantly low-lying coastal plains typical of Kerala's midland-coastal transition zone, with an average elevation of 23 to 25 meters above sea level.[9] [10] This terrain includes gently rolling hills interspersed with flat, alluvial lowlands formed by riverine deposits, facilitating agriculture and urban expansion but also exposing the area to seasonal flooding risks from nearby waterways.[11] The region falls within the Vamanapuram River basin, where the coastal strand plain experiences minimal topographic variation, contrasting with the steeper Western Ghats to the east.[12] Proximity to the Kallada and Vamanapuram rivers influences local hydrology, supporting paddy fields and coconut plantations across the undulating landscape, while the absence of significant escarpments or highlands underscores Attingal's integration into the broader Neendakara coastal plain ecosystem.[12] Urban development has adapted to this flat-to-moderate relief, with infrastructure like roads and buildings aligned to natural drainage patterns rather than rugged elevations.[13]Climate
Attingal features a tropical monsoon climate (Köppen Am), marked by consistently high temperatures, elevated humidity, and seasonal heavy rainfall primarily from the southwest monsoon. The region remains hot and humid year-round, with minimal seasonal temperature variation due to its coastal proximity in southern Kerala. Average annual precipitation totals around 1,800 mm, with the wet season spanning April to November and contributing the majority of rainfall.[14] Temperatures typically range from daily lows of 23–26 °C to highs of 29–33 °C, rarely falling below 21 °C or surpassing 34 °C. The hottest period occurs from March to May, when average highs exceed 32 °C amid rising humidity leading into the monsoon. A marginally cooler phase follows from June to October, with daytime highs under 30 °C, though perceived temperatures stay elevated due to persistent mugginess, which affects over 91% of the year.[14] Rainfall peaks during the southwest monsoon (June–September), with June averaging 289 mm over about 18 wet days, while drier conditions prevail from December to March, including January's low of 18 mm. The northeast monsoon (October–December) adds secondary precipitation, though less intense. High humidity (often above 80%) and frequent cloud cover, peaking at 92% in June, contribute to an oppressive feel, with wind speeds highest in July at around 18.5 km/h.[14]History
Pre-Colonial Era
Attingal's pre-colonial era is primarily associated with its integration into the Venad kingdom, a medieval polity in southern Kerala that emerged as an independent entity following the decline of the Chera Perumal empire around the 12th century. Originally a subordinate territory within the Chera domain—as evidenced by records like the Tarisapally copper plates—Venad consolidated under the Kulasekhara dynasty, which adopted matrilineal succession and vested considerable authority in female rulers, including the Rani of Attingal. Epigraphical inscriptions from the period reveal royal titles emphasizing sovereignty and divine kingship, underscoring the dynasty's efforts to legitimize rule through temple grants and territorial expansions.[15] The Rani of Attingal served as the senior matriarch, overseeing administrative functions and maintaining the dynasty's continuity, with Attingal functioning as a key principality focused on agrarian and coastal resources like pepper cultivation. By the 14th century, Venad achieved prominence under kings such as Ravi Varma Kulasekhara (r. circa 1299–1314), who extended influence northward and fortified the kingdom against regional rivals, including remnants of Chera and Tamil polities. This era saw the construction of enduring structures, including early palace complexes attributed to around 1305 CE, reflecting the region's growing political and cultural centrality within Kerala's feudal landscape.[16] Earlier roots may link to the ancient Ay dynasty of the Sangam period (3rd century BCE–3rd century CE), which controlled southern Kerala territories through trade networks and chieftaincies, though direct epigraphic ties to Attingal remain sparse. Venad's matrilineal system, inherited from these antecedents, prioritized royal women in governance, distinguishing it from patrilineal norms elsewhere in India and enabling resilient power transitions amid feudal conflicts.[17]Attingal Outbreak of 1721
The Attingal Outbreak, spanning April to October 1721 and also termed the Anjengo Revolt, began with the ambush and killing of roughly 140 East India Company personnel, including soldiers, civilians, and slaves, by local warriors near the Rani's palace in Attingal on April 15.[4] [18] The victims, led by Company agent William Gyfford, had been invited to the palace during the Vishu festival, presented with gifts symbolizing renewed trade ties, but were attacked either within the premises or en route to their boats on the Vamanapuram River by kalari-trained fighters under local chieftains.[18] [19] Only a handful of survivors, including three European men, escaped to alert the Company's fort at Anjengo (Anchuthengu), approximately 10 kilometers away.[18] [20] Underlying causes stemmed from accumulated grievances against the East India Company's exploitative trade policies, including underpayment for black pepper—a key export commodity—corruption among Company agents, and attempts to monopolize commerce while fortifying Anjengo against local wishes granted decades earlier by the Rani's predecessor, Umayamma.[4] [18] Local chieftains, notably Kudamon Pillai, mobilized Nairs, Ezhavas, Muslims, and other groups resentful of British disrespect toward customs, such as ignoring intermediaries for presenting gifts to the Rani and prior humiliation of a temple priest at Sarkaradevi, which prompted his suicide.[4] [18] The reigning Rani's involvement is disputed in historical accounts: some suggest tacit endorsement amid her own frustrations with Company overreach, while others indicate the uprising proceeded independently of her, as she later expressed regret and offered compensation to the British.[4] [18] Dutch records corroborate higher casualty figures around 134, contrasting with potentially understated Company reports.[18] In the aftermath, Attingal forces besieged Anjengo Fort for five to six months, aiming to expel the British presence, but withdrew upon the arrival of reinforcements from the Company's Tellicherry (Thalassery) settlement in October 1721.[4] [21] The incident compelled the East India Company to temporarily scale back aggressive expansion in the region, underscoring vulnerabilities in early British commercial footholds and fostering cross-community native solidarity against foreign trade dominance.[18] [22]Colonial Aftermath and 19th Century
Following the Attingal Outbreak of 1721, in which approximately 140 British East India Company personnel were killed at the Rani's palace on April 11, survivors fortified Anjengo (Anchuthengu) and withstood six months of siege by local forces before relief arrived from Tellicherry in October.[23] The British secured a 1723 treaty with the Raja of Travancore (Venad), granting them a pepper trade monopoly and rights to reestablish factories, though direct control over Attingal remained limited amid ongoing instability.[23] This period marked a shift from overt confrontation to cautious commercial engagement, with Anjengo serving as a British outpost despite the earlier violence. Marthanda Varma, born in 1706 to the Rani of Attingal and ascending as ruler of Venad in 1729, launched reprisals against rebel factions, including attacks supported by Madurai Nayak troops, effectively curbing the autonomy of Attingal's nobility and Pillamar (feudal lords).[24] By the 1730s, he integrated Attingal into the expanding Travancore kingdom, subordinating the Rani's traditional authority and centralizing power, which ended the semi-independent status of the Attingal principality.[5] Anjengo bolstered this consolidation; in 1742, it supplied Travancore with 150 soldiers, 500 guns, and gunpowder for Marthanda Varma's campaigns against Dutch forces and internal threats, strengthening the Anglo-Travancore alliance amid European rivalries over pepper trade.[23] In the 19th century, Attingal functioned as an administrative and commercial hub within Travancore, which formalized British paramountcy through a 1795 subsidiary alliance treaty providing military protection in exchange for influence via a Resident at Trivandrum from 1805.[23] Anjengo's factory supported logistics during the Anglo-Mysore Wars (1798–1799) by storing ammunition but declined thereafter, closing around 1809 as trade shifted to larger ports like Kollam, reducing Attingal's strategic coastal role.[23] The Attingal Palace persisted as a residence for Travancore's female royals, styled as Ranis of Attingal, though their political power was ceremonial under the kingdom's matrilineal but centralized governance.[25]20th Century Developments and Independence
During the early 20th century, Attingal underwent administrative reforms within the Travancore kingdom, including the formation of the Attingal Town Improvement Authority in 1914 to manage urban infrastructure and planning, followed by its official constitution as a municipality in 1924, making it one of Kerala's earliest such entities.[9] These steps reflected broader modernization efforts in Travancore, focusing on local governance and town enhancement prior to formal municipal regulations.[26] Residents of Attingal participated in the princely state's popular movements against autocratic rule, including agitations for responsible government in the 1930s and communist-led protests in the 1940s, with local individuals joining efforts to challenge feudal structures and demand democratic reforms.[27] These activities aligned with statewide unrest, such as the 1946 Punnapra-Vayalar uprising, which highlighted labor and peasant grievances and accelerated pressure for political change in Travancore.[28] Following an assassination attempt on Diwan C. P. Ramaswami Iyer on 25 July 1947 amid mounting public demands, Maharaja Chithira Thirunal Balarama Varma signed the instrument of accession to the Indian Union on 30 July 1947, integrating Attingal and the rest of Travancore into independent India.[29] On 1 July 1949, Travancore merged with Cochin to form the state of Travancore-Cochin, further embedding Attingal within the new federal structure until Kerala's reorganization in 1956.[29] This transition ended princely rule and aligned the region with India's constitutional framework.Demographics
Population Statistics
As per the 2011 Indian census, the population of Attingal municipality stood at 37,346 residents, comprising 17,009 males and 20,337 females.[30] [2] The sex ratio was 1,196 females per 1,000 males, higher than the Kerala state average of 1,084, reflecting a demographic pattern common in urban areas of the state with relatively balanced or female-skewed ratios due to migration and longevity factors.[30] The literacy rate in Attingal was recorded at 96.65% in 2011, with male literacy at 98.26% and female literacy at 95.23%, surpassing the national average of 74.04% and aligning with Kerala's high overall literacy of 94%.[1] Population density was 2,214 persons per square kilometer across the municipality's 16.87 km² area.[2]| Census Year | Total Population | Decadal Growth Rate (%) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | 35,693 | - | [31] |
| 2011 | 37,346 | 4.61 | [31] [30] |
Religious and Linguistic Composition
According to the 2011 Census of India, Hindus constitute the overwhelming majority in Attingal, comprising 86.27% of the municipal population, reflecting the town's historical roots in Hindu-majority Travancore princely state traditions. Muslims form the largest minority at 12.36%, concentrated in specific wards and associated with trade communities, while Christians account for 1.17%, primarily from Syrian Christian and Latin Catholic denominations typical of southern Kerala. Negligible shares include Sikhs at 0.01%, with Buddhists, Jains, and other unspecified groups under 0.01% each; no significant presence of other major religions is recorded.[1] The linguistic composition is highly homogeneous, with Malayalam serving as the mother tongue for virtually the entire population, aligning with Kerala's statewide figure where it is spoken by 96.7% of residents as the dominant Dravidian language. Census data for Thiruvananthapuram district, encompassing Attingal, reports no substantial deviation, with Tamil speakers forming under 2% regionally due to proximity to Tamil Nadu borders, but minimal in Attingal proper; English is used in education and administration but not as a primary language. Other scheduled languages like Hindi or Urdu have negligible native speakers, under 0.5% combined, underscoring the area's linguistic uniformity shaped by historical Malayalam literary and cultural dominance.[33][1]| Religion | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Hinduism | 86.27% |
| Islam | 12.36% |
| Christianity | 1.17% |
| Sikhism | 0.01% |
| Others | 0.19% |
Government and Politics
Municipal Administration
Attingal Municipality functions as the primary local self-government institution for the town, responsible for urban planning, public health, sanitation, water supply, road infrastructure, building regulations, and waste management under the Kerala Municipality Act, 1994. The governing body comprises 31 elected councilors representing individual wards, with elections held every five years.[34] The municipal council elects a chairperson from among its members to preside over meetings, formulate policies, and oversee implementation. Following the 2020 local body elections, Adv. S. Kumari of the Communist Party of India (Marxist [CPI(M)] was elected chairperson, representing Ward 6 (Thachoorkunnu).[34] Thulaseedharan Pillai G of CPI(M), from Ward 21, serves as vice-chairman.[34] The Left Democratic Front (LDF), anchored by CPI(M), secured 18 of the 31 seats in 2020, maintaining control of the council.[35] Executive administration is handled by the municipal secretary, supported by departments for engineering, health, revenue, and town planning, along with standing committees addressing finance, development, public works, health, and welfare.[36] The municipality has implemented quality management systems, earning ISO 9001:2015 certification in 2019 for efficient public service delivery.[37] It was recognized as Kerala's top-performing municipality for 2011-2012 based on governance and service metrics.[38] As of October 2025, the 2020-elected council remains in place pending the upcoming local body polls.[39]Political Representation and Elections
Attingal constitutes the Attingal Assembly constituency (No. 128), a Scheduled Caste-reserved seat in the Kerala Legislative Assembly, one of 140 such constituencies in the state. The constituency elects a single member to represent its approximately 200,000 electors in the unicameral legislature, which convenes in Thiruvananthapuram. This assembly segment falls within the Attingal Lok Sabha constituency for national representation.[40] The current MLA is O. S. Ambika of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)), who secured the seat in the April 6, 2021, elections with 69,898 votes, equivalent to 47.35% of the 147,626 valid votes polled. Ambika defeated Adv. P. Sudheer of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), who received 38,262 votes (25.92%), by a margin of 31,660 votes; the Indian National Congress (INC) candidate placed third. This outcome reflected the Left Democratic Front's (LDF) continued dominance in the region, amid a statewide LDF victory.[40] At the municipal level, Attingal is administered by an elected council of 31 ward councilors under the Kerala Municipality Act, 1994, with elections held every five years by the State Election Commission. The 2020 local body polls, conducted on December 8, resulted in an LDF majority, enabling control of the chairperson and standing committees. Party-wise distribution of seats was as follows:| Party | Seats |
|---|---|
| CPI(M) | 17 |
| CPI | 3 |
| INC | 5 |
| BJP | 4 |
