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Hugli-Chuchura, also rendered as Hooghly-Chinsurah, is a city and municipality in the Hooghly district of the Indian state of West Bengal. Situated on the western bank of the Hooghly river, about 35 kilometres north of Kolkata, it serves as the administrative headquarters of Hooghly district. The settlement is in fact a twin town comprising the historic localities of Hooghly to the north and Chinsurah to the south, which were merged into a single municipality.
| Key facts | |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| State | West Bengal |
| District | Hooghly |
| Type | City and municipality |
| Headquarters of | Hooghly district |
| River | Hooghly (Bhagirathi) |
| Region | Lower Gangetic plain |
Hugli-Chuchura lies on the right bank of the Hooghly river, opposite the towns of Naihati and Halisahar on the eastern bank. The terrain is part of the alluvial plain of the Ganges delta and is generally flat, with a low elevation above sea level. The city is closely linked with neighbouring urban centres such as Bandel, Bansberia and Chandannagar, all of which form part of the Kolkata metropolitan region.
Hooghly emerged as an important port on the Bhagirathi-Hooghly during the 16th century. The Portuguese established a trading settlement here around 1579–1580, which flourished until it was destroyed by Mughal forces under Shah Jahan in 1632. After the Portuguese decline, the locality of Chinsurah was developed by the Dutch East India Company, which made it the centre of Dutch operations in Bengal from the mid-17th century. The Dutch fortification known as Fort Gustavus stood at Chinsurah.
Following the Battle of Chinsurah in 1759, in which British forces defeated the Dutch, the area passed firmly into the British sphere of influence. By the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824, the Dutch formally ceded Chinsurah to the British in exchange for territories in the East Indies. Hooghly subsequently became the administrative centre of Hooghly district under the Bengal Presidency.
The town is administered by the Chinsurah Municipality, which manages civic services such as water supply, sanitation, roads and public health. The city falls under the Chinsurah assembly constituency for elections to the West Bengal Legislative Assembly and is part of the Hooghly Lok Sabha constituency.
Hugli-Chuchura is well connected by road and rail. The Grand Trunk Road passes through the town, linking it with Kolkata to the south and Bardhaman to the north-west. Chinsurah and Hooghly railway stations lie on the Howrah–Bardhaman main line of the Eastern Railway, providing frequent suburban services to Howrah. A ferry service across the Hooghly connects Chuchura with Naihati on the opposite bank.
The local economy is based on trade, services, small-scale industry and administrative functions associated with the district headquarters. The town has a strong Bengali cultural character, with Durga Puja, Jagaddhatri Puja in nearby Chandannagar, and Muharram observances at the Imambara forming significant annual events.