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With a central population of
17 million (2008) and an extended metropolitan
population of more than 27 million,
Delhi is the largest metropolis in
India overtaking Mumbai and is one of the oldest
continually inhabited cities in the world. It is
also the world's most populous city within the
municipal city limits. It is located on the
banks of the River Yamuna in northern India and,
as the National Capital Territory of
Delhi (NCT), has the political status
of a federally-administered Union Territory
within the National Capital Region. In 1991, a
constitutional amendment gave Delhi a special
status among the Union Territories and its own
legislative assembly with limited powers.
As of July 2007, the National
Capital Territory of Delhi comprises nine
districts, 27 tehsils, 59 census towns,
165 villages and three statutory towns – the
Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD); the New
Delhi Municipal Committee (NDMC); and the Delhi
Cantonment Board (DCB).
Delhi has been the capital of
several ancient Indian empires and a major city
along the old trade routes between northwest
India and the Indo-Gangetic Plains. It is the
site of many ancient and medieval monuments,
archaeological sites and remains. The Mughal
emperor Shahjahan built the city and it served
as the capital of the Mughal Empire from 1649 to
1857.
After the British Raj took
control of India during the 19th century,
Calcutta (now Kolkata) became the capital until
George V announced in 1911 that it was to move
back to Delhi. A new capital city, New Delhi,
was built during the 1920s and it remains the
area's administrative quarter. When India gained
independence from British rule in 1947, New
Delhi was declared its capital and seat of
government. As such, New Delhi houses important
offices of the federal government, including the
Parliament of India.
Owing to the immigration of
people from across the country, Delhi has grown
to be a cosmopolitan city. Its rapid development
and urbanisation, coupled with the relatively
high average income of its population, has
largely eclipsed socio-cultural traits that used
to represent Delhi until a few years after
independence. Today, Delhi is a major cultural,
political, and commercial center of India.
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