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  1. Anchuthengu. Malabar District, also known as Malayalam District, [1] [2] was an administrative district on the southwestern Malabar Coast of Bombay Presidency (1792–1800), [3] Madras Presidency (1800–1937), [4] Madras Province (1937–1950) and finally, Madras State (1950–1956) in India. It was the most populous and the third-largest ...

  2. A. T. Ummer. Anjukandy Thalakkal Ummer ( Malayalam: അഞ്ചുകണ്ടി തലക്കൽ ഉമ്മർ) (10 March 1933 – 18 October 2001) was a Malayalam music composer from Kerala, India. He is known for composing many soft melodies for 174 Malayalam movies . Born in Anjukandy in Kannur district on 10 March 1933, as the son of ...

  3. Administrative divisions of Madras Presidency. The Madras Presidency was a province of British India comprising most of the present day Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh along with a few districts and taluks of Karnataka, Kerala and Odisha. A few princely states, notably Ramnad and Pudukkottai also merged into the Presidency at some or the other time.

  4. Nov 22, 2018 · This discussion of a major city in British India has particular importance because it immediately precedes the 1857 Mutiny.— George P. Landow ] The Presidency of Madras is one of the great territorial divisions of British India, bounded in the North by the presidencies of Bengal and Bombay, the Nizam’s dominions, and Nagpoor, and on the East, West, and South by the Indian Ocean.

  5. 1 Madras Presidency–natural features, regions and languages; 2 Madras Presidency – districts; 3 Madras Presidency – municipal towns; 1 Politics and the Province: the Justice party; 2 The province and the locality; 3 Depression, dissent and disengagement; 4 The ascent of the congress; Conclusion; Biographical notes; Glossary; Bibliography ...

  6. May 29, 2021 · The Madras Presidency was a province of British India comprising most of the present day Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh along with a few districts and taluks of ...

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  8. Sep 21, 2009 · Summary. By 1800, the British had acquired most of what was to become their presidency of Madras. They found themselves in possession of a collection of territories which covered about 140,000 square miles and which, between 1870 and 1920, came to contain a population of some 30 to 40 millions. The province was certainly the most artificial of ...