Ratnagiri, town, southwestern Maharashtra state, western India. It is situated on the Arabian Sea coast at the mouth of the Kajali River.
Ratnagiri became an administrative capital under the Bijapur rulers. In 1731 it came under the control of Satara kings, and in 1818 it was surrendered to the British. A fort, built during the Bijapur dynasty and strengthened in 1670 by the Maratha king Shivaji, is located on a headland near the harbour. Ratnagiri has a palace where Thibaw, the last king of Burma (now Myanmar), and, later, Hindu and Indian nationalist Vinayak Damodar Savarkar were confined.
The town has a marine biology research station and is one of the ports of the Konkan Coast. Ratnagiri is a popular resort. The surrounding area is bordered on the east by the Sahyadri Hills of the Western Ghats. The hills receive heavy annual rainfall, which runs off in rapid streams that have dissected the landscape, creating infertile plateaus separated by fertile alluvial valleys. The main crops are rice and coconuts; cultivation of various fruits and cashew nuts was developed in the 1970s. Fishing is predominant in coastal areas, particularly at Ratnagiri town, and forestry yields quality teak. Iron ore and bauxite are mined, and iron is exported through the port of Redi. The region has come to depend for its nonagricultural needs on Mumbai (Bombay) to the north, which attracts much of Ratnagiri’s working population. Pop. (2001) 70,383; (2011) 76,229.