Mumbai: A trade and travel hub


Mumbai: A trade and travel hub
Mumbai: A trade and travel hub
Video overview of Mumbai's history.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Transcript

NARRATOR: Just off the west coast of India lies Bombay Island, home to the city of Mumbai, formerly known as Bombay. A principal port on the Arabian Sea, Mumbai is India's financial and commercial center. It is also one of the world's largest and most densely populated cities, home to citizens of great wealth as well as great poverty.

By 1000 BCE, Mumbai had become a center of maritime trade with Persia and Egypt. Over the next two millennia, a number of empires and dynasties held control over Bombay Island. In 1294 the ruling Yadava dynasty founded the settlement of Mahikavati on the island. Most of the island's place-names date from this era, and descendants of the Yadavas still inhabit contemporary Mumbai.

In 1348 Muslim forces invaded and conquered Bombay Island. The region was incorporated into the kingdom of Gujarat until 1534, when Sultan Bahadur Shah ceded the island to the Portuguese.

The marriage of King Charles II of Great Britain and Ireland to the king of Portugal's sister brought the island under British control. The city became known as Bombay and was the capital of the territorial division called the Bombay Presidency. In 1668 the crown ceded Bombay Island to the East India Company, which controlled trade with East and Southeast Asia and India.

By the turn of the 19th century, instability and conflict on the mainland drove artisans and merchants to resettle on the island, which helped stimulate the growth of Bombay. Trade and communications channels to the mainland were established and those to Europe extended. Bombay prospered during the 19th century, growing in population—becoming a strong center of import trade.

Bombay also became a center for political activity by the last half of the century. The first session of the Indian National Congress, which led the Indian movement for independence from British rule, was held in the city in 1885. Bombay remained the scene of both Indian national and South Asian regional political activity through the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

In 1942 the Indian National Congress met in Bombay and passed the “Quit India” resolution, which demanded that Britain grant India complete independence.

Bombay remained a center of political unrest even after Indian independence in 1947. Bombay state, created from the old Bombay Presidency, consisted of Gujarati and Marathi speakers, and, from 1956 until 1960, protests raged in the city against this two-language system. These protests led to the state's partition into the two modern states of Gujarat and Maharashtra in 1960, with the city of Bombay named the capital of Maharashtra.

In late 1992 and early 1993, Bombay was rocked by sectarian riots in which hundreds of people died. A few years later the city changed its name to Mumbai, its Marathi name, taken from the local Hindu goddess Mumba, whose temple once stood in the city.

During the early 21st century, Mumbai experienced a number of terrorist attacks. Notable among these were the bombing of a train in 2006 and multiple attacks on several locations in the city in 2008, each of which killed almost 200 people.

Today Mumbai serves as one of India's most important hubs for domestic and international trade and travel. Mumbai handles some three-fifths of India's international flights and nearly two-fifths of its domestic flights. The facilities provided by the city's harbor make Mumbai the country's principal west-coast port.

The city also houses several important financial and business services. India's central bank is located in Mumbai, and the Bombay Stock Exchange is the country's leading stock market.

Mumbai has a number of museums, libraries, literary organizations, art galleries, theaters, and other cultural institutions. The sport of cricket has a large following in the city.

Mumbai is also notable for being the home of Bollywood, the Indian film industry that began there in the 1930s and developed into an enormous moviemaking empire. Today Bollywood produces as many as 1,000 feature films a year. In addition to their widespread domestic popularity, Bollywood films have gained international audiences among South Asians in the United Kingdom and in North America.