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Patna (Hindi: Paṭanā, pronounced [ˈpəʈnaː] ), historically known as Pāṭaliputra,[12] is the capital and largest city of the Indian state of Bihar.[1] According to the United Nations, as of 2018, Patna had a population of 2.35 million,[13] making it the 19th largest city in India.[1] Covering 250 square kilometres (97 sq mi) and over 2.5 million people, its urban agglomeration is the 18th largest in India. Patna also serves as the seat of Patna High Court. The Buddhist, Hindu and Jain pilgrimage centres of Vaishali, Rajgir, Nalanda, Bodh Gaya and Pawapuri are nearby and Patna City is a sacred city for Sikhs as the tenth Sikh Guru, Guru Gobind Singh was born here.[14] The modern city of Patna is mainly on the southern bank of the river Ganges. The city also straddles the rivers Son, Gandak and Punpun. The city is approximately 35 kilometres (22 mi) in length and 16 to 18 kilometres (9.9 to 11.2 mi) wide.

Key Information

One of the oldest continuously inhabited places in the world,[15] Patna was founded in 490 BCE by the king of Magadha. Ancient Patna, known as Pataliputra, was the capital of the Magadha Empire throughout the Haryanka, Nanda, Mauryan, Shunga, Gupta, and Pala dynasties. Pataliputra was a seat of learning and fine arts. It was home to many astronomers and scholars including Aryabhata, Vātsyāyana and Chanakya.[16][17] During the Maurya period (around 300 BCE) its population was about 400,000.[18] Patna served as the seat of power, and political and cultural centre of the Indian subcontinent during the Maurya and Gupta empires.[19] With the fall of the Gupta Empire, Patna lost its glory. The British revived it again in the 17th century as a centre of international trade. Following the partition of Bengal presidency in 1912, Patna became the capital of Bihar and Orissa Province.[20]

Until the 19th century, it was a major trading and commercial hub in India.[21] After independence there were a few downturns but its economy was still stable.[22] After the separation of Jharkhand from Bihar, it lost its glory.[23] As per the Directorate of Economics and Statistics (Government of Bihar), Nominal GDP of Patna District was estimated at INR 63,176.55 crores in 2011-12.[24][25] As of 2011-12, Patna already recorded per capita gross domestic product of 1,08,657, way ahead of many other Indian cities and state capitals.[24][26] Using figures for assumed average annual growth, Patna is the 21st fastest growing city in the world and 5th fastest growing city in India according to a study by the City Mayors Foundation. Patna registered an average annual growth of 3.72% during 2006–2010.[27] As of 2011-12, the GDP per capita of Patna is ₹1,08,657, and its GDP growth rate is 7.29 per cent. In June 2009, the World Bank ranked Patna second in India (after Delhi) for ease of starting a business.[28]

Etymology

[edit]

The name of this city has changed with time. One of the oldest cities of India, there are several theories regarding the origin of the modern name Patna (Bengali: পাটনা; Devanagari: पटना; Kaithi: 𑂣𑂗𑂢𑂰; Gurmukhi: ਪਟਨਾ; Urdu: پٹنہ). It is etymologically derived from Patan (Devanagari: पटन), the name of the Hindu goddess, Patan Devi.[29] Patan Devi Mandir is still in old Patna near Gulzarbagh mandi along with another, Patan Devi Mandir, near Takht Sri Patna Sahib. Many believe Patna derived its name from Patli, a tree variety that was found in abundance in the historic city.[30] It is also seen on the state tourism's logo.[31] The place is mentioned in Chinese traveller Fa Hien's records as Pa-lin-fou.[29] The city has been known by various names through more than 2,000 years of existence – Pataligrama, Pataliputra, Kusumapura, Kusumdhwaja Pushpapuram, Padmavathi, Azimabad and the present-day Patna.[32][33] Legend ascribes the origin of Patna to the mythological King Putraka who created Patna by magic for his queen Patali, literally "trumpet flower", which gives it its ancient name Pataligrama. It is said that in honour of the queen's firstborn, the city was named Pataliputra. Gram is Sanskrit for village and Putra means son.[34] Legend also says that the Emerald Buddha was created in Patna (then Pataliputra) by Nagasena in 43 BCE.[35]

History

[edit]

Ancient Era

[edit]

Traditional Buddhist literature attributes foundation of Patna 490 BCE[36][37] as Ajatashatru, the king of Magadha, wanted to shift his capital from the hilly Rajagrha (today Rajgir) to a strategically chosen place to better combat the Licchavis of Vaishali.[38] He chose the site on the bank of the Ganges and fortified the area. Gautama Buddha travelled through this place in the last year of his life. He prophesied a great future for this place even as he predicted its ruin due to flood, fire, and feud.[39] According to Dieter Schlingloff, the Buddhist accounts may have presented the grandeur of Patna as a prophecy and that its wooden fortifications, unlike other early historic Indian cities, indicate that it might be much older than thought but only archaeological excavation and C14 dates of its wooden palisades which is presently lacking may establish this.[40]

Mauryan Empire

[edit]
Statue of Matrikas found near Agam Kuan, built by Ashoka.

Megasthenes, the Indo-Greek historian and ambassador to the court of Chandragupta Maurya, gave one of the earliest accounts of the city. He wrote that the city was on the confluence of the rivers Ganga and Arennovoas (Sonabhadra – Hiranyawah) and was 14 kilometres (9 mi) long and 2.82 kilometres (1.75 mi) wide.[41][42] Megasthenes, the Greek ambassador to India, described the city as the greatest city on earth during its heyday.[43] The Shungas ultimately retained control of Pataliputra and ruled for almost 100 years. The Shungas were followed by the Kanvas and eventually by the Guptas.[44] Some Chinese travellers came to India in pursuit of knowledge and recorded their observations about Pataliputra in their travelogues. One such famous account was recorded by a Chinese Buddhist traveller Fa Hien, who visited India between 399 and 414 CE, and stayed here for many months translating Buddhist texts.[45] When the Chinese Buddhist Monk Faxian visited the city in 400 A.D, he found the people to be rich and prosperous; they practised virtue and justice. He found that the nobles and householders of the city had constructed several hospitals in which the poor of all countries, the needy, the crippled, and the diseased, could get treatment. They could receive every kind of help gratuitously. Physicians would inspect the diseases and order them food, drink, and medicines.[46][page needed]

Gupta and Pala empire

[edit]
Main street of Patna, showing one side of the Chowk, 1814–15.
City of Patna, on the River Ganges, 19th-century painting.

In the years that followed, many dynasties ruled the Indian subcontinent from the city, including the Gupta Empire and the Pala kings. With the disintegration of the Gupta empire, Patna passed through uncertain times. Bakhtiar Khilji captured Bihar in the 12th century and destroyed everything, and Patna lost its prestige as the political and cultural centre of India.[47]

Mughal Empire

[edit]
Guru Tegh Bahadur (in Dhaka) being told about the birth of Gobind Rai (in Patna), 19th century painting

The Mughal Empire was a period of unremarkable provincial administration from Delhi.[48] The most remarkable period during the Middle Ages was under the Afghan emperor Sher Shah Suri, who revived Patna in the middle of the 16th century. He built a fort and founded a town on the banks of the Ganges. Sher Shah's fort in Patna does not survive, although the Sher Shah Suri mosque, built in Afghan architectural style, does. Mughal emperor Akbar reached Patna in 1574 to crush the rebellious Afghan Chief Daud Khan. One of the navratnas from Akbar's court, his official historian and author of "Ain-i-Akbari" Abul Fazl refers to Patna as a flourishing centre for paper, stone and glass industries. He also refers to the high quality of numerous strains of rice grown in Patna, famous as Patna rice in Europe.[49] By 1620, the city of Patna was being described as the "chiefest mart towne of all Bengala" (i.e. largest town in Bengal)[38][50] in northern India, "the largest town in Bengal and the most famous for trade".[51] This was before the founding of the city of Calcutta. Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb acceded to the request of his favourite grandson, Prince Muhammad Azim, to rename Patna as Azimabad, in 1704 while Azim was in Patna as the subedar. Patna or Azimabad did see some violent activities, according to Phillip Mason, writing in the book "The Men Who Ruled India". "Aurangzeb had restored the poll tax (Jazia) on unbelievers, which had to be compounded for. In Patna, Peacock, the factory's chief, was not sufficiently obedient. He was seized, forced to walk through the town bare-headed and bare-footed, and subjected to many other indignities before he paid up and was released." Little changed during this period other than the name. With the decline of the Mughal empire, Patna moved into the hands of the Nawabs of Bengal, who levied a heavy tax on the populace but allowed it to flourish as a commercial centre. The mansions of the Maharaja of Tekari Raj dominated the Patna riverfront in 1811–12.[52] In 1750, the future Nawab of Bengal, Siraj ud-Daulah revolted against his grandfather, Alivardi Khan, and seized Patna, but quickly surrendered and was forgiven.[53] Guru Gobind Singh (22 December 1666 – 7 October 1708), the tenth Guru of the Sikhs, was born as Gobind Rai in Patna to Guru Teg Bahadur, the ninth Guru of the Sikhs, and his wife Mata Gujri. His birthplace, Patna Sahib, is one of the most sacred sites of pilgrimage for Sikhs.[54]

Portuguese Empire

[edit]

As trade grew, settlements of the Portuguese empire expanded to the Bengal Gulf. Since at least 1515, the Portuguese were in Bengal as traders, and later in 1521, an embassy was sent to Gaur to create factories in the region. The Bengal Sultan after 1534 allowed the Portuguese to develop several settlements as Chitagoong e Satgaon.[55] In 1535 the Portuguese were allied with the Bengal sultan and held the Teliagarhi pass[56] 280 km from Patna helping to avoid the invasion by the Mughals. By then, several of the products came from Patna, and the Portuguese sent in traders, establishing a factory there in 1580 at least.[57] The products were shipped out down the river until other Portuguese ports as Chittagoon e Satgaoon, and from there to the rest of the empire.

British Empire

[edit]

During the 17th century, Patna became a centre of international trade.[50] In 1620, the English East India Company established a factory in Patna for trading in calico and silk. Soon it became a trading centre for saltpetre. Francois Bernier, in Travels in the Mogul Empire (1656–1668), says, ". It was carried down the Ganges with great facility, and the Dutch and English sent large cargoes to many parts of the Indies, and Europe". This trade encouraged other Europeans, principally the French, Danes, Dutch, and Portuguese, to compete in the lucrative business. Peter Mundy, writing in 1632, described Patna as "the greatest mart of the eastern region".[48] In 1763, Nawab Mir Qasim ordered the killing of 45 mainly British employees and 200 sepoys of the East India Company in the Patna massacre; the prisoners were shot to death in their cells and their bodies dumped in a well.[58] After the decisive Battle of Buxar of 1764, the treaty of Allahabad marked the start of the political and constitutional involvement of the British in India. It gave the East India Company the right to collect a tax of this former Mughal province by the Mughal emperor. Patna was annexed by the company in 1793 to its territory when Nizamat (Mughal suzerainty) was abolished, and the British East India Company took control of the province of Bengal-Bihar. Patna, however, continued as a trading centre. In 1912, when the Bengal Presidency was partitioned, Patna became the capital of the British province of Bihar and Orissa. However, in 1936 Orissa became a separate entity with its capital. To date, a major population of Bengalis continue to live in Patna.[20][59]

Indian Independence Movement

[edit]

People from Patna were greatly involved in the Indian independence movement.[60][61] Most notable movements were the Champaran movement against the Indigo plantation and the 1942 Quit India Movement.[62][63] National leaders who came from the city include Swami Sahajanand Saraswati; the first President of the Constituent Assembly of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad; Bihar Vibhuti (Anugrah Narayan Sinha); Basawon Singh (Sinha); and Loknayak (Jayaprakash Narayan).

Post-Independence

[edit]

Patna remained the capital of Bihar after India gained independence in 1947, even as Bihar was partitioned again in 2000 when Jharkhand became a separate state of the Indian union.[59] On 27 October 2013, six people were killed and 85 others were injured in a series of co-ordinated bombings at an election rally for BJP candidate Narendra Modi.[64] On 3 October 2014, 33 people were killed and 26 injured in a stampede at Gandhi Maidan during Vijaya Dashmi celebrations.[65]

Geography

[edit]

Topography

[edit]
Map of Patna district
Patna's Urban agglomeration
Jurisdiction Population
Town Type Estimate
(2011)
Patna Municipal Corporation 1,684,222
Danapur Nagar Parishad 182,429
Badalpura Out Growth 75
Danapur Cantonment Cantonment Board 28,723
Khagaul Nagar Parishad 44,364
Nohsa Census Town 16,680
Pataliputra Housing Colony Census Town 3,531
Phulwari Sharif Nagar Parishad 81,740
Saidpura Census Town 7,392
Patna UA 2,049,156
Patna district 5,838,465
Source:[66][67]

Patna is on the southern bank of the river Ganges.[68] The total area of Patna is 250 km2 (97 sq mi). The municipal area constitutes 109.218 km2 (42.169 sq mi). The suburban area covers 140.782 km2 (54.356 sq mi). It has an average elevation of 53 m (174 ft). A characteristic feature of the geography of Patna is its confluence of major rivers.[69]

During the British Raj, Patna was part of the Bengal Presidency. After Nalanda district was carved out of Patna district in 1976,[70] Patna was purged of all hilly regions. It is an alluvial, flat expanse of land. The land in the district is fertile and is almost entirely cultivated, with no forest cover. Alluvial soil is ideal for cultivating rice, sugarcane, and other food grains. The area under cultivation is studded with mango orchards and bamboo groves. In the fields along the banks of river Ganges, weeds such as ammannia, citriculari, hygrophile and sesbania grow. But palmyra, date palm, and mango orchards are found near habitations. Dry stretches of shrubbery are sometimes seen in the villages far from the rivers. Trees commonly found are bel, siris, jack fruit, and the red cotton tree.[71] Patna is unique in having four large rivers in its vicinity.[72] It is the largest riverine city in the world.[73] The topography of Patna city is saucer shaped as per Patna City Development Plan prepared in 2006.[74][75] The bridge over the river Ganges, named Mahatma Gandhi Setu, is 5575m long. It is the longest river bridge in India.[76]

Patna comes under India's seismic zone-IV, indicating its vulnerability to major earthquakes, but earthquakes have not been common in recent history.[77] Patna also falls in the risk zone for floods and cyclones.[78][79]

Climate

[edit]
Bank of River Ganges
Monsoon clouds over Priyadarshi Nagar, a part of Kankarbagh- residential area in Eastern Patna.

Patna has a humid subtropical climate under the Köppen climate classification: (Cwa) with sweltering summers from late March to June, the monsoon season from late June to late September and chilly winter nights and foggy or sunny days from November to February.[80] Highest temperature ever recorded was 46.6 °C (115.9 °F) in the year 1966,[81] the lowest ever was 1.1 °C (34 °F) on 9 January 2013,[82] and highest rainfall was 204.5 mm (8.05 in) in the year 1997.[81]

The table below details historical monthly averages for climate variables.

Climate data for Patna Airport (1991–2020, extremes 1951–2013)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 33.1
(91.6)
35.1
(95.2)
41.4
(106.5)
44.6
(112.3)
45.6
(114.1)
46.6
(115.9)
41.6
(106.9)
39.7
(103.5)
37.6
(99.7)
38.2
(100.8)
34.6
(94.3)
30.5
(86.9)
46.6
(115.9)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 22.1
(71.8)
26.1
(79.0)
32.2
(90.0)
37.1
(98.8)
37.5
(99.5)
36.4
(97.5)
33.4
(92.1)
33.1
(91.6)
32.6
(90.7)
32.1
(89.8)
29.1
(84.4)
24.3
(75.7)
31.3
(88.3)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 9.2
(48.6)
12.5
(54.5)
17.0
(62.6)
22.2
(72.0)
25.2
(77.4)
26.7
(80.1)
26.5
(79.7)
26.5
(79.7)
25.7
(78.3)
22.0
(71.6)
15.4
(59.7)
10.7
(51.3)
20.0
(68.0)
Record low °C (°F) 1.1
(34.0)
3.4
(38.1)
8.2
(46.8)
13.3
(55.9)
17.7
(63.9)
19.3
(66.7)
21.1
(70.0)
20.2
(68.4)
19.0
(66.2)
12.0
(53.6)
7.7
(45.9)
2.2
(36.0)
1.1
(34.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 10.2
(0.40)
12.6
(0.50)
8.9
(0.35)
11.9
(0.47)
48.4
(1.91)
162.2
(6.39)
289.1
(11.38)
266.6
(10.50)
209.7
(8.26)
49.7
(1.96)
5.3
(0.21)
4.7
(0.19)
1,077.6
(42.43)
Average rainy days 1.1 1.2 0.6 1.0 3.0 6.9 12.6 12.4 9.2 2.7 0.4 0.4 51.6
Average relative humidity (%) (at 17:30 IST) 67 53 38 33 43 59 74 76 76 69 67 72 61
Mean monthly sunshine hours 207.7 228.8 260.4 264.0 272.8 192.0 130.2 151.9 162.0 238.7 240.0 201.5 2,550
Mean daily sunshine hours 6.7 8.1 8.4 8.8 8.8 6.4 4.2 4.9 5.4 7.7 8.0 6.5 7.0
Average ultraviolet index 6 7 9 11 12 12 12 12 11 8 6 5 9
Source 1: India Meteorological Department (sun 1971–2000)[83][84][85][86]
Source 2: Weather Atlas[87]

Air pollution

[edit]

Pollution is a major concern in Patna. According to the CAG report, tabled in the Bihar Legislative Assembly in April 2015, respirable suspended particulate matter (RSPM) level (PM-10) in Patna was 355, three-and-a-half times higher than the prescribed limit of 100 micro-gram per cubic metre,[88] primarily due to high vehicular[89] and industrial emissions[90] and construction activities in the city.[91] In May 2014, a World Health Organization survey declared Patna the second most air polluted city in India, only after Delhi, with the survey calculating the airborne particulate matter in the state capital's ambient air (PM-2.5) to be 149 micro-grams, six times more than the safe limit, which is 25 micro-grams.[92][93] Severe air pollution in the city has caused a rise in pollution-related respiratory ailments, such as lung cancer, asthma, dysentery and diarrhoea.[94][95] The dense smog in Patna during winter season results in major air and rail traffic disruptions every year.[96]

Patna has been ranked 10th best "National Clean Air City" (under Category 1 >10L Population cities) in India according to 'Swachh Vayu Survekshan 2024 Results' [97]

Economy

[edit]
Maurya Lok is a major shopping area of the city, and one of the oldest

Since the 17th century, Patna has been a centre of international trade and an agricultural and textile hub, including a major silk and calico market.[citation needed] After gaining independence in 1947, the economy remained relatively stable, including growth in produce and manufacturing of vegetable oil. From the 1980s onwards, the economy experienced fluctuations. When liberalisation came to India in the 1990s, Patna did not attract significant global funds or foreign investment which proved a setback for the economy. Although the city had several fertiliser plants and sugar mills, due to a weakened ecosystem, many companies incurred losses and were eventually forced to close or leave the state.[citation needed]

The economy of Patna has seen sustained growth since 2005, in particular from the fast-moving consumer goods industry, the service sector, and Green Revolution businesses.[98] In 2009, the World Bank ranked Patna as the second best city in India to start a business.[99] In 2010, Patna was ranked 21st fastest-growing city in the world and fifth fastest-growing city in India, and was forecast to grow at an average annual rate of 3.72% through 2020.[27]

Its largest exports are grain, sugarcane, sesame, and Patna rice, a local medium-grained variety. There are several sugar mills in and around Patna.[100] Patna has been described as an important business and luxury brand centre of eastern India.[98]

The major business districts of the city are Bander Bagicha, Exhibition Road, Gandhi Maidan Marg, Frazer Road, Indrapuri and Maurya Lok.

Many manufacturing companies, including Hero Cycles, Britannia Industries, PepsiCo, Sonalika Tractors and UltraTech Cement have established their manufacturing plants in the Patna metropolitan area. One of the world's largest leather clusters is in Fatuha, in Patna. Patna is also emerging as an information technology hub, including Tata Consultancy Services, which started operations in 2019 at a new Patna facility.[101]

Demographics

[edit]

With an estimated population of 1.68 million in 2011, Patna is the 19th most populous city in India and with over 2 million people, its urban agglomeration is the 18th largest in India. Residents of Patna are referred to by the demonym Patnaite.[105][106]

According to 2011 census data, Patna city had a population of 1,684,222 (before the expansion of the city limits) within the corporation limits, with 893,399 men and 790,823 women. This was a 22.3% increase compared to 2001 figures. 11.32% of the population was under six years of age, with 102,208 boys and 88,288 girls. The overall literacy rate is 83.37%, with the male literacy rate being 87.35% and female 79.89%. The sex ratio of Patna is 885 females per 1,000 males. The child sex ratio of girls is 877 per 1000 boys.[107] The urban agglomeration had a population of 2,049,156, of which 1,087,285 are male and 961,871 are females with 82.73% literacy.[108] Patna is the second largest city (in terms of population) in eastern India.[109]

Roughly 0.25% of Patna's population lives in slums, which makes Patna the city with the lowest percentage of people living in slums in India.[110] Like other fast-growing cities in the developing world, Patna suffers from major urbanisation problems including unemployment, poor public health, and poor civic and educational standards for a large section of the population.[111] In 2015, the National Sample Survey Organisation revealed that, for females in India, Patna had the highest unemployment rate at 34.6%, and for males, it was the second highest with a rate of 8% in 2011–12.[112]

Religion and language

[edit]
Religion in Patna city (2011)[113]
Religion Percent
Hinduism
86.39%
Islam
12.27%
Christianity
0.51%
Other or not stated
0.83%

According to the 2011 census of India, 86.39% of Patna's residents practice Hinduism. Islam is the second most popular at 12.27%. Christianity, Jainism, Sikhism, and Buddhism are among the other minority religions. 0.01% practice other religions and 0.49% no particular religion.[113]

Languages of Patna city (2011)[114]
  1. Hindi (65.9%)
  2. Magahi (18.0%)
  3. Urdu (9.67%)
  4. Bhojpuri (3.19%)
  5. Maithili (1.79%)
  6. Others (1.37%)

Hindi and Urdu are official languages of the state of Bihar, but many other languages are also spoken. The native language is Magadhi or Magahi, named after Magadha, the ancient name of South Bihar, and is most widely spoken. Hindi is spoken by 65.94% of the population, 18.04% Magahi, 9.67% Urdu, 3.19% Bhojpuri and 1.79% Maithili as their first language.[114]

Administration

[edit]

The Patna sub-division (Tehsil) is one of the 6 Tehsils of the Patna district. It is headed by an IAS or state Civil service officer of the rank of Sub Divisional Magistrate (SDM). The SDM of Patna Tehsil reports to the District Magistrate (DM) of Patna District.

Blocks

[edit]

The Patna Tehsil is divided into 3 Blocks, each headed by a Block Development Officer (BDO). The list of Blocks is as follows:

  1. Patna
  2. Sampatchak
  3. Phulwari Sharif

Government

[edit]

Civic administration

[edit]

The civic administration of Patna is run by several government agencies and has overlapping structural divisions. At least five administrative definitions of the city are available; listed in ascending order of area: Patna division, Patna district (also the Patna Police area), the Patna Metropolitan Region[115] (also known as Patna Planning area),[116] "Greater Patna" or PRDA area, which adds to the PMC a few areas just adjacent to it[117] and Patna Municipal Corporation area.

City officials 
Assumed office Office Source
Corporation Mayor Sita Sahu, BJP June 2017 Maurya Lok [118]
Corporation Commissioner Animesh Kumar Parashar, IAS November 2021 Maurya Lok [119]
Divisional Commissioner Sanjay Kumar Agarwal, IAS October 2019 Near Golghar, Gandhi Maidan [120]
District Magistrate Dr.Chandrashekhar Singh, IAS January 2021 Patna Collectorate [121]
Senior Superintendent of Police Manavjit Singh Dhillon, IPS January 2022 South Gandhi Maidan Marg [122]

The Patna Municipal Corporation, or PMC, oversees and manages the civic infrastructure of the city's 75 wards,[118] which accommodates a population of 1.7 million as per 2011 Census. The municipal corporation consists of democratically elected members; each ward elects a Councillor to the PMC.[123] The PMC is in charge of the civic and infrastructure needs of the metropolis.

As Patna's apex body, the corporation discharges its functions through the mayor-in-council, which comprises a mayor, a deputy mayor, and other elected members of the PMC. The Mayor is usually chosen through indirect election by the councillors from among themselves. The functions of the PMC include water supply, drainage and sewerage, sanitation, solid waste management, street lighting, and building regulation. The Municipal Commissioner is the chief Executive Officer and head of the executive arm of the Municipal Corporation. All executive powers are vested in the Municipal Commissioner who is an Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer appointed by the state government.[124] Although the Municipal Corporation is the legislative body that lays down policies for the governance of the city, it is the Commissioner who is responsible for the execution of the policies. The Commissioner is appointed for a fixed term as defined by state statute. The powers of the Commissioner are those provided by statute and those delegated by the Corporation or the Standing Committee. As of June 2017, the BJP won PMC Mayor seat; the mayor is Sita Sahu, while the deputy mayor is Vinay Kumar Pappu.[118] The Patna Municipal Corporation was ranked 4th out of 21 Cities for best governance & administrative practices in India in 2014. It scored 3.6 on 10 compared to the national average of 3.3.[125] The revenue district of Patna comes under the jurisdiction of a District Collector (District Magistrate).[126] The Collectors are in charge of the general administration, property records and revenue collection for the Central Government, and oversee the national elections held in the city.[127] The Bihar Urban Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (BUIDCO) and the Patna Metropolitan Area Authority, are responsible for the statutory planning and development of the Patna Metropolitan Region.[128] Patna Metropolitan Area Authority was established in 2016.[129] It is the superseding agency for the former Patna Regional Development Authority (PRDA), which was dissolved in 2006.[130] In addition to the city government, numerous commissions and state authorities—including the Ministry of Tourism, the Bihar Health Department, the Bihar Water Resources Department, National Ganga River Basin Authority, Bihar State Pollution Control Board and the Bihar Public Service Commission—play a role in the life of Patnaites. As the capital of Bihar, Patna plays a major role 8n both state politics and central politics.[131]

In October 2016, the Bihar cabinet approved the Patna Master Plan 2031, which envisages the development of a new airport at Bihta.[132][133] As of August 2015, the area of Patna city (along with its urban agglomeration) is 250 square kilometres (97 sq mi).[3] Patna Master 2031 is the second master plan of the city that has been passed ever, after the last plan was approved for 1961-1981.[134] Patna master plan covers six urban local bodies - Patna Municipal Corporation, Danapur Nagar Parishad, Phulwarisharif Nagar Parishad, Khagaul Nagar Parishad, Maner Nagar Panchayat and Fatuha Nagar Parishad.[135] The new master plan proposed to increase the area of Patna city to 1,167 square kilometres (451 sq mi) to transform it as a metropolitan city.[136] 5 satellite towns have also been proposed in the master plan at Bihta, Naubatpur, Punpun, Fatuha and Khusrupur.

Patna has been selected as one of the hundred Indian cities to be developed as a smart city under Government of India's flagship Smart Cities Mission.[137] With the grade of a Smart City, Patna will have highly up-to-date and radical provisions like uninterrupted electric supply, first-rate traffic and transport system, superior health care and many other prime utilities. Under this scheme, the city will use digital technology that will act as the integral mechanism of the aforesaid facilities and thereby further elevate the lifestyle of the citizens. A special purpose vehicle company named the Patna Smart City Limited has been formed to implement the smart city projects. On 22 November 2017, Eptisa Servicios de Ingenieria SL of Spain was chosen as the project management consultant.[138]

Politics

[edit]

As the seat of the Government of Bihar, The city has several federal facilities, including the Raj Bhavan: Governor's house, the Bihar Legislative Assembly; the state secretariat, which is housed in the Patna Secretariat; and the Patna High Court. The Patna High Court is one of the oldest High Court in India. The Patna High Court has jurisdiction over the state of Bihar.[139] Patna also has lower courts; the Small Causes Court for civil matters, and the Sessions Court for criminal cases.[140][141] The Patna Police, commanded by Senior Superintendent of Police, is overseen by the Bihar Government's Home Department. The Patna district elects two representatives to India's lower house, the Lok Sabha,[142] and 14 representatives to the state legislative assembly. The capital city of Patna has 8 State Legislative Assembly constituencies,[143] which form two constituencies of the Lok Sabha (the lower house of the Parliament of India).

8 State Legislative Assembly constituencies in capital city of Patna
City representatives (Legislators) 
Member Party Constituency Source
Ravi Shankar Prasad, MP BJP Patna Sahib [144]
Misa Bharti, MP RJD Pataliputra [145]
Sanjiv Chaurasiya, MLA BJP Digha [146]
Nitin Naveen, MLA BJP Bankipur [146]
Nand Kishore Yadav, MLA BJP Patna Sahib [146]
Arun Kumar Sinha, MLA BJP Kumhrar [146]
Rama Nand Yadav, MLA RJD Fatuha [147]
Ritlal Yadav, MLA RJD Danapur [146]
Gopal Ravidas, MLA CPI-ML(L) Phulwari [148]
Bhai Virendra, MLA RJD Maner [149]

Utility services

[edit]
Bhootnath Road TV Tower broadcasts programming to Patna

Groundwater fulfills the basic needs of the people,[150] administered by Patna Jal Parishad under Patna Municipal Corporation.[151] The public water supply system comprises 98 tube wells[152] that pump water directly to the distribution mains. Around 23 overhead reservoirs[150] of which only the ones at Agam Kuan, Gulzarbagh Press, Guru Gobind Singh Hospital and High Court serve the city. The sewerage system in Patna was set up in 1936. At present, there are four sewage treatment plants[153] at Saidpur, Beur, Pahari and Karmali Chak.[154] In 2019, the central government has started the process Nirmal Ganga, which is to build new sewerage infrastructure at Patna's Karmalichak as well as in Barh, Naugachia and Sultanganj. The new infrastructure will be capable of preventing the flow of 67 million litre of sewage into Ganga.[155]

As of 2011, the city's electricity consumption is about 601 kWh per capita, even though the actual demand is much higher.[156] Electricity supply to the city is regulated and distributed by the South Bihar Power Distribution Company Limited[157] managed by Bihar State Power Holding Company Limited (the holding company and a successor company of erstwhile Bihar State Electricity Board).[158] The city forms the Patna Electric Supply Undertaking (PESU)[159] Circle, which is further divided into two wings namely Patna East (consists Kankarbagh, Patna City, Gulzarbagh, Bankipore, Rajendra Nagar Divisions) and Patna West (Consists Danapur, New Capital, Pataliputra, Gardanibagh, Dak Bungalow divisions).[160][161]

Direct–to–home (DTH) is available via DD Free Dish, Airtel digital TV, Dish TV, Tata Sky, Videocon d2h, Sun Direct and Reliance Digital TV.[162] Cable companies include Darsh Digital Network Pvt. Ltd.,[163] SITI Maurya Cablenet Pvt. Ltd[164] etc. The Conditional Access System for cable television was implemented in March 2013.[165]

Patna comes under the Patna Telecom District of the Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL),[166] India's state-owned telecom and internet services provider. Both Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) and Code division multiple access (CDMA) mobile services are available.[167] Apart from telecom, BSNL also provides broadband internet service.[168] Among private enterprises, Bharti Airtel, Reliance Jio, Reliance GSM/CDMA, Idea Cellular, Aircel, Tata Teleservices (Tata DoCoMo, Virgin Mobile and Tata Indicom), Telenor (Formerly Uninor & Now Acquired by Bharti Airtel), Vodafone and Videocon Telecom[169] are the leading telephone and cell phone service providers in the city.[170][171]

Patna was the second Indian city, after Bangalore,[172] which offered free WiFi connectivity to its citizens in February 2014. By surpassing the previous record-holder, Beijing in China,[173] Patna's WiFi zone is the world's longest free WiFi zone, which covers a 20-km stretch from NIT Patna on Ashok Rajpath to Danapur.[174][175]

Transport

[edit]

Roads

[edit]
Bihar's longest flyover from Jagdeo Path Mor to Sheikhpura Mor in Bailey Road, Patna
Chiriyatand Flyover at Patna, one of the many new ones that have come up in the city recently.
Radio Taxis
Digha–Sonpur Bridge connecting Patna with North Bihar.

Patna is about 100 km south of national East – West Highway corridor. The NH 30, NH 31 and NH 2 passes through the city. The Ashok Rajpath, Patna-Danapur Road, Bailey Road, Harding Road and Kankarbagh old bypass Road are the major corridors. Patna was one of the first places in India to use horse-drawn trams for public transport.[176] Public transportation is provided for by buses, auto rickshaws and local trains. Auto rickshaws are said to be the lifeline of the city.[177] BSRTC has started City bus service on all major routes of Patna.[178][179] App based cab service is available within city.[180][181] Patna is about 70.02KM away from Chhapra

Air transport

[edit]
Jay Prakash Narayan International Airport, Patna

Patna Airport known as Lok Nayak Jayaprakash Narayan International Airport is classified as a restricted international airport.[182] The arrival of several low-cost carriers and a number of new destinations have caused a growth in air traffic in recent years, as has an improvement in the situation with regard to law and order.[183] For the period April to December 2009 the airport ranked first in a survey of 46 airports in the country in terms of percentage growth of domestic passengers as well as domestic aircraft movement.[184] The Airport Authority of India (AAI) has proposed to develop a civil enclave at Bihta Air Force Station to serve as the new airport for Patna. The military airfield lies 40 kilometres (25 mi) southwest of Patna, in Bihta.[185]

Railways

[edit]
Patna Junction Railway Station, Patna

Patna is served by several railway stations within. The Patna Junction railway station is the main railway station of the city, and one of the busiest railway stations in India.[186] Patna lies in between New Delhi and Kolkata on Howrah–Delhi main line, which is one of the busiest rail routes in India.[187] Patna Junction is directly connected to most of the major cities in India.[188] The city has four additional major railway stations: Rajendra Nagar Terminal (adjacent to Kankarbagh), Patliputra Junction (near Bailey road), Danapur (near western outskirts) and Patna Sahib (in Patna City area). Danapur is the divisional headquarters of East Central Railway zone's Danapur railway division. Patna is well connected with Gaya, Jehanabad, Bihar Sharif, Rajgir, Islampur, Jamalpur Junction and Munger through daily passenger and express train services. India's longest road-cum-rail bridge, Digha–Sonpur Bridge, across the Ganges River, connects Digha, Patna to Pahleja Ghat in Sonpur.[189] The bridge was completed in 2015,[190][191] and is 4.55 kilometres (2.83 miles) long, therefore the second longest rail-cum-road bridge in India, after Bogibeel Bridge in Assam.[192]

The city is served by several major road highways and state highways, including National Highways 19,[193] 30,[194] 31,[195] and 83.[196] Pataliputra Bus Terminal is an upcoming ISBT. Asia's longest river bridge, the Mahatma Gandhi Setu (built 1982), is in Patna and connects the city to Hajipur across the Ganga. In recent times, the bridge has been witnessing major traffic chaos and accidents due to excessive numbers of vehicles passing over it and regularly overloading the structure.[197] A new six lane road bridge across the Ganges parallel to Mahatma Gandhi Setu is already been completed and in use which is connecting Kacchi Dargah in Patna City to Bidupur in Vaishali district,[198] which is the longest bridge in India.[199] Patna is well connected with roads to various major cities of Bihar like Hajipur, Munger, Jamalpur, Bhagalpur, Gaya Motihari, and Purnia.

Patna is 1,015 kilometres (631 miles) east from Delhi, 1,802 kilometres (1,120 miles) northeast from Mumbai,1,527 kilometres (949 miles) north from Hyderabad and 556 kilometres (345 miles) northwest from Kolkata.[200] Luxury bus service between Patna and several neighbouring cities is provided by the Bihar State Tourism Development Corporation and the Bihar State Road Transport Corporation.[201] Auto rickshaws are a popular mode of transportation.[202] Prepaid auto services operated by an all-women crew was started in 2013 in Patna, which is the first of its kind in India.[203] Radio Taxi services are available within city limits and surrounding areas. There are also private options such as Ola Cabs.[181][180]

Metro

[edit]

Patna Metro is an under-construction rapid transit system for the city. It would be owned and operated by state run Patna Metro Rail Corporation.[204] It will be constructed on Public Private Partnership (PPP) mode, estimated to cost 140 billion (US$2 billion).[205] It will have 5 lines with a total planned length of 60 kilometres (37 mi), which will be built in 3 phases.[206] Patna Monorail Project covering the municipal area is also underway. Recently the central government approved Patna metro rail project comprising two corridors (Danapur - Khemnichak and Patna Junction - Pataliputra Bus Terminal).[207]

River Port on National Waterway 1 at Gai Ghat, Patna

The Ganges – navigable throughout the year – was the principal river highway across the vast Indo-Gangetic Plain. Vessels capable of accommodating five hundred merchants were known to ply this river in the ancient period; it served as a major trade route, as goods were transported from Pataliputra to the Bay of Bengal and further, to ports in Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia. The role of the Ganges as a channel for trade was enhanced by its natural links – it embraces all the major rivers and streams in both north and south Bihar.[208] In recent times, Inland Waterways Authority of India has declared the stretch of river Ganges between Allahabad and Haldia National Inland Waterway and has taken steps to restore and maintain its navigability. The National Waterway-1, the longest Waterway in India, stretches 1620 km in the River Ganga from Allahabad to Haldia via Varanasi, Munger, Bhagalpur passes through Patna.[209] This National Waterways has fixed terminal at Patna.[210]

Culture

[edit]
Magahi folk singers
Gandhi Maidan (shown above) lies in the heart of Patna and is the site for most political and social functions in the city.
The Mahavir Mandir is a famous temple in Patna.

Patna's native language is Magahi or Magadhi a language derived from the ancient Magadhi Prakrit,[211] which was created in the ancient kingdom of Magadha, the core of which was the area of Patna south of the Ganges. It is believed to be the language spoken by Gautama Buddha. Patna has a vibrant Bengali culture too with many Bengali stalwarts including the first Chief Minister of post-independence West Bengal, Bidhan Chandra Ray, being born here. The numerous Bengali speaking Patnaites have contributed massively into fine arts, culture, education and history of Bihar in general and Patna in particular.[212] However, Magahi was the official language of the Mauryan court, in which the edicts of Ashoka were composed.[213]

The name Magahi is directly derived from the name Magadhi Prakrit, and educated speakers of Magahi prefer to call it "Magadhi" rather than "Magahi".[214]

Patna has many buildings adorned with Indo-Islamic[215] and Indo-Saracenic architectural motifs. Several well-maintained major buildings from the colonial period have been declared "heritage structures";[216][217] others are in various stages of decay.[218] Established in 1917 as the Bihar's first museum, the Patna Museum (पटना संग्रहालय) houses large collections that showcase Indian natural history and Indian art.[219] The Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Library and Sinha Library are historic public libraries of Patna.[220][221]

Several theatres are in or near the central part of the city, including the Bhartiya Nritya Kala Mandir, the Rabindra Parishad, Premchand Rangshala and the Kalidas Rangalaya, which is home to the Bihar art theatre. Kalidas Rangalaya also hosts the Patliputra Natya Mahotsav, a dance festival.[222] But in the last two decades, the popularity of commercial theatres in the city has declined.[223]

The Patna School of Painting or Patna Qalaam, some times also called Company style, is an offshoot of the well-known Mughal Miniature school of painting, which flourished in Bihar during the early 18th to the mid-20th centuries.[224] The practitioners of this art form were descendants of Hindu artisans of Mughal painting who facing persecution under the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb and who found refuge, via Murshidabad, in Patna during the late 18th century. The Patna painters differed from the Mughal painters, whose subjects included only royalty and court scenes, in that they included as subjects bazaar scenes, scenes of Indian daily life, local dignitaries, festivals and ceremonies, and nature scenes.[225] The paintings were executed in watercolours on paper and on mica, but the style was generally of a hybrid and undistinguished quality. It is this school of painting that inspired the formation of the College of Arts and Crafts, Patna, under the leadership of Shri Radha Mohan, which is an important centre of fine arts in Bihar.[225]

Bihar Government is promoting its art and culture through Madhubani arts to educate people about Bihar's rich cultural diversity.[226]

Some well known dishes of Bihari cuisine include sattu paratha (parathas stuffed with roasted gram flour), "sattu ka sharbat" (a spiced drink with roasted gram flour as main ingredient), chokha (spicy mashed potatoes), fish curry, Bihari kebab, postaa-dana kaa halwaa, malpua, dal pitha (Similar to momos), kheer makhana (fox nut) and thekua/khajuria (a type of snack).[227]

Street foods such as samosa,[228] chaat, jalebi, litti chokha, phuchka (a deep-fried crêpe with tamarind sauce), South Indian and Chinese cuisine are favourite among Patnaites.[229] Taj Hotel Patna is under construction at Budh Marg Lodipur.[230]

Bihari Women have traditionally worn cotton sari but shalwar kameez and other western attire are gaining acceptance among younger women.[231] Western attire has gained wide acceptance among the urban men, although the traditional dhoti and kurta[232] are seen during festivals. Chhath, also called Dala Chhath, is a major ancient festival in Bihar.[233] It is celebrated twice a year: once in the summer, called the Chaiti Chhath, and once about a week after Deepawali, called the Kartik Chhath. Durga Puja, held in September–October, is Patna's another important festival; it is an occasion for glamorous celebrations.[234][235] Among the city's other festivals, are Saraswati Puja, Eid, Holi, Christmas, Vishwakarma Puja, Makar Sankranti, Raksha Bandhan and Rath Yatra. Cultural events include the Patna Book Fair, Patna Sahib Mahotsav, the Patna Film Festival, Bihar Diwas, Rajgir Mahotsav, Vaishali Mahotsav and the Sonepur Cattle Fair in neighbouring towns.

Tourism

[edit]
Golghar was originally built to serve as a granary for the British East India Company army during the famine of 1786. It now features an observation deck overlooking the Ganges and the city.
Sabhyata Dwar in Patna
Sanjay Gandhi Zoological Park in Patna

Patna is home to many tourist attractions and it saw about 2.4 million tourists (including day visitors) in 2005. Tourists visiting the city accounted for 41% of the total number of tourists visiting Bihar although Bodh Gaya was the most popular destination for foreign visitors.[236] The cultural heritage of Bihar is reflected in its many ancient monuments. Kumhrar and Agam Kuan are the sites of the ruins of the Ashokan Pataliputra. Didarganj Yakshi remains as an example of Mauryan art.[237]

Takht Sri Patna Sahib is one of the Five Takhts of Sikhism and consecrates the birthplace of the tenth Guru of the Sikhs, Gobind Singh.[238] There are five other Gurdwaras in Patna that are related to different Sikh Gurus; these are Gurdwara Pahila Bara,[239] Gurdwara Gobind Ghat,[240] Gurdwara Guru ka Bagh,[241] Gurdwara Bal Leela,[242] Gurdwara Handi Sahib,[243] and Prakash Punj.[244] Padri Ki Haveli, High Court, Golghar, Sultan Palace, and Secretariat Building are examples of British architecture. Gandhi Maidan is a historic ground in Patna where several freedom movement rallies took place. Newly built Buddha Smriti Park near Patna Junction is also becoming a major tourist attraction.[245]

The Patna Planetarium (Indira Gandhi Planetarium) is in Patna's Indira Gandhi Science Complex. It claims to be one of the largest planetariums in Asia and to attract a large number of tourists.[246][better source needed] The Sanjay Gandhi Jaivik Udyan (Patna Zoo) is at Bailey Road, Raj Bhawan, Rajbanshi Nagar, and includes over 300 mammals, 300 birds, and 450 species of reptiles as of January 2019.[247]

In 2015, the Bihar government has built a state-of-the-art art landmark museum in Patna at a cost of approximately 530 crores[248] on a site of 13.9 acres at Bailey Road.[249] 5 firms were shortlisted for the architectural design,[250] of which the Japanese firm Maki and Associates was chosen. It is now completed and opened for all.[251] Completed in May 2018, the Sabhyata Dwar was built with Mauryan-style architecture. It was opened to the general public in December 2018.[252]

In 2014, the Bihar government laid the foundation of Samrat Ashok International Convention Centre. It is expected to use more steel than used in raising Eiffel Tower and Indira Gandhi International Airport. Construction of Dr. A.P.J Abdul Kalam Science City began in February 2019.[253] The Eco Park is in Jawaharlal Nehru Marg. It has more than 3,000 varieties of plants and includes several theme parks, a restaurant, and a boat trip zone.

Education

[edit]
Indian Institute of Technology Patna at Bihta, one of the premier institutes of engineering and research in India.
Patna College, established 1863, is considered to be the oldest institution of higher education in Bihar.

Schools in Patna are either government-run schools or private schools. The schools are affiliated to Bihar School Examination Board (BSEB), Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS), or the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) boards. A number of Bengali medium schools also thrive in Patna.[254] Hindi and English are the primary languages of instruction.[255] A 2012 survey found 1,574 schools: of these, 78% were private unaided schools (most of them at an affordable cost), 21% were government schools and 1% were private aided.[256]

Under the 10+2+3/4 plan, students complete ten years of schooling and then enroll in schools that have a higher secondary facility and are affiliated to the Bihar State Intermediate Board, the All-India Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE), the NIOS[257] or the CBSE, where they select one of three streams: arts, commerce, or science.[254] This is followed by either a general degree course in a chosen field of study or a professional degree course, such as law, engineering, and medicine.[258]

Patna has important government educational institutions like Patna University, Anugrah Narayan College, Chanakya National Law University, Aryabhatta Knowledge University, Indian Institute of Technology Patna, Bakhtiyarpur College of Engineering, National Institute of Technology, Patna, Patna Science College, Patna Women's College, Patna Law College, Bihar Veterinary College, J.D. Women's College, Birla Institute of Technology, Patna,[259] Patna Medical College Hospital, Rajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Nalanda Medical College Hospital, Indira Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, Mahavir Cancer Sansthan, All India Institute of Medical Sciences Patna, National Institute of Fashion Technology Patna, Chandragupta Institute of Management, Development Management Institute, National Institute of Electronics & Information Technology, Patliputra University.[260]

Patna University was established in 1917 and is the seventh oldest modern university in the Indian Sub-continent.[261] Patna also has a variety of other universities, as well as many primary and secondary schools.

Nalanda University (also known as Nalanda International University) is an established university in Rajgir, around 100 kilometres (62 mi) from Patna. The University, created as a revival of an ancient centre of learning at Nalanda, began its first academic session on 1 September 2014.[262] It attracts students from across the globe.[263]

Sports

[edit]
Moin-Ul-Haque Stadium near Rajendra Nagar, used for cricket and association football.

As in the rest of India, cricket is popular in Patna and is played on grounds and in streets throughout the city.[264] There are several sports grounds across the city. The Bihar Cricket Association, which regulates cricket in Bihar,[265] is based in the city. Tournaments, especially those involving cricket, basketball, football, badminton, and table tennis, are regularly organised on an inter-locality or inter-club basis.

Moin-ul-Haq Stadium, which has a capacity of 25,000, has served as the venue for two one-day international cricket matches and several national sports events.[266] It was home to the Bihar cricket team. Due to negligence and lack of maintenance, the stadium is in a dilapidated state and no international match has been played here since 1996.[267] In 2013, it was announced by the Chief Minister of Bihar Nitish Kumar that an international cricket stadium will be constructed at Rajgir.[268]

The Patna Golf Club was established on 21 March 1916, and is one of the oldest golf courses in India. It has 18 holes in a historic setting in and around Bailey Road, a 165-acre (67 ha) course.[269][270]

Patna hosted the first ever woman's Kabaddi world cup.[271] It was held at the Patliputra Sports Complex, Kankarbagh from 1 to 4 March 2012.[272] Hosts India won the World Cup defeating Iran in the finals.[273] Patna also hosts the seven league matches of Pro Kabaddi League with its home team as Patna Pirates at the Patliputra Sports Complex.[274]

Other famous sports complexes of Patna are Bihar Military Police's Mithilesh Stadium,[275] East Central Railway zone's indoor stadium at Digha[276] etc.

Media

[edit]

The beginning of the 20th century was marked by a number of notable new publications. A monthly magazine named Bharat Ratna was started in Patna in 1901. It was followed by Ksahtriya Hitaishi, Aryavarta from Dinapure, Patna, Udyoga and Chaitanya Chandrika.[277] Udyog was edited by Vijyaanand Tripathy, a famous poet of the time and Chaitanya Chandrika by Krishna Chaitanya Goswami, a literary figure of that time. The literary activity was not confined to Patna alone but to many districts of Bihar.[278][279]

Magahi Parishad, established in Patna in 1952, pioneered Magadhi journalism in Bihar. It started the monthly journal, Magadhi, which was later renamed Bihan.[280]

Many national media agencies, including the Press Trust of India and Doordarshan's regional offices, are based in the city.[281] The Hindu, The Times of India, Hindustan Times, The Economic Times and The Telegraph are the five principal English-language daily newspapers which have Patna editions. The Pioneer and The Indian Express,[282] though not printed in the city, are other English-language daily newspapers available in the city. The city's Hindi newspapers include Hindustan Dainik, Dainik Jagran, Dainik Bhaskar,[283] Prabhat Khabar, Aaj and Rashtriya Sahara,[282] all of which have editions from Patna. There are also daily Urdu newspapers like Qaumi Tanzeem, Farooqi Tanzeem, and Qaumi Duniya Daily published in Patna.[282] There is also the Hindi and English mixed newspaper tabloid Inext.[284]

Patna has several AM and FM radio stations, including many state-owned channels. The city hosts several radio stations, including the state-owned All India Radio's Vividh Bharati, and FM 105. The All India Radio, Patna (officially Akashvani Patna Kendra) was established in 1948.[285]

Patna is served by several private channels.

Private FM stations

[edit]
No. Name Frequency Language
01 Radio Mirchi 98.3 FM Hindi
02 Radio City 91.1 FM Hindi
03 Big FM 95.0 FM Hindi & Bhojpuri
04 Red FM 93.5 FM Hindi

Notable people

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Patna, anciently known as Pataliputra or Patalipattan, is the capital and largest city of the Indian state of Bihar, located on the southern bank of the Ganges River in northern India.[1] Its history extends back to at least 600 BCE, marking it as one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited urban centers, and it functioned as the political heart of major ancient Indian empires for over a millennium.[1][2] Under Chandragupta Maurya, who founded the Maurya dynasty around 321 BCE by defeating the Nanda rulers of Magadha, Pataliputra became the capital of an empire that unified much of the Indian subcontinent.[2] The city later served as a key seat during the Gupta Empire, contributing to periods of significant cultural and administrative advancement.[1] In the colonial era, Patna was designated the capital of the Bihar and Orissa Province in 1912 after the partition of Bengal Presidency, a status it retained following Bihar's separation from Jharkhand in 2000.[3] As of 2025, Patna's urban population is estimated at approximately 2.69 million, supporting roles as a regional hub for administration, education—including institutions like the Indian Institute of Technology Patna—and trade, particularly in agriculture and related industries, amid ongoing urban expansion.[4] Defining features include archaeological remnants of Mauryan wooden architecture at sites like Kumhrar and British-era structures such as the Golghar granary, though many historical landmarks face neglect and encroachment pressures.[5]

Etymology

Origins and Evolution of the Name

The ancient settlement at the site of modern Patna, originally known as Pataligrama or Patali, was fortified by King Ajatashatru of Magadha around 490 BCE, leading to its renaming as Pataliputra (or Pāṭaliputra).[1] This name appears in early Buddhist texts like the Mahāparinibbāṇa Sutta, composed in the 4th–3rd centuries BCE, referencing it as a key urban center on the Ganges.[6] Greek accounts from Megasthenes, circa 300 BCE, record it as Palibothra, confirming its prominence as the Mauryan capital under Chandragupta Maurya from approximately 321 BCE.[1] The etymology of Pataliputra remains uncertain, with "pāṭalī" likely referring to the trumpet flower (Bignonia suaveolens) abundant in the region or a species of rice, combined with "putra" meaning "son" in Sanskrit, possibly evoking a legendary founder or floral association rather than literal progeny.[7] Alternative derivations link it to the pre-existing village Patali prefixed with "pattan," denoting a port or ferry crossing, reflecting its strategic location at the Ganges confluence facilitating trade.[1] These interpretations draw from Puranic texts like the Vāyu Purāṇa, which attribute foundational expansions to later Haryanka rulers such as Udayin around 460 BCE, though archaeological evidence from sites like Kumhrar supports continuous habitation from the 6th century BCE without resolving the precise linguistic origin.[7] The name Pataliputra endured through the Mauryan (322–185 BCE), Shunga (185–73 BCE), and Gupta (c. 320–550 CE) empires, symbolizing imperial continuity, but faded with urban decline post-Gupta invasions and floods by the 7th century CE.[1] Revival occurred under Sher Shah Suri (r. 1540–1545 CE), who shifted his capital from Bihar Sharif to the site in 1541 CE, rebuilding infrastructure and renaming it Patna—likely a simplification of "Patalipattan" or derived from "pattan" (port), aligning with its riverine commerce role, though some traditions invoke the local deity Patan Devi.[8] [1] In 1704 CE, Mughal prince Azim-us-Shan briefly redesignated it Azimabad after himself, but local and administrative persistence favored Patna, solidifying its modern usage by the early 18th century.[9]

History

Ancient Period

The ancient settlement at the site of modern Patna was originally known as Pataligrama, a village referenced in early Buddhist texts as a place visited by Gautama Buddha during the final year of his life, around the mid-5th century BCE.[8][10] The Mahaparinibbanasutta describes Buddha observing fortifications under construction there, indicating emerging strategic importance amid the political consolidation of the Magadha kingdom.[10] Pataliputra proper emerged circa 490 BCE when Ajatashatru, king of Magadha from the Haryanka dynasty (r. c. 492–460 BCE), transformed Pataligrama into a fortified town to secure the region's defenses against rival kingdoms like Kosala and the Licchavis.[11][12] This fortification leveraged the natural barriers of the Ganges River and surrounding wetlands, establishing it as a military outpost during Ajatashatru's campaigns, which included conflicts documented in Jain and Buddhist chronicles.[13] Ajatashatru's successor, Udayin (r. c. 460–444 BCE), further developed the site by extending its walls and moats, formally designating Pataliputra as the capital of Magadha around 460 BCE and relocating the royal seat from Rajagriha (modern Rajgir).[14][15] This shift reflected the city's advantageous position near the Ganges-Son confluence, facilitating trade, agriculture, and control over eastern India, though primary archaeological confirmation of these early Haryanka-era structures remains limited due to subsequent urban overlays and flood deposits.[16] Texts like the Puranas and early Buddhist accounts affirm Pataliputra's role as a burgeoning political hub by the late 5th century BCE, predating its expansion under later dynasties.[13]

Mauryan and Post-Mauryan Empires

Pataliputra, the ancient precursor to modern Patna, emerged as the political and administrative center of the Mauryan Empire following its conquest by Chandragupta Maurya around 321 BCE, marking the transition from Nanda rule to Mauryan dominance in Magadha.[17] Under Chandragupta (r. circa 321–297 BCE) and his successors Bindusara (r. circa 297–273 BCE) and Ashoka (r. circa 268–232 BCE), the city functioned as the imperial capital, overseeing an empire that extended from present-day Afghanistan to southern India, supported by a centralized bureaucracy and extensive road networks like the Uttarapatha.[18] Ashoka's reign, post-Kalinga War conversion to Buddhism around 260 BCE, elevated Pataliputra's role in disseminating edicts via inscribed pillars and rocks, with the city hosting the Third Buddhist Council circa 250 BCE to standardize doctrine amid sectarian disputes.[19] Archaeological evidence from sites like Kumhrar (ancient Pataliputra's core) substantiates the city's grandeur, including remnants of a vast wooden palisade enclosing an area of approximately 1,600 by 600 meters and an open-air assembly hall featuring over 80 polished sandstone pillars arranged in orthogonal rows, dated to the 3rd century BCE and attributed to Ashoka's era for administrative or ecclesiastical purposes.[20] Terracotta figurines and seals unearthed at Bulandi Bagh and other locales depict Mauryan-era craftsmanship, reflecting urban sophistication with influences from Achaemenid Persia in architectural elements like pillared halls.[21] These findings, excavated since the early 20th century under figures like David Spooner, underscore Pataliputra's status as a cosmopolitan hub integrating local Magadhan traditions with Hellenistic and Persian motifs post-Alexander's campaigns.[22] The Mauryan Empire's disintegration after circa 185 BCE, triggered by weak successors and regional revolts, led to the rise of the Shunga dynasty under Pushyamitra Shunga, a Brahmin general who assassinated the last Mauryan ruler Brihadratha, establishing control over Magadha with Pataliputra as capital from approximately 185 to 73 BCE.[23] The Shungas, emphasizing Vedic revival through rituals like the ashvamedha horse sacrifice performed by Pushyamitra, defended against Indo-Greek incursions while patronizing Bharhut-style stupa architecture, though Pataliputra's prominence waned as power shifted eastward under later kings like Agnimitra.[23] Succeeding them, the Kanva dynasty—founded by minister Vasudeva Kanva after overthrowing Shunga king Devabhuti—ruled briefly from 73 to 28 BCE, maintaining Pataliputra and Vidisha as bases amid fragmenting polities, before succumbing to Satavahana and regional influences.[24] This era saw Pataliputra's transition from imperial nucleus to a contested stronghold, with sparse archaeological continuity linking Mauryan wood-and-mud structures to emerging brick-based fortifications.[25]

Medieval Dynasties

Following the decline of the Gupta Empire in the 6th century CE, the Pala dynasty established control over Bihar, including Patna (ancient Pataliputra), around 750 CE under Gopala, marking a revival of Buddhist patronage and regional power.[26] The Palas initially used Pataliputra as their capital before shifting to sites like Vikramashila and Mudgagiri (modern Munger), with the city serving as a key administrative and cultural center during the reigns of Dharmapala (r. 770–810 CE) and Devapala (r. 810–850 CE), who expanded the empire to include much of northern India.[26] Pala rule, lasting until approximately 1174 CE under the later kings like Madanapala, emphasized monastic universities such as Nalanda near Patna, fostering scholarship but contributing to urban decay in Pataliputra as capitals moved eastward.[27] After the Palas' fragmentation amid invasions by the Rashtrakutas and Pratiharas, Patna experienced a period of local chieftaincies and instability until the early 13th century, when Muhammad Bakhtiyar Khilji's conquest of Bihar in 1203 CE brought the region under the Delhi Sultanate.[28] From 1206 to 1526 CE, successive Delhi dynasties—the Mamluk (Slave), Khalji, Tughlaq, Sayyid, and Lodi—exercised nominal or direct control over Patna as part of the Bihar province, with governors administering from forts and imposing Islamic taxation systems, though the city itself diminished in prominence compared to its ancient stature.[29] The Tughlaqs briefly shifted emphasis to Daulatabad, weakening central oversight, while Lodi rule saw Afghan influences strengthen in Bihar, setting the stage for regional autonomy.[29] By the mid-14th century, the independent Bengal Sultanate under Shamsuddin Ilyas Shah (r. 1342–1358 CE) absorbed Bihar, including Patna, into its domain, treating it as a frontier district with tribute collection and military outposts to counter Delhi's resurgence.[28] This Ilyas Shahi phase, extending to the early 16th century, integrated Patna into Bengal's trade networks along the Ganges but saw little monumental development, as power centered in Gaur and Sonargaon. The Bengal rulers maintained suzerainty until Humayun's Mughal campaigns disrupted the region. The Sur dynasty's brief interregnum under Sher Shah Suri (r. 1540–1545 CE), an Afghan warlord from Sasaram in Bihar, marked a temporary resurgence for Patna; he revived the ancient site by establishing an administrative complex along the Ganges in 1541 CE and constructing the Sher Shah Suri Mosque between 1540 and 1545 CE, exemplifying early Indo-Islamic architecture with its arched facades and minarets.[30][31] Sher Shah's reforms, including road networks connecting Patna to the empire's core, briefly elevated its strategic role before the Mughals reasserted control in 1555 CE, transitioning Bihar into a suba under Akbar's administration.[1]

Colonial Era

The British East India Company established a trading factory in Patna in 1620 at Alamganj, though it closed shortly after in 1621 and was re-established in 1651 before reopening in 1718.[32][33] Following the Company's victory at the Battle of Buxar in 1764, it acquired the diwani rights over Bihar in 1765, solidifying control and transforming Patna into a key commercial hub for commodities like indigo, gunpowder, and especially opium.[33][30] Patna emerged as the primary center for opium production, where the Company compelled local farmers to cultivate poppy on designated lands, processed the raw opium into exportable chests, and shipped it primarily to China, generating substantial revenue amid coercive agrarian policies.[34] In response to the devastating Bihar famine of 1770, which killed an estimated 10 million people, the Company commissioned the construction of the Golghar granary in Patna, completed on July 20, 1786, under engineer Captain John Garstin to store up to 140,000 tonnes of grain as a buffer against future shortages, though it was never fully utilized due to design flaws preventing efficient unloading.[35][36] Patna's strategic location facilitated administrative oversight, with the city serving as district headquarters under the Bengal Presidency. The Indian Rebellion of 1857 saw significant unrest in Patna's vicinity, beginning with the mutiny of sepoys from the Danapur garrison on July 25, 1857, who marched toward Arrah.[37] Bihar zamindar Kunwar Singh, aged 80, led guerrilla resistance against British forces across the region, employing tactics like ambushes and feigned retreats until his death from wounds on April 26, 1858, despite British reprisals that devastated local infrastructure and populations.[38] Following the rebellion's suppression, the Government of India Act 1858 transferred authority from the Company to direct Crown rule, with Patna retaining prominence as an administrative and educational center, including the founding of Patna College in 1863. Bihar remained part of the Bengal Presidency until its separation in 1912 to form the Bihar and Orissa Province.

Independence and Post-Colonial Development

Following India's independence on 15 August 1947, Patna continued to serve as the capital of Bihar, transitioning from its status as the administrative center of a British province to that of an Indian state. Bihar formally attained statehood under the Constitution of India on 26 January 1950, with Patna hosting key institutions such as the Bihar Legislative Assembly and the Governor's residence at Raj Bhavan. Sri Krishna Sinha, who had led the interim ministry since 1946, became the first Chief Minister, overseeing the integration of princely states like Saraikela and Kharsawan into Bihar by 1948.[2][39] Post-colonial administrative reforms emphasized land redistribution through the Bihar Land Reforms Act of 1950, which abolished the zamindari system inherited from British rule, aiming to transfer tenancy rights to cultivators and redistribute surplus land. However, implementation faced challenges, including legal delays and elite resistance, resulting in limited fragmentation of holdings and persistent rural inequality. Economically, Bihar initially leveraged its mineral resources—accounting for significant national output in coal and mica—but the central government's Freight Equalisation Policy, introduced in the early 1950s, subsidized transportation costs nationwide, eroding incentives for local industrialization by equalizing prices of raw materials across India. This policy, intended to promote balanced regional growth, instead disadvantaged resource-rich states like Bihar, contributing to industrial stagnation as factories shifted to coastal areas.[40][41] By the 1960s and 1970s, Patna emerged as a focal point for political activism amid Bihar's economic underperformance, exemplified by the 1966-67 drought that affected millions and highlighted infrastructural deficits in irrigation and flood control. The city hosted the Bihar Movement led by Jayaprakash Narayan starting in 1974, a campaign against corruption and authoritarianism under the Indira Gandhi administration, which mobilized students and farmers and culminated in the national Emergency declared in June 1975. Despite these upheavals, public investment in basic infrastructure remained modest; for instance, agricultural growth lagged due to inadequate extension services and reliance on flood-prone Gangetic plains, with Bihar's per capita income falling behind national averages by the 1980s. Analyses attribute this to a combination of policy missteps, such as overemphasis on heavy industry without supporting ecosystems, and governance issues including patronage networks that prioritized short-term redistribution over productive investments.[42][43]

Recent Developments (2000s–Present)

The administration of Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, in power since 2005, prioritized infrastructure to address longstanding traffic and connectivity issues in Patna, resulting in the construction of over a dozen major flyovers and elevated roads by the mid-2010s. A notable example is the 2.9 km four-lane flyover connecting Jagdeo Path to Sheikhpura Mor, completed in July 2015 at a cost of ₹300 crore, which eased congestion in eastern Patna.[44] Further expansions included multiple Ganga-spanning bridges, such as the JP Ganga Setu extension projects, contributing to Bihar's overall addition of 25 major river bridges between 2005 and 2020, compared to just 16 in the prior 58 years.[45] In 2025, Patna's elevated infrastructure advanced with the inauguration of the city's first double-decker flyover on Ashok Rajpath in June, a 2.2 km structure designed to separate local and long-distance traffic from Patna College Circle to Fraser Road.[46] The Patna Metro Rail project marked a milestone with the launch of its initial 3.6 km elevated Blue Line section from Malahi Pakri to New ISBT on October 6, 2025, operated initially by Delhi Metro Rail Corporation personnel; this priority corridor, part of a planned 14.6 km east-west line, aims for full Phase 1 completion by 2027–28.[47] [48] Educational developments bolstered Patna's role as a regional hub, with the Indian Institute of Technology Patna (established 2008) achieving 19th rank in engineering and 36th overall in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) 2025, reflecting investments in research and facilities.[49] The National Institute of Technology Patna, upgraded from its colonial-era origins, ranked 53rd in engineering and 13th in architecture in the same assessment, supporting growth in technical education enrollment.[50] Economically, Patna's per capita income stood at ₹131,064 as of recent district-level data, surpassing Bihar's state average and driving urban expansion, though regional disparities persist with neighboring districts like Sheohar at ₹19,592. The city's GDP growth averaged around 7% annually in the 2010s, fueled by services, construction, and government-led projects, positioning Patna as India's fifth-fastest-growing city by some mid-2010s metrics.[51] Despite progress, recurrent flooding hampers development, with 333.2 mm of rain in July 2025 causing widespread waterlogging in low-lying areas, homes, and hospitals due to clogged drains and encroachment on floodplains.[52] Similar events in 2019 and 2024 affected millions across Bihar, including Patna, underscoring vulnerabilities from rapid urbanization outpacing drainage upgrades.[53]

Geography and Environment

Location and Topography

Patna lies in the Indo-Gangetic Plain of eastern India, at approximately 25°37′N latitude and 85°08′E longitude, serving as the administrative capital of Bihar state.[54] Positioned on the southern bank of the Ganges River, the city extends along the river for roughly 32 kilometers eastward.[55] It is bordered by the Son River to the west and influenced by the nearby Gandak and Punpun rivers, which join the Ganges in proximity, creating a region marked by river confluences.[55] The terrain consists of flat alluvial plains formed by Ganges sediment deposition, characteristic of Bihar's southern alluvial zone.[56] Patna's average elevation measures 53 meters (173 feet) above mean sea level, with minimal variation across the urban area.[57] This low-lying, saucer-shaped topography, with ground levels gently sloping away from the river, facilitates fertile agriculture but heightens vulnerability to seasonal flooding from the Ganges and tributaries.[55]

Climate Patterns

Patna features a humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cwa), characterized by hot, dry summers, a pronounced monsoon season, mild winters, and transitional periods with variable humidity influenced by its location on the Indo-Gangetic Plain.[58] Annual average temperatures hover around 26°C, with extremes driven by continental air masses and the Bay of Bengal's moisture during monsoons.[59] Precipitation totals approximately 1,000–1,200 mm yearly, over 80% occurring from June to September, while the winter months remain largely rainless.[60] [61] Summer spans March to June, with rising temperatures peaking in May at average highs of 39–41°C and frequent heatwaves pushing maxima above 45°C; the record high is 46.6°C, recorded on May 9 (year unspecified in records). [60] Lows rarely drop below 25°C amid low humidity initially, though pre-monsoon thunderstorms (locally called kal baisakhi) introduce gusty winds and brief relief. The monsoon arrives in late June, delivering heavy, erratic rainfall—July averages 257 mm—accompanied by high humidity (often 80–90%) and daily highs of 32–35°C, fostering flooding risks along the Ganges.[60] Post-monsoon October sees clearing skies and moderating temperatures, transitioning to winter (November–February) where daytime highs average 20–25°C and nighttime lows 8–10°C, with January coldest at around 9°C minimum; fog and occasional cold waves from western disturbances can lower visibility and temperatures briefly.[59]
MonthAvg. High (°C)Avg. Low (°C)Avg. Rainfall (mm)
January23918
February261120
March321712
April362211
May392525
June3726127
July3325257
August3225203
September3224165
October311937
November281311
December2497
Data derived from long-term observations (1961–1990 for temperature, 1951–2000 for rainfall) at Patna observatory, reflecting subtropical monsoon patterns with minimal interannual variability outside monsoon fluctuations. [60] Historical extremes include prolonged dry spells in non-monsoon periods and intense rain events during monsoons, with no sustained long-term shifts in averages but noted increases in extreme heat days post-2000.[62]

Environmental Challenges

Patna faces significant air pollution, primarily from vehicular emissions, construction dust, and biomass burning, with PM2.5 concentrations averaging 73.7 micrograms per cubic meter in 2025, classifying it as a non-attainment city under national standards.[63][57] Real-time Air Quality Index (AQI) readings frequently reach moderate to unhealthy levels, such as 168 (moderate) on October 25, 2025, dominated by PM2.5 and PM10 pollutants, exacerbating respiratory issues among residents, particularly during winter inversions.[64][65] Studies indicate long-term exposure correlates with increased health risks, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, though enforcement of mitigation measures like odd-even vehicle schemes has shown limited sustained impact.[66] Water pollution in the Ganges River, which borders Patna, stems from untreated sewage, industrial effluents, and cremation activities, rendering the water unfit for bathing at most ghats due to faecal coliform levels exceeding 1,000 MPN/100 ml—the threshold set by the World Health Organization for even crop irrigation.[67][68] Sampling at sites like Digha Ghat reveals elevated biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and coliform bacteria from organic waste and plastics, impairing aquatic life and fish populations vital to local markets.[69][70] Despite national cleanup initiatives, persistent high pollution loads highlight gaps in sewage treatment infrastructure, with only partial coverage of the city's wastewater discharge.[71] Recurrent flooding, driven by monsoon overflows from the Ganges and inadequate urban drainage, affects Patna alongside broader Bihar vulnerabilities, impacting over 2.5 million people across districts including Patna in August 2025 alone.[72] Urban sprawl exacerbates inundation, as seen in the 2019 floods that damaged infrastructure and spread waterborne diseases, with causes including embankment breaches and poor planning rather than solely natural factors.[73][74] Solid waste management remains strained, with Patna generating substantial unsegregated refuse that overwhelms landfills and contributes to open dumping, as noted by the National Green Tribunal in 2023 critiques of Bihar's systems.[75] Challenges include low door-to-door collection rates, insufficient recycling, and citizen non-compliance, hindering sustainable practices despite pilot segregation drives.[76][77] These issues compound broader climate risks, including biodiversity loss, underscoring the need for integrated urban planning.[78]

Demographics

Population Dynamics

The population of Patna city stood at 1,684,222 as per the 2011 Census of India, reflecting the urban core within Patna district, which had a total of 5,838,465 residents.[79] [80] Between 2001 and 2011, the city's population grew by approximately 22.2%, outpacing the national urban average but aligning with Bihar's broader rural-to-urban migration trends.[4] The district's decadal growth rate during this period was 23.73%, driven by a combination of natural increase and net in-migration, with the latter accounting for an estimated 40-50% of urban expansion in Bihar's capital region.[81] Historical data indicate accelerated growth since the mid-20th century, with Patna's urban population quadrupling from 1951 to 2011 amid post-independence industrialization and administrative centralization.[82] In 1950, the estimated city population was 334,432, rising steadily to over 1.6 million by 2011 due to annual compound growth rates averaging 2.5-3% in recent decades, positioning Patna among India's faster-growing urban centers.[4] Projections from demographic models estimate the city population at 2,689,540 by 2025, with the urban agglomeration exceeding 3 million, though these figures remain provisional pending the delayed 2021 census.[4] [83] Key drivers include substantial rural-to-urban migration from within Bihar, where circular and seasonal labor flows—often to construction, services, and informal sectors—have fueled peripheral expansion and vertical urban growth at rates up to 4 meters per year in outer areas.[84] [85] This influx has elevated population density to over 6,700 persons per square kilometer in the core city, straining infrastructure and contributing to informal settlements, while natural growth rates, influenced by higher fertility in migrant communities, add to the pressure.[4] Out-migration to larger metros like Delhi and Mumbai offsets some gains but remains secondary to inbound rural flows.[86]
Census YearPatna City PopulationDecadal Growth Rate (%)
20011,377,000-
20111,684,22222.2
Post-2011 trends suggest sustained momentum, with urban agglomeration growth projected at 1.8-2% annually through 2030, contingent on economic opportunities in services and governance sectors, though unchecked migration exacerbates vulnerabilities like overcrowding and uneven resource distribution.[4] [81]

Religious, Linguistic, and Caste Composition

According to the 2011 Indian census, Hindus form the overwhelming majority in Patna district, comprising 91.74% of the population (5,356,075 individuals), followed by Muslims at 7.54% (439,952 individuals), Christians at 0.21% (12,551), Sikhs at 0.08% (4,803), Buddhists at 0.04%, and Jains at 0.03%, with the remaining 0.36% adhering to other religions or none.[87] These figures reflect Patna's historical role as a center of Hindu pilgrimage and administration, though urban migration has slightly diversified religious demographics compared to rural Bihar. No district-specific religious data from post-2011 surveys exists, but state-level trends from Bihar's 2023 caste enumeration show a broader Hindu share of 81.99% and Muslim share of 17.71%, suggesting potential shifts due to internal migration.[88] Linguistically, Patna district's population primarily speaks Indo-Aryan languages, with mother tongue data from the 2011 census highlighting Magahi as the most prevalent at 46.34%, followed closely by Hindi at 43.76% and Urdu at 5.19%; smaller shares include Maithili (around 1-2%) and migrant languages like Bengali and Oriya.[87] Magahi, a dialect of the Magadhi Prakrit continuum, dominates rural areas and reflects the region's ancient linguistic heritage tied to classical Magadha, while standard Hindi functions as the administrative and educational medium, often encompassing reported "Hindi" responses that blur dialect distinctions in census aggregation. Urdu, linked to the Muslim minority, persists in urban enclaves, particularly in commerce and poetry traditions. English is widely used in government, education, and business but not as a primary tongue.[81] Caste composition in Patna lacks granular district-level enumeration from the national census, which records only Scheduled Castes (SC) at 15.8% (approximately 928,000 individuals) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) at 0.2% (around 11,000), lower than Bihar's state averages of 16% SC and 1.3% ST, attributable to Patna's urban concentration and historical landownership patterns favoring non-tribal groups.[87] Bihar's 2023 state caste survey, covering 130.7 million residents, offers contextual insight: upper castes (Brahmin, Rajput, Bhumihar, Kayastha) at 15.52%, Other Backward Classes (OBC) at 27.12%, Extremely Backward Classes (EBC) at 36.01%, SC at 19.65%, and ST at 1.68%, with Yadavs (14.27%) and Kurmis (2.87%) prominent among OBCs.[88] In Patna, as the state capital, upper castes and urban OBCs likely hold disproportionate influence in administration and professions, though empirical verification awaits district-specific data; the survey underscores Bihar's caste-based social structure, where EBC-OBC-SC-ST groups exceed 85% statewide, driving reservation politics.[89]
CategoryPatna District (2011 Census)Bihar State (2023 Survey)
Upper CastesNot enumerated15.52%
OBCNot enumerated27.12%
EBCNot enumerated36.01%
SC15.8%19.65%
ST0.2%1.68%

Socioeconomic Profile

Patna district records a literacy rate of 70.68% as per the 2011 Census, surpassing the state average of 61.8% at the time, with male literacy at 78.48% and female literacy at 61.96%.[87] Urban areas within the district exhibit higher rates, approximately 80.98%, reflecting the concentration of educational institutions and administrative functions in the capital city.[90] Recent state-level surveys indicate broader improvements, with Bihar's overall literacy rising to 79.7% by 2023, though district-specific updates for Patna remain aligned with its urban-rural divide, where rural literacy lags at around 62.38%.[91] The district's per capita income stands at ₹1,21,396 at current prices for 2022-23, the highest among Bihar's districts and significantly above the state average of ₹66,828 for 2023-24, underscoring Patna's role as an economic outlier driven by services, government employment, and commerce rather than agriculture.[92] Labour force participation rate is 42.56% as of 2023-24, with urban migration inflows bolstering skilled sectors, though rural areas remain agriculture-dependent.[93] Human Development Index (HDI) for the district was 0.811 in 2016, classifying it as high and reflecting better access to health, education, and income compared to Bihar's lower state metrics. Poverty metrics show Patna benefiting from state-wide reductions, with Bihar's multidimensional poverty index dropping from 51.91% in 2015-16 to 33.76% by 2021 per NITI Aayog data; Patna's urban core likely experiences even lower rates due to concentrated opportunities, though rural pockets and urban slums persist with elevated deprivation in nutrition and sanitation.[94] NFHS-5 (2019-21) data for Bihar highlights educational disparities, with 55% of women aged 15-49 literate versus 76% of men, a gap narrower in Patna owing to proximity to higher education hubs like IIT Patna.[95]
Key Socioeconomic IndicatorsPatna DistrictBihar State (Comparison)Year
Literacy Rate (Overall)70.68%61.8% (2011)2011
Per Capita Income (Current Prices)₹1,21,396₹66,8282022-23 / 2023-24
HDI0.811 (High)Lower (State Avg.)2016
Multidimensional Poverty RateLower than state avg.33.76%2021

Economy

Major Sectors and Employment

Patna's economy relies heavily on the tertiary sector, encompassing public administration, education, healthcare, retail, and wholesale trade, which benefits from its status as Bihar's capital and primary urban center. The service sector contributes the largest share to Bihar's GSDP at approximately 60%, with Patna district playing a pivotal role due to concentrations of government offices, universities, and markets.[92][96] Public administration and professional services employ significant portions of the workforce, supported by institutions such as the state legislature, high court, and higher education facilities including IIT Patna.[97] The labor force in Patna totals about 682,000 workers, with manufacturing comprising 22.8%—primarily in food processing, chemicals, and textiles—while trade and transportation account for 21.7%, driven by wholesale activities in nondurable and durable goods.[98] Administrative support services (9.6%) and professional, scientific, and technical services (7.9%) further bolster employment in the services domain. Small and micro enterprises dominate the secondary sector, with 12,231 registered units focused on agro-based (177 units), metal-based (104 units), and garment production (39 units), alongside service-oriented repairing enterprises (121 units).[97] Industrial clusters provide targeted employment, including 10,000 jobs in leather footwear, 5,000 in bell metal wares, and 700 in GLS lamps, though overall manufacturing remains limited compared to services.[97] The district's 21 medium-scale and few large-scale units, such as Bharat Wagon & Engineering and Patna Dairy Project, supplement this but employ fewer workers relative to the tertiary base. Bihar's broader workforce shows over 50% in agriculture statewide, but Patna's urban profile shifts emphasis to non-farm sectors, with construction and trade also notable amid state-level growth.[99] Labor force participation in Patna district stands at 42.6% as of 2023-24, aligning with Bihar's 43.4% rate, though urban youth unemployment reaches 10.8%.[93][99]

Economic Growth and Indicators

Patna district's per capita gross state domestic product (GSDP) stood at ₹1,14,541 as per the Bihar Economic Survey 2024-25, marking it as the highest among Bihar's districts and reflecting its concentration of administrative, educational, and service activities.[92] This figure exceeds the state average of ₹66,828 for 2023-24 at current prices, underscoring Patna's role in driving Bihar's urban economic output despite the state's overall low base.[100] Bihar's GSDP grew by 9.2% at constant prices in 2023-24, placing it third nationally, with Patna contributing through sectors like public administration and real estate that leverage its status as the capital.[101] Projections for 2024-25 indicate continued expansion, with Bihar's GSDP growth estimated at 8.64% at constant prices, ranking sixth among Indian states, buoyed by Patna's infrastructure investments and proximity to markets.[102] At current prices, the growth reached 13.9% in advanced estimates for the same period, outpacing national GDP trends and highlighting recovery from pre-2005 stagnation.[103] Patna's per capita income has risen steadily since economic reforms post-2005, though it remains below national urban averages due to persistent migration outflows and limited industrialization.[104] Key indicators reveal structural challenges amid growth: Bihar's unemployment rate was 3.9% in 2022-23 per NITI Aayog data, slightly above the national 3.2%, with urban Patna likely experiencing higher youth underemployment from Periodic Labour Force Survey trends around 13%.[105] Poverty incidence in Bihar declined, with estimates showing a reduction to below 20% by 2024-25 through targeted schemes, though Patna's urban poverty rate hovers lower at around 10-15% based on district-level Multidimensional Poverty Index improvements.[106]
IndicatorPatna/Bihar Value (Recent)Source Notes
Per Capita GSDP (Patna District)₹1,14,541 (2024-25 est.)Bihar Economic Survey; highest in state[92]
GSDP Growth (Constant Prices, 2023-24)9.2% (Bihar, Patna-aligned)Third nationally; services-led[101]
Unemployment Rate (2022-23)3.9% (Bihar); urban youth ~13%NITI Aayog/PLFS; migration impacts Patna[105]
Poverty Reduction~15-20% decline (2024-25 est., Bihar)Scheme-driven; lower in urban Patna[106]

Persistent Challenges

Despite serving as Bihar's primary urban economic center with the state's highest per capita gross state domestic product (GSDP) at ₹1,14,541, Patna grapples with entrenched structural weaknesses that limit sustainable growth.[92] The district's economy remains heavily skewed toward services and informal activities, with manufacturing and secondary sector contributions lagging due to stagnant industrial expansion post-2011.[107] This reliance on construction within the secondary sector—accounting for over 51% of its share in 2018-19—fails to generate diversified, high-skill employment, exacerbating vulnerability to economic shocks.[107] Outward migration persists as a core challenge, fueled by wage disparities and scarce local opportunities, particularly affecting Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Other Backward Classes.[107] The return of approximately 5 million migrants during the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted skill mismatches and urban unemployment rates of 3.8% (38 per thousand) in 2021-22, exceeding rural figures in some metrics and surpassing national averages at the state level.[107] Infrastructure bottlenecks, including chronic power shortages and inadequate connectivity, deter private investment and hinder micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), which face restricted access to bank finance and markets for clusters like leather footwear and bell metal.[97][108] The dominance of the informal economy compounds these issues, with small-scale enterprises and street vendors in Patna confronting precarity, limited collectivization, and neglect in policy frameworks despite their role in daily livelihoods.[109][110] Urban slums exhibit deep economic distress, clustering toward the lower end of national informality continua, where poverty traps and indebtedness prevail amid inadequate formal integration.[111] Inequality remains stark, with Patna's per capita income over 13 times that of Bihar's poorest districts, yet overall low relative to national benchmarks, perpetuating cycles of low productivity and underinvestment in human capital.[112][113]

Government and Politics

Administrative Structure

Patna district, with the city as its headquarters, is administered by a District Magistrate (DM), a senior Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer who oversees revenue collection, law and order coordination, disaster management, and developmental schemes across the district's six sub-divisions—Patna Sadar, Danapur, Maner, Masaurhi, Paliganj, and Phulwari Sharif—and 23 community development blocks.[114] [115] The DM reports to the Divisional Commissioner of Patna Division, which encompasses Patna and five other districts, handling appellate functions, coordination of inter-district issues, and supervision of district-level implementation of state policies.[116] The Patna Municipal Corporation (PMC), established under the Bihar Municipal Act, 2007, governs the urban agglomeration of Patna, spanning approximately 326 square kilometers and responsible for municipal services including water distribution, waste management, road maintenance, and urban planning.[117] PMC operates through a bicameral structure: a legislative wing comprising 75 elected ward councillors forming the House of Councillors, which elects a Mayor and Deputy Mayor for a five-year term, and an executive wing led by a Municipal Commissioner, typically an IAS officer, who implements council decisions and manages day-to-day operations.[118] The corporation divides its jurisdiction into six administrative circles—New Capital, Patliputra, Kankarbagh, Agamkuan, Kotwali, and Patori—for decentralized service delivery and oversight.[119] Policing in Patna follows a commissionerate system, introduced in 2006, where the Commissioner of Police, an Indian Police Service (IPS) officer of Inspector General rank, holds executive magisterial powers equivalent to a Deputy Commissioner, directly managing the city's law enforcement through multiple zones, divisions, and stations without subordination to the District Magistrate for core policing functions. This structure aims to enhance urban policing efficiency amid Patna's high population density, though coordination with district administration persists for events like elections and public order.[120]

Political History and Dynamics

Patna was established as the capital of the Bihar and Orissa Province on October 1, 1912, following the partition of the Bengal Presidency by the British government.[3] It retained this status after Bihar's separation from Orissa in 1936 and became the capital of the state upon India's independence in 1947.[1] As the administrative center, Patna has hosted the Bihar Legislative Assembly since 1937, serving as the focal point for state-level political deliberations and governance.[121] Post-independence, Bihar's politics, with Patna at its core, saw the Indian National Congress maintain dominance until the mid-1970s, exemplified by long-serving Chief Ministers like Sri Krishna Singh (1946–1961) and Karpoori Thakur's brief socialist tenure emphasizing backward caste empowerment.[122] The 1970s witnessed unrest through movements like Jayaprakash Narayan's campaign against corruption, originating from Patna, which contributed to the national Emergency and subsequent political shifts.[123] From 1990 to 2005, Lalu Prasad Yadav's Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) administration prioritized Yadav-Muslim consolidation but coincided with economic stagnation, high crime rates, and mass out-migration, often termed "Jungle Raj" by critics for its governance failures.[124] The 2005 elections marked a turning point, with Nitish Kumar's Janata Dal (United) (JD(U)) and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) alliance ousting RJD, ushering in policies focused on road infrastructure, electricity access, and law enforcement, which measurably reduced caste-based violence and improved Patna's urban amenities. Alliances proved volatile: JD(U) allied with RJD in 2015, collapsed in 2017, and rejoined BJP-led NDA, with Nitish Kumar as Chief Minister since 2005 except for a brief 2014–2015 interlude.[125] Patna's assembly constituencies, including Patna Sahib, Bankipore, and Patliputra, typically exhibit stronger NDA support due to upper-caste and urban professional demographics, as evidenced by BJP and JD(U) victories in 2020: BJP won Patna Sahib with 97,692 votes (51.91% share), Patna East, and Patna Central, while JD(U) secured Patna West.[126] As of October 2025, ahead of assembly elections on November 6 and 11, Patna's dynamics reflect statewide caste arithmetic and development debates, with NDA under Nitish Kumar emphasizing "sushasan" (good governance) against Mahagathbandhan's (RJD-led) promises of youth jobs and expanded reservations.[127] Tejashwi Yadav positions as the opposition's chief ministerial face, targeting EBCs and Dalits, while BJP counters with anti-corruption narratives rooted in RJD's past record.[128] Persistent challenges include coalition instability and criminality among candidates, with 35% of Bihar's 2020 contestants facing charges, underscoring electoral incentives misaligned with merit-based governance.[129]

Governance and Corruption Issues

Patna's municipal governance operates under the Patna Municipal Corporation (PMC), established in 1952 and responsible for local administration, urban planning, sanitation, and infrastructure development, with oversight from the Bihar state government through appointed commissioners and an elected mayor.[130] The structure includes 72 wards represented by councilors, but decision-making often involves coordination with state-level departments, leading to delays in project execution due to jurisdictional overlaps and inadequate enforcement of bylaws. Corruption scandals have repeatedly undermined PMC's efficacy, with investigations revealing embezzlement in construction contracts and property tax assessments. In 2010, Bihar's Vigilance Investigation Bureau booked an IAS officer serving as municipal commissioner and 13 other officials for irregularities involving crores in public funds allocated for urban works.[131] Similarly, in 2012, former commissioner K. Senthil Kumar faced charges on 130 counts of graft, resulting in his suspension by the state governor in 2011 after probes confirmed misuse of development budgets.[132] More recent cases highlight ongoing vulnerabilities in procurement and land management. The Enforcement Directorate seized properties worth Rs 2.60 crore from a former PMC commissioner in 2022, linked to irregularities during his tenure, including favoritism in tender awards.[133] In August 2025, anti-corruption raids in Patna uncovered officials attempting to burn evidence, with Rs 52 lakh in cash seized from a government engineer's premises amid probes into disproportionate assets and bribery in infrastructure projects.[134] [135] Land-related corruption exacerbates urban governance challenges, with Patna's land mafia employing fake receipts, forged surveys, and intimidation to encroach on public and private properties, complicating municipal enforcement despite cadastral revisions dating back to 1965.[136] Engineer Vinod Kumar Rai's 2025 implication in a Rs 150 crore scam involving manipulated municipal tenders exemplifies how technical roles facilitate siphoning of funds meant for city expansion.[137] State-level interventions, such as Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's May 2025 directive for expedited vigilance probes and stricter accountability in high-value contracts, aim to curb these issues, yet Bihar's persistent low rankings in national corruption perception indices—driven by empirical data from official raids and judicial cases—indicate that political promises of "corruption-free" administration have yielded limited tangible reductions in Patna's systemic graft.[138] [139] Protests in Patna over exam paper leaks in December 2024 further exposed corruption in recruitment tied to municipal and state jobs, eroding public trust in governance institutions.[140]

Infrastructure and Utilities

Transport Networks

Patna's transport infrastructure encompasses road networks, rail connectivity, air travel, and an emerging metro system, though it faces challenges from rapid urbanization and limited public transit capacity. The city is served by National Highway 31, which traverses its length and links to major routes like NH 19 and NH 80, facilitating inter-state travel; however, chronic congestion and inadequate bus services— with only 260 buses registered in the fiscal year ending March 2025 despite a need for over 1,250—exacerbate mobility issues for its over 2 million residents.[141][142] Recent initiatives include a ₹1,000 crore-plus road upgrade program targeting access roads to districts like Maner and Bihta, alongside the approved 282 km Patna-Purnia Expressway, estimated at ₹18,042 crore, aimed at reducing travel times.[143][144] Rail transport centers on Patna Junction (PNBE), a key junction station in eastern India with 10 platforms, 15 tracks, and two entry gates, handling over 170 trains weekly and serving as the primary rail hub for Bihar.[145][146] The station, elevated at 57 meters above sea level, connects Patna to major cities including Delhi, Kolkata, and Mumbai, supporting high passenger volumes amid ongoing electrification and modernization efforts.[147] Air connectivity is provided by Jay Prakash Narayan International Airport (PAT), which handled approximately 3.8 million passengers in the fiscal year ending March 2025, primarily domestic flights with limited international services.[148] A new terminal, inaugurated in May 2025 at a cost of ₹1,200 crore and spanning 65,155 square meters, features 54 check-in counters, five aerobridges, and capacity for 4,500 peak-hour passengers, boosting overall handling potential to 10 million annually as part of a ₹1,400 crore expansion.[149][150] The Patna Metro, operational since October 7, 2025, marks a milestone in urban transit with its initial 4.3 km elevated Blue Line segment from ISBT to Bhoothnath Road, comprising five stations and funded at ₹13,926 crore for the full project under a state-central partnership.[151][152] This priority corridor, delayed from earlier targets, integrates with existing networks and plans expansion to 14.6 km by 2027-28, including underground sections toward Patna Junction, though full phase 1 completion remains projected for later years amid construction hurdles.[48][153] Waterway options along the Ganges exist via ferries but play a minor role compared to land-based modes.[154]

Urban Services and Development

Patna's urban services encompass water supply, sanitation, electricity distribution, and waste management, managed primarily by the Patna Municipal Corporation (PMC) and state utilities, amid ongoing development under the Smart Cities Mission. The city generates approximately 680 metric tons of municipal solid waste daily, with collection efficiency reaching 98% as reported in the 2023 Swachh Survekshan survey.[155] In July 2025, Patna earned a 3-star garbage-free city certification and the "Promising Swachh Shehar" title, reflecting incremental progress in urban cleanliness.[156] Water supply infrastructure is being upgraded through a new Ganga water scheme, aiming for 24-hour availability via 10 small treatment plants between Digha and Didarganj, with intake wells at strategic points.[157] Sanitation efforts include sewerage systems and facilities detailed in urban profiles, though challenges persist in coverage and maintenance.[158] Electricity is handled by the Patna Electric Supply Undertaking (PESU), which operates 69 substations across 12 divisions; peak demand hit a record 883 MW in June 2025 amid heatwaves.[159] Recent enhancements include five new 33/11 kV substations commissioned by September 2025 and plans for battery energy storage systems in 16 urban substations to provide 500 MW for four hours.[160][161] A state-wide Rs 12,869 crore power transmission revamp by 2035 will bolster Patna's grid reliability.[162] Solid waste management is advancing with a Rs 514 crore integrated project approved in August 2025 on a public-private partnership basis, targeting Patna and surrounding areas for processing and environmental protection.[163] Bihar's first solid waste management cluster, utilizing waste from 11 urban bodies, received central in-principle approval in April 2025.[164] Urban development initiatives under Patna Smart City Limited include area-based projects like road-cum-drainage improvements, redevelopment of Mandiri Nala, and Adalatganj Lake, alongside pan-city efforts for IT connectivity and smart mobility.[165] In September 2025, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar launched projects worth over Rs 10,000 crore, including a 35.65-km extension of the JP Ganga Path from Digha to Koilwar Bridge.[166] Persistent challenges undermine service delivery, particularly urban flooding exacerbated by outdated drainage, encroachment on natural water bodies, and insufficient capacity for heavy monsoons; heavy rains in October 2025 caused road collapses and widespread waterlogging.[167] Areas like Patliputra Colony face annual inundation due to uneven roads and clogged systems, as noted in August 2025 reports.[168] Storm water drain constructions have disrupted neighborhoods, slowing flood mitigation amid Ganga overflows.[169] These issues highlight causal factors like rapid urbanization increasing impervious surfaces and inadequate planning, contributing to Patna's vulnerability as one of India's flood-prone cities.[170][171]

Culture and Heritage

Historical and Cultural Significance

Patna, originally known as Pataliputra or Pataligrama, traces its origins to approximately 490 BCE when King Ajatashatru of the Haryanka dynasty fortified a small village on the southern banks of the Ganges River, establishing it as a strategic outpost that evolved into the capital of the Magadha kingdom.[8] This site, central to the rise of early Indian empires, expanded under Udayin, Ajatashatru's successor, who shifted the Magadhan capital from Rajagriha to Pataliputra around 460 BCE, leveraging its riverine position for trade and defense.[27] By the Mauryan period, following Chandragupta Maurya's founding of the empire circa 321 BCE, Pataliputra became the administrative hub of a vast domain stretching across much of the Indian subcontinent, renowned for its wooden palisades, 570 towers, and 64 gates as described by the Greek envoy Megasthenes during his stay around 300 BCE.[172] Under Emperor Ashoka (r. circa 268–232 BCE), the city epitomized Mauryan grandeur and served as the base for disseminating Buddhist teachings after his conversion following the Kalinga War, with edicts inscribed on pillars and rocks promoting dhamma (moral law) that influenced governance and ethics across the realm.[1] Pataliputra's strategic and cultural prominence persisted through the Gupta Empire (circa 320–550 CE), often termed India's classical age, where it remained a key center for learning and administration amid advancements in art, science, and literature.[173] The city's ancient foundations are evidenced by archaeological finds at sites like Kumhrar and Agam Kuan, revealing Mauryan pillars, brick structures, and artifacts such as Matrika sculptures indicative of syncretic religious practices blending Vedic and Buddhist elements.[1] Patna's historical significance intersects profoundly with the origins of Buddhism and Jainism, two of India's earliest organized religions that emerged in the Magadhan region during the 6th–5th centuries BCE; the Buddha attained enlightenment in nearby Bodh Gaya and delivered discourses in Rajgir, while Mahavira, the 24th Tirthankara of Jainism, was born in proximate Vaishali and preached ascetic principles that gained royal patronage.[174] These faiths, emphasizing non-violence and ethical conduct, shaped Magadhan society and polity, with Mauryan rulers like Chandragupta embracing Jainism in his later years and Ashoka institutionalizing Buddhist missions that extended to Sri Lanka and Central Asia.[175] The city's layered heritage reflects this religious pluralism, later incorporating Sikh traditions through Takht Sri Patna Sahib, commemorating the birthplace of Guru Gobind Singh in 1666 CE during the Mughal era, underscoring Patna's enduring role as a confluence of spiritual and imperial histories.[176] Culturally, Patna embodies Bihar's syncretic legacy, hosting heritage sites like the Patna Museum, which preserves Mauryan relics and Indo-Greek artifacts, and annual events tied to its ancient ethos, though modern expressions draw from broader Bihari traditions including folk arts and riverine festivals that echo Ganges-centric rituals predating recorded history.[176] This continuum from imperial capital to resilient cultural node highlights Patna's causal role in disseminating philosophical and administrative innovations that influenced subsequent Indian civilizations, unmarred by later declines under foreign incursions that shifted power eastward.[177]

Festivals, Arts, and Cuisine

Chhath Puja stands as the preeminent festival in Patna, a four-day Hindu observance dedicated to the Sun God (Surya) and his consort Usha, involving rigorous fasting, ritual bathing in the Ganga, and offerings of fruits, thekua sweets, and bananas at sunrise and sunset from the city's river ghats.[178] Observed in the Kartik month of the Hindu lunar calendar (typically October-November), it draws millions to sites like Gandhi Ghat and Koleyar Ghat, emphasizing purity, gratitude for harvests, and family devotion without priests or idols.[179] In 2025, the festival spanned October 25 to 28, with Nahay Khay on the first day marking ceremonial baths and vegetarian meals.[179] Other observances include Guru Gobind Singh Jayanti in January at Takht Sri Patna Sahib, commemorating the Sikh Guru's birth with processions and langar feasts, reflecting Patna's historical Sikh heritage.[180] Patna's artistic legacy centers on the Patna Kalam school of painting, which emerged in the early 18th century under Mughal influence and flourished through the 19th century, featuring detailed ink and watercolor depictions of daily life, bazaars, festivals, and flora-fauna on paper, ivory, or mica sheets using fine brushes and natural pigments.[181] Artists like Shiva Ram and Bal Ram documented colonial-era Patna with naturalistic styles, distinct from courtly miniatures, though the tradition waned post-1857 due to economic shifts and competition from European prints.[181] Contemporary crafts include wooden toy-making, with Patna as a hub for carved figurines and rattles from softwoods like mango, often painted in vibrant colors for local markets and festivals.[182] Cuisine in Patna reflects Bihar's agrarian roots, emphasizing simple, spiced vegetarian staples prepared with minimal oil and seasonal ingredients like sattu (roasted Bengal gram flour) and river fish. Litti chokha, the signature dish, comprises wheat-flour balls (litti) stuffed with sattu, roasted over cow-dung fires, and served with mashed eggplant (baingan bharta), tomatoes, and chilies for a smoky, tangy flavor profile.[183] Sattu features prominently in parathas, sharbat drinks cooled with lemon and black salt, or as a protein-rich sharbat during summers, leveraging the gram's high nutritional value from local milling.[184] Sweets like khaja—layered, sugar-syrup-drenched pastries—and thekua (deep-fried wheat-jaggery discs) are tied to rituals, with khaja's ghee-based preparation yielding over 500 tonnes annually from Patna's confectioners for regional distribution.[184] Non-vegetarian options include machher jhol (fish curry with mustard oil and spices), though vegetarian dominance prevails due to cultural and religious influences.[183]

Education and Healthcare

Educational Institutions

Patna hosts a range of higher education institutions, including historic universities and specialized technical and medical colleges, making it a key center for learning in Bihar despite statewide challenges in educational outcomes. Major establishments encompass public universities offering broad academic programs, engineering institutes focused on technical training, and medical facilities emphasizing healthcare education. Patna University, founded on 1 October 1917 as the seventh oldest university in the Indian subcontinent, provides undergraduate, postgraduate, and doctoral degrees in arts, sciences, commerce, law, and education. It operates multiple constituent colleges and has been accredited with a B+ grade by NAAC. In the 2024 NIRF rankings, it secured a position in the 51-100 band among state public universities.[185][186] The National Institute of Technology Patna traces its origins to 1886 with the establishment of the Pleaders' Survey Training School, which upgraded to Bihar College of Engineering in 1924 and attained NIT status in 2004 under the Ministry of Education. It delivers B.Tech, M.Tech, and Ph.D. programs in eight engineering disciplines, architecture, computer science, and management, with admissions primarily via JEE Main for undergraduates. The institute emphasizes research and infrastructure development on its Ashok Rajpath campus.[187][188] Indian Institute of Technology Patna, established in 2008 as one of India's second-generation IITs, offers B.Tech, M.Tech, M.Sc., and Ph.D. programs across departments in engineering, sciences, humanities, and management, with 638 undergraduate seats filled through JEE Advanced. Located on a 550-acre campus in Bihta, it enrolled 670 B.Tech students as of April 2016 and supports research in areas like AI, data science, and cybersecurity through specialized BS programs.[189][190] All India Institute of Medical Sciences Patna, operational since 2012 under the Pradhan Mantri Swasthya Suraksha Yojana, functions as an institute of national importance with 42 specialized departments. It provides MBBS, nursing, and postgraduate medical training, backed by a 960-bed hospital, emergency services, and advanced facilities including operation theaters and skill labs.[191][192] Additional prominent institutions include Chanakya National Law University, established in 2006 for legal education with programs like BA LLB and LLM, and Patna Women's College, founded in 1923 as one of India's earliest degree colleges for women, affiliated with Patna University and offering arts, science, and vocational courses. Aryabhatta Knowledge University, set up in 2010, oversees health sciences and technical education in Bihar. These entities contribute to Patna's role in regional higher education, though enrollment and quality metrics reflect broader infrastructural limitations in the state.[193]

Health Services and Outcomes

Patna hosts several major public and private healthcare facilities, serving as the primary hub for advanced medical care in Bihar. The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Patna, established in 2012, operates with 960 beds across 42 specialized departments, including emergency and trauma services, providing tertiary care in fields such as cardiology, neurology, and oncology.[191] Other key government institutions include Patna Medical College and Hospital (PMCH), Indira Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences (IGIMS), and Nalanda Medical College and Hospital, which handle a significant volume of inpatient and outpatient cases, though they face operational strains from high patient loads.[194] Private multispecialty hospitals like Paras HMRI (over 350 beds) and Ford Hospital offer services in gastroenterology, renal care, and maternity, supplementing public options but primarily catering to those who can afford them.[195][196] Despite these facilities, healthcare infrastructure in Patna grapples with persistent shortages in human resources. As of 2024, staff nurse shortages in Patna stood at 18% of sanctioned positions, the lowest in Bihar but indicative of broader understaffing that hampers service delivery.[197] The state's doctor-to-patient ratio remains critically low at approximately 1:17,685, far below the World Health Organization's recommended 1:1,000, exacerbating delays in consultations and emergency responses.[198] Paramedic shortages, while varying, contribute to inefficiencies, with public hospitals often lacking essential diagnostics and equipment, leading to patient dissatisfaction and low trust in the system due to poor doctor-patient communication and inadequate basic amenities.[199][197] Health outcomes in Patna reflect Bihar's overall challenges, with urban advantages tempered by systemic gaps. Bihar's infant mortality rate (IMR) was 47 deaths per 1,000 live births in the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5, 2019-21), showing minimal improvement from 48 in NFHS-4 (2015-16), driven by factors like low immunization coverage and malnutrition.[200] Maternal mortality ratio (MMR) remains elevated, with many districts exceeding 70 deaths per 100,000 live births, attributable to delayed access to skilled birth attendants and emergency obstetric care.[201] Life expectancy in Bihar averaged 69.1 years (2014-18), with marginal gender differences, but Patna's urban setting likely yields slightly better figures due to proximity to tertiary centers, though specific district-level data is limited.[202] Ongoing issues include underimmunization, with Bihar targeting 90% full coverage amid persistent gaps, and a resource crunch in mental health services, where facilities fall short of demand.[203][204]

Sports and Media

Sporting Activities

Cricket is the most prominent sport in Patna, with the Moin-ul-Haq Stadium serving as the primary venue for matches, including those of the Bihar Ranji Trophy team.[205] The stadium, located in the city center, accommodates up to 25,000 spectators and hosts both cricket and association football events.[205] Football also enjoys significant participation, supported by turf facilities like the Urja Turf Stadium, which features three dedicated fields across 4.5 acres for organized play.[206] Kabaddi has gained traction, particularly through professional leagues; the Patliputra Sports Complex in Kankarbagh regularly hosts events, including international women's championships.[205] This multi-purpose venue facilitates kabaddi alongside other activities like athletics and indoor games. Bihar's state priority sports list, which influences local programs in Patna, emphasizes kabaddi, football, badminton, volleyball, athletics, and hockey, with infrastructure development aimed at these disciplines.[207] Emerging activities include water sports on the Ganges River, such as jet skiing and boating events introduced to promote tourism and recreation.[208] Road running events like the annual Patna Marathon draw participants for distances up to full marathons, fostering community engagement.[209] Private clubs, such as Capers Sports Club, offer coached sessions in swimming, lawn tennis, cricket, skating, and fitness classes, catering to urban residents.[210] Table tennis and indoor games like chess and carrom are common in educational institutions and public facilities across the city.[208]

Media Landscape

Patna's media landscape is dominated by Hindi-language print publications, which maintain substantial readership and advertising revenue, particularly during election cycles. Hindi newspapers in Bihar, including those published in Patna, allocated nearly three times the advertising expenditure compared to digital media in the lead-up to the 2025 state elections, underscoring the enduring influence of traditional print amid a national shift toward digital platforms.[211] Leading dailies include Hindustan, with a reported daily circulation exceeding 406,000 copies from its Patna edition as of recent audits, followed by Dainik Bhaskar claiming over 600,000 copies statewide but with strong Patna distribution.[212][213] Other prominent Hindi papers like Dainik Jagran and Prabhat Khabar compete closely, with circulations in the Bihar market ranging from 15 to 37 lakhs copies daily across editions, reflecting Patna's role as a publishing hub for regional news, politics, and local affairs.[214] Television broadcasting in Patna features public and private regional channels focused on Bihar-specific content. Doordarshan Bihar, operated by Prasar Bharati and headquartered in Patna, provides statewide coverage of news, cultural programs, and folk traditions like Maithili painting, serving both rural and urban audiences.[215] Private channels such as News18 Bihar-Jharkhand and Zee Bihar Jharkhand offer 24-hour news cycles emphasizing local politics and events, while Maurya TV and others cater to Bhojpuri-speaking viewers with entertainment and current affairs.[216] These outlets, though supplemented by national networks like Aaj Tak, prioritize Bihar-centric reporting, with events like the India News Manch 2025 held in Patna highlighting the city's growing role in pre-election media discourse.[217] Radio remains a key medium through All India Radio (AIR) Patna, broadcasting on 621 AM for news and talk in Hindi and Maithili, alongside FM Rainbow at 102.5 MHz for music and light entertainment.[218] This public service station, established decades ago, continues to reach remote areas, with programs covering Bhojpuri music and regional updates. Digital media, including local portals like Patnaites Media and Bihar Times, is expanding but lags behind print in penetration and revenue, focusing on online news aggregation and city-specific updates since around 2016.[219] Overall, Patna's media ecosystem reflects Bihar's linguistic diversity and political intensity, with traditional outlets retaining dominance despite national trends toward digital consumption.[220]

Notable Individuals

Historical Figures

Pataliputra, the ancient core of modern Patna, served as the capital of the Magadha kingdom and the Maurya Empire (c. 321–185 BCE), from which several pivotal rulers governed. Chandragupta Maurya (r. c. 321–297 BCE) established the dynasty's capital at Pataliputra after overthrowing the Nanda rulers, unifying much of northern India under centralized administration with strategic advice from Chanakya, author of the Arthashastra.[221][222] His grandson Ashoka (r. c. 268–232 BCE) expanded the empire to its zenith, ruling from Pataliputra and later promoting non-violence and Buddhist dhamma through edicts following the Kalinga War in 261 BCE.[223] In the Gupta era (c. 4th–6th centuries CE), Kusumapura—another name for Pataliputra—emerged as a hub of intellectual activity. Aryabhata (476–550 CE), a pioneering mathematician and astronomer, composed his Aryabhatiya there around 499 CE, introducing approximations of pi (3.1416), trigonometric functions, and the notion of Earth's rotation, though his birthplace remains uncertain with some evidence pointing to southern India.[224][225] Patna's historical significance extended into the early modern period with the birth of Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Sikh Guru, on December 22, 1666, during his father Guru Tegh Bahadur's posting in the Mughal subah of Bihar. The young Gobind Rai spent his first five years in Patna, where he received early education; the site now houses Takht Sri Harmandir Sahib, one of Sikhism's five takhts.[226][227]

Modern Personalities

Shatrughan Sinha, born on 9 December 1945 in Patna, Bihar, emerged as a prominent Bollywood actor in the 1970s with action roles in films like Mere Apne (1971) and Dostana (1973), earning the nickname "Shotgun" for his dialogue delivery.[228] He later entered politics, serving as a Bharatiya Janata Party Member of Parliament from Patna Sahib constituency multiple times, including from 2009 to 2019, and as Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare in 2019.[229] Shekhar Suman, born on 7 December 1962 in Patna, is an actor and television host recognized for his debut in the film Utsav (1984) and hosting shows such as Movers & Shakers in the 2000s, blending comedy with social commentary.[230] His career spans over 30 films and numerous TV appearances, contributing to Patna's visibility in Indian entertainment through family ties to the industry.[231] Rajesh Kumar, born on 20 January 1975 in Patna, gained fame for portraying the middle-class husband Rosesh in the sitcom Sarabhai vs Sarabhai (2004–2006 and its 2017 revival), which satirized urban Indian family dynamics and earned critical acclaim for its writing.[232] He has appeared in over 50 television episodes and films, including Yeh Meri Family (2018), highlighting relatable characters drawn from everyday life.[233] Anand Kumar, born on 1 January 1973 in Patna, founded the Super 30 program in 2002 to coach underprivileged students for the Indian Institutes of Technology entrance exams, achieving a 100% success rate for 18 consecutive years by 2020 through rigorous, low-cost mathematics training.[234] Starting from selling papads to fund his education after his father's death, Kumar's initiative has prepared over 500 students for IIT admissions, emphasizing merit over financial barriers.[235] Ishan Kishan, born on 18 July 1998 in Patna, is a professional cricketer who debuted for India in Test cricket in 2023 and holds the record for the fastest ODI century by an Indian wicketkeeper-batsman (48 balls against Bangladesh in 2022).[236] Rising through Bihar's domestic circuit, he captained the India Under-19 team at the 2016 World Cup and plays for Mumbai Indians in the IPL, scoring over 1,500 international runs by 2024.[237]

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