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Kodaikanal is a hill station and municipality in the Dindigul district of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Situated in the Palani Hills of the Western Ghats, the town lies at an elevation of about 2,133 metres (7,000 feet) above sea level. Known as the "Princess of Hill Stations," Kodaikanal is one of the most visited summer retreats in southern India, valued for its cool climate, lake, granite cliffs and shola grassland ecology.
| Name | Kodaikanal |
|---|---|
| State | Tamil Nadu |
| District | Dindigul |
| Region | Palani Hills, Western Ghats |
| Elevation | Approximately 2,133 m (7,000 ft) |
| Type | Hill station, municipality |
| Languages | Tamil, English |
| Nearest major city | Madurai |
The name Kodaikanal is derived from Tamil. Common interpretations include "the gift of the forest" (kodai meaning gift and kanal meaning forest) and "summer forest," referring to its use as a warm-weather refuge from the plains.
Kodaikanal sits on a plateau above the southern escarpment of the upper Palani Hills, between the Parappar and Gundar valleys. The terrain is characterised by steep granite cliffs, wooded slopes, grasslands and remnants of native shola forest. The town is built around the artificial Kodaikanal Lake, a star-shaped 24-hectare reservoir created in 1863 by Sir Vere Henry Levinge, then Collector of Madurai.
The climate is temperate throughout the year, with cool summers and cold winters. Frost is occasionally recorded in December and January. The area receives rainfall from both the southwest and northeast monsoons.
The Palani Hills were home to Paliyan and other indigenous communities long before the establishment of the modern town. Kodaikanal was developed as a hill station in 1845 by American Christian missionaries and British civil servants seeking relief from the heat and tropical diseases of the southern plains. The first permanent bungalows were built that year by missionaries from the American Madurai Mission.
In 1901, the Kodaikanal International School (originally Highclerc School) was founded to serve the children of missionaries; it remains one of the oldest international schools in India. The Kodaikanal Solar Observatory, established in 1899 under the Madras Observatory, became an important centre for astronomical research and is now operated by the Indian Institute of Astrophysics.
Tourism is the principal driver of the local economy. Notable attractions include Kodaikanal Lake, Bryant Park, Coaker's Walk, Bear Shola Falls, Silver Cascade, Pillar Rocks, Dolphin's Nose and Green Valley View. Horticulture, including the cultivation of pears, plums, avocados and homemade chocolates, also contributes to local commerce. The town is well known for hand-rolled eucalyptus oil and traditional bee-balm products.
The surrounding Palani Hills contain shola–grassland mosaics that support endemic species such as the Nilgiri tahr and the Palani Hills laughingthrush. Conservation concerns include the spread of invasive species such as wattle, eucalyptus and pine plantations introduced during the colonial era, as well as habitat fragmentation. The Palani Hills were declared a wildlife sanctuary by the Government of Tamil Nadu in recent years to strengthen protection of these ecosystems.
Kodaikanal hosts several reputed institutions, including: