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    • Pearl fishing and shipping industries

      • It is a hub for pearl fishing and shipping industries, contributing to the economic development of the region. Agriculture, particularly rice, pulses, sugarcane, cotton, and peanuts cultivation along the coast, plays a crucial role in the local economy.
      www.ncesc.com › geographic-faq › why-is-coromandel-coast-important
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  2. The Coromandel Coast is the southeastern coastal region of the Indian subcontinent, bounded by the Utkal Plains to the north, the Bay of Bengal to the east, the Kaveri delta to the south, and the Eastern Ghats to the west, extending over an area of about 22,800 square kilometres. [1] The coast has an average elevation of 80 metres and is backed ...

  3. Jan 16, 2019 · Economic Activities Along the Coromandel Coast Agriculture . The region receives sufficient rainfall, making it an ideal place for agriculture. Agriculture has been practiced on the coast for hundreds of years and remains the primary economic activity in the Coromandel Coast.

  4. Agriculture is the mainstay of the coastal economy. Rice, pulses (legumes), sugarcane, cotton, and peanuts (groundnuts) are grown. Bananas and betel nuts are grown together with rice in the low-rainfall region of the interior. There are casuarina and coconut plantations along the coast.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Jan 1, 2018 · Along the whole coast, trade formed the mainstay of economic activities among Muslim communities. Muslim-dominated ports channeled goods from inland kingdoms into coastal and overseas trade while supplying these same kingdoms with goods. The main export item of the coast was cloth.

    • ttschach@uni-goettingen.de
  6. Taking the Coromandel Coast as its focus of study, this chapter makes three interrelated points: 1) South Indian commercial agricultural and rural industry—such as rice cultivation and textile weaving—played a dynamic role in the political and commercial activities of the Indian Ocean region; 2) there is an archaeological record that ...

  7. As Hendrik Brouwer explained in 1612, the Coromandel Coast was "the left arm of the Moluccas, because we have noticed that without the textiles of Coromandel, commerce is dead in the Moluccas." The English by contrast were slower to patronize this coastline, and instead concentrated their trading activities in Persia and Surat in Gujarat.

  8. In this in-depth history of India's eastern coastline during the late-medieval and early-modern periods, the author unearths fresh empirical data from the records of the Dutch and English East India Companies to reconstruct the life and livelihood of the region. He discusses its geographical and economic boundaries, its topography and climate, its ports and trading outlets, and examining the ...

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