
Victoria Memorial
Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) is a city of contrasts and
contradictions and that makes a lasting impact on its visitors. It
is India's third largest city, and home to some of its holiest
temples and finest colonial structures.
As the 'Cultural Capital of India', Kolkata has the biggest
concentration of artists, writers and publishers in the country.
And although the centre of Bengali culture, Kolkata is also a
diverse city, with a polyglot mix of languages spoken across its 14
million inhabitants.
Kolkata was home to two Nobel laureates - Mother Theresa, whose
humble home can still be visited - and writer Rabindranath Tagore.
The city also accommodates sports fans, with Eden Gardens, the
city's temple to cricket and the second largest such stadium in the
world, and Saltlake Stadium, one of the world's largest football
venues with a capacity of 120,000.
From 1772 to 1912 Kolkata was the capital of the British Raj, a
legacy evident in its superb colonial architecture, highlighted by
the enormous Victoria Memorial, and well-planned infrastructure.
The latter half of the 20th century, however, saw Kolkata enter a
period of decline, with rampant poverty and economic stagnation. It
was only in the 1980s, under India's first democratically elected
Marxist administration, that the city turned the corner.
Today visitors making the journey to this eastern corner of the
country find a city that has rediscovered its pride and cultural
identity, offering a Bengali welcome warm enough to seduce the most
jaded Indian traveller.