Kolkata
Kolkata, formerly Calcutta, is the capital and largest city of West Bengal and the cultural capital of India. Kolkata is an "in your face" city that shocks and charms the unsuspecting visitor.Photo: Rangan Datta Wiki, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Photo: Sujay25, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Essential Destinations
Top destinations include Esplanade and B. B. D. Bagh.
Esplanade
Photo: Gangulybiswarup, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Esplanade or Dharmatala is the modern city centre of Kolkata, combining colonial-era buildings with modern developments. It serves as the city's new central business district and is preferred by major businesses, particularly along Chowringhee Road.
B. B. D. Bagh
Photo: Rangan Datta Wiki, CC BY-SA 4.0.
B. B. D. Bagh, short of Benoy-Badal-Dinesh Bagh, is the colonial-era precinct of Kolkata. Formerly known as Dalhousie Square or simply Dalhousie, the precinct takes a visitor back to the British Raj era with nostalgic overtones.
Photo: Ketanmehta4u, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Photo: DeepanjanGhosh, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Places of Interest
Highlights include Howrah Bridge and Howrah Station.
Howrah Bridge
Photo: Pradip paswan, CC BY-SA 4.0.
The Howrah Bridge is a balanced steel bridge over the Hooghly River in West Bengal, India. Commissioned in 1943, the bridge was originally named the New Howrah Bridge, because it replaced a pontoon bridge at the same location linking both sides of Kolkata.
Howrah Station
Railway station
Photo: Tirthankar Maiti, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Howrah Station, also known as Howrah Junction, is a major railway station of Kolkata, which not only connects the city to the rest of India, but also acts as a major stopover to connect different destinations of West Bengal and beyond.
Raj Bhavan
Government office
Photo: Rangan Datta Wiki, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Raj Bhavan, officially known as Lok Bhavan and formerly as Government House is the official residence of the Governor of West Bengal, C. V. Ananda Bose, located in Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal.
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Alipore and Maidan.
Alipore
Suburb
Photo: Kolkatan, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Alipore is a neighbourhood of South Kolkata in Kolkata district in the Indian state of West Bengal. It is flanked by the Tolly Nullah to the north, Bhowanipore to the east, the Diamond Harbour Road to the west and New Alipore to the south, bordered by the Budge Budge section of the Sealdah South section railway line.
Maidan
Suburb
Photo: Rangan Datta Wiki, CC BY-SA 4.0.
The Maidan is a 400-hectare green space in Central Kolkata that stretches from the Hooghly River in the west to Chowringhee Road in the east, and from the Victoria Memorial in the south to Raj Bhavan and Eden Gardens in the north.
Jorasanko
Suburb
Photo: P.K.Niyogi, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Jorasanko is a neighbourhood of North Kolkata, in Kolkata district, West Bengal, India. It is so called because of the two wooden or bamboo bridges that spanned a small stream at this point.
Kolkata
- Type: City with 4,490,000 residents
- Description: capital city of West Bengal, India
- Also known as: “Cal”, “City of Joy”, “City of Palaces”, “City of Processions”, “Kalikātā”, “Kol”, “Kolkāta”, and “Sealdah”
- Historically known as: “Calcutta”
- Categories: municipal corporation of West Bengal, megacity, provincial capital, metropolis, largest city, and locality
- Location: Kolkata, West Bengal, Eastern India, India, South Asia, Asia
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
22.5726° or 22° 34′ 22″ northLongitude
88.3639° or 88° 21′ 50″ eastPopulation
4,490,000Elevation
11 metres (36 feet)IATA airport code
CCUUnited Nations Location Code
IN CCUOpen location code
7MJCH9F7+3HOpenStreetMap ID
node 245707150OpenStreetMap feature
place=cityGeoNames ID
1275004Wikidata ID
Q1348
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikivoyage.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Kolkata from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Afrikaans to Yue Chinese—“Kolkata” goes by many names.
- Afrikaans: “Kalkutta”
- Afrikaans: “Kolkata”
- Albanian: “Kalkuta”
- Amharic: “ኮልካታ”
- Angika: “कलकत्ता”
- Arabic: “كالكوتا”
- Arabic: “كلكتا”
- Arabic: “كلكتة”
- Arabic: “كُلْكَتَّة”
- Aragonese: “Calcuta”
- Armenian: “Կալկաթա”
- Assamese: “কলকাতা”
- Assamese: “কলিকতা”
- Asturian: “Calcuta”
- Azerbaijani: “Kəlkətə”
- Azerbaijani: “Kəlkütə”
- Balinese: “Kolkata”
- Bashkir: “Калькутта”
- Basque: “Kalkuta”
- Belarusian: “Калката”
- Belarusian: “Калькута”
- Bengali: “Kolkata”
- Bengali: “আনন্দ নগরী”
- Bengali: “কলকাতা”
- Bengali: “কলিকাতা”
- Bengali: “প্রাসাদ নগরী”
- Bengali: “মিছিলের শহর”
- Bhojpuri: “कलकत्ता”
- Bhojpuri: “कोलकाता”
- Bosnian: “Kolkata”
- Breton: “Kolkata”
- Bulgarian: “Калкута”
- Bulgarian: “Колката”
- Burmese: “ကာလကတ္တားမြို့”
- Catalan: “Calcuta”
- Cebuano: “Kolkata (kapital sa estado)”
- Cebuano: “Kolkata”
- Central Bikol: “Kolkata”
- Central Kurdish: “کەلکەتە”
- Chechen: “Калькутта”
- Chinese: “Kolkata”
- Chinese: “加尔各答”
- Chinese: “加爾各答”
- Chuvash: “Калькутта”
- Cornish: “Kolkata”
- Corsican: “Calcutta”
- Crimean Tatar: “Kolkata”
- Croatian: “Calcutta” (historical)
- Croatian: “Kolkata”
- Czech: “Kalkata”
- Dagbani: “Kolikata”
- Dagbani: “Kolkata”
- Danish: “Calcutta”
- Danish: “Kolkata”
- Dotyali: “कोलकाता”
- Dutch: “Calcutta”
- Dutch: “Kolkata”
- Eastern Mari: “Колката”
- Eastern Mari: “Колкате”
- Egyptian Arabic: “كولكاتا”
- Esperanto: “Kolkato”
- Estonian: “Kolkata”
- Extremaduran: “Calcuta”
- Faroese: “Kolkata”
- Fiji Hindi: “Kolkata”
- Finnish: “Kalkutta”
- French: “Calcutta”
- French: “Kolkata”
- Galician: “Calcuta”
- Galician: “Kolikata”
- Galician: “Kolkata”
- Gan Chinese: “加爾各答”
- Gan Chinese: “加麗加達”
- Georgian: “კოლკატა”
- German: “Calcutta”
- German: “Kolkata”
- German: “Kalkutta” (historical)
- Goan Konkani: “Kolkata”
- Goan Konkani: “कलकत्ता”
- Gorontalo: “Kalkuta”
- Greek: “Καλκούτα”
- Greek: “Κολκάτα”
- Guarani: “Kalkuta”
- Gujarati: “કલકત્તા”
- Gujarati: “કોલકાતા”
- Hausa: “Kolkata”
- Hebrew: “כלכותה”
- Hebrew: “קולקטה”
- Hindi: “कोलकाता”
- Hindi: “खुशी का शहर”
- Hungarian: “Kalkutta”
- Hungarian: “Kolkata”
- Icelandic: “Kalkútta”
- Icelandic: “Kolkata”
- Ido: “Kalkuta”
- Iloko: “Kolkata”
- Indonesian: “Calcutta”
- Indonesian: “Kalkutta”
- Indonesian: “Kolkata”
- Ingush: “Калькутта”
- Interlingua: “Calcutta”
- Interlingua: “Kolkata”
- Interlingue: “Calcutta”
- Irish: “Calcúta”
- Italian: “Calcutta”
- Italian: “Colcata”
- Japanese: “カルカッタ”
- Japanese: “コルカタ”
- Japanese: “喜びの都市”
- Japanese: “宮殿都市”
- Javanese: “Kalkuta”
- Javanese: “Kolkata”
- Kabiyè: “Kalikuta”
- Kalaallisut: “Kolkata”
- Kannada: “ಕೊಲ್ಕತ್ತ”
- Kannada: “ಕೊಲ್ಕತ್ತಾ”
- Kara-Kalpak: “Kalkutta”
- Kashmiri: “کَلٕکَتا”
- Kashmiri: “کولکاتا”
- Kazakh: “Калькутта”
- Kazakh: “Колката”
- Kirghiz: “Калькутта”
- Komering: “Kolkata”
- Korean: “콜카타”
- Kurdish: “Kolkata”
- Ladin: “Kolkata”
- Ladino: “Kalkuta”
- Latin: “Calcutta”
- Latin: “Kalakātā”
- Latin: “Kalkātā”
- Latvian: “Kolkata”
- Limburgan: “Calcutta”
- Lithuanian: “Kalkuta”
- Lithuanian: “Kolkata”
- Lombard: “Calcuta”
- Low German: “Kalkutta”
- Lower Sorbian: “Kalkuta”
- Luxembourgish: “Kalkutta”
- Macedonian: “Калкута”
- Macedonian: “Колката”
- Maithili: “कोलकाता”
- Malagasy: “Kolkata”
- Malay: “Kolkata”
- Malayalam: “കൊൽക്കത്ത”
- Maltese: “Calcutta”
- Maltese: “Kolkata”
- Manipuri: “ꯀꯣꯜꯀꯥꯇꯥ”
- Maori: “Karakata”
- Maori: “Korokata”
- Marathi: “कोलकाता”
- Mazanderani: “کلکته”
- Min Nan Chinese: “Kolkata”
- Mingrelian: “კოლკატა”
- Moksha: “Колката”
- Mongolian: “Калькутта”
- Moroccan Arabic: “كولكاتا”
- Nepali: “कलकत्ता”
- Nepali: “कोलकाता”
- Newari: “कोलकाता”
- Northern Frisian: “Kalkutta”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Kolkata”
- Norwegian Nynorsk: “Kolkata”
- Norwegian: “Calcutta” (historical)
- Norwegian: “Kolkata”
- Novial: “Kolkata”
- Nyanja: “Kolkata”
- Occitan (post 1500): “Calcuta”
- Old English (ca. 450-1100): “Caligardamana”
- Old English (ca. 450-1100): “Kolkata”
- Oriya: “କଲିକତା”
- Ossetian: “Калькуттæ”
- Pampanga: “Kolkata”
- Panjabi: “ਕੋਲਕਾਤਾ”
- Persian: “کلکته”
- Piemontese: “Kolkata”
- Polish: “Kalkuta”
- Polish: “Kolkata”
- Portuguese: “Calcutá”
- Portuguese: “Calcutta”
- Portuguese: “Kolkata”
- Pushto: “کلکته”
- Pwo Eastern Karen: “ကာလးကာ့တာႋဍုံ”
- Quechua: “Kolkata”
- Romanian: “Calcuta”
- Romanian: “Calcutta”
- Romanian: “Kolkata”
- Russia Buriat: “Калькутта”
- Russian: “Калькутта”
- Russian: “Колката”
- Rusyn: “Колката”
- Samogitian: “Kalkota”
- Sanskrit: “कोलकता”
- Sanskrit: “कोलकाता”
- Santali: “ᱠᱚᱞᱠᱟᱛᱟ”
- Santali: “ᱠᱳᱞᱠᱟᱛᱟ”
- Scots: “Kolkata”
- Scottish Gaelic: “Kolkata”
- Serbian: “Колката”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Kolkata”
- Sicilian: “Calcutta”
- Silesian: “Kolkata”
- Sindhi: “جلوسن جو شهر”
- Sindhi: “خوشين جو شهر”
- Sindhi: “ڪلڪتو”
- Sindhi: “ڪولڪتا”
- Sindhi: “محلات جو شهر”
- Sinhala: “කල්කටාව”
- Sinhala: “කොල්කාතා”
- Slovak: “Kalkata”
- Slovenian: “Kalkuta”
- Slovenian: “Kolkata”
- South Azerbaijani: “کلکته”
- Spanish: “Calcuta”
- Swahili: “Kolkata”
- Swedish: “Calcutta”
- Swedish: “Kolkata”
- Swiss German: “Kalkutta”
- Sylheti: “ꠇꠟꠇꠣꠔꠣ ꠘꠉꠞ”
- Sylheti: “ꠇꠟꠇꠣꠔꠣ”
- Tagalog: “Kolkata”
- Tajik: “Калкута”
- Tajik: “Калкутта”
- Talysh: “Kalkuta”
- Tamil: “கொல்கத்தா”
- Tamil: “கோல்கட்டா”
- Tamil: “கோல்கதா”
- Tatar: “Kälküttä”
- Tatar: “Кәлкүттә”
- Telugu: “కోల్ కతా”
- Telugu: “కోల్కత”
- Telugu: “కోల్కాతా”
- Thai: “โกลกาตา”
- Tibetan: “ཀ་ལི་ཀུ་ཏ”
- Tosk Albanian: “Kalkutta”
- Turkish: “Kalküta”
- Turkmen: “Kalkutta”
- Twi: “Kolkata”
- Uighur: “Kalkutta”
- Ukrainian: “Колката”
- Upper Sorbian: “Kalkutta”
- Upper Sorbian: “Kolkata”
- Urdu: “کلکتہ”
- Urdu: “کولکاتا”
- Urdu: “کولکاتہ”
- Uzbek: “Kalkutta”
- Venetian: “Calcuta”
- Veps: “Kolkat”
- Vietnamese: “Kolkata”
- Volapük: “Kolkata”
- Waray (Philippines): “Kolkata”
- Welsh: “Calcutta”
- Welsh: “Kolkata”
- Western Armenian: “Կալկաթա”
- Western Frisian: “Kalkutta”
- Western Frisian: “Kolkata”
- Western Panjabi: “کلکتا”
- Western Panjabi: “کلکتہ”
- Western Panjabi: “کولکتا”
- Wu Chinese: “加尔各答”
- Yakut: “Колката”
- Yiddish: “קאלקאטא”
- Yue Chinese: “架利吉打”
- “Calcuta”
- “Calcutta”
- “Kalkota”
- “ma tomo Kokata”
- “כלכתה”
- “कलकत्ता”
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