Karaikal

India
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Karaikal, town, Puducherry union territory, southeastern India. It constitutes an enclave on the Coromandel Coast of the Bay of Bengal within eastern Tamil Nadu state, near the mouth of the Arasalar River.

Karaikal, the chief town of the Karaikal territory and a former French colony in India, is in the fertile Kaveri (Cauvery) River delta, the most-important rice-growing region of Tamil Nadu. The area was part of the Chola empire in the 10th century, and it was conquered successively by Vijayanagar, Maratha, Muslim, and French troops, becoming French in the late 18th century. Since the 1950s the area has been a popular seaside tourist resort of the union territory. Major sites include the Jambunatha temple built by Thirumalai Rayan of the Vijayanagar empire in the 15th century, the Saneeswaran temple, and the Karaikal Ammaiyar temple. Pop. (2001) 74,438; (2011) 86,838.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Maren Goldberg.