Short description: Town located at a higher elevation than the nearby plain or valley
Shimla, a city founded as a hill station. The city's urban planning and architecture, as seen here on the south side of the Ridge, were designed to foster a European experience for homesick colonial officials and executives.
A hill station is a town located at a higher elevation than the nearby plain or valley. The term was used mostly in colonial Asia (particularly in India), but also in Africa (albeit rarely), for towns founded by European colonialists as refuges from the summer heat and, as Dale Kennedy observes about the Indian context, "the hill station ... was seen as an exclusive British preserve: here it was possible to render the Indian into an outsider".[1][2] In India, which has the largest number of hill stations, most are situated at an altitude of approximately 1,000 to 2,500 metres (3,300 to 8,200 ft).
Contents
1History
1.1In South Asia
2List of hill stations
2.1Africa
2.1.1Madagascar
2.1.2Morocco
2.1.3Nigeria
2.1.4Uganda
2.2Americas
2.2.1Brazil
2.2.2Costa Rica
2.2.3United States
2.3Asia
2.3.1Bangladesh
2.3.2Cambodia
2.3.3China
2.3.4Cyprus
2.3.5Hong Kong
2.3.6India
2.3.7Indonesia
2.3.8Iraq
2.3.9Israel
2.3.10Japan
2.3.11Jordan
2.3.12Malaysia
2.3.13Myanmar
2.3.14Nepal
2.3.15Pakistan
2.3.16Philippines
2.3.17Sri Lanka
2.3.18Syria
2.3.19Vietnam
2.4Oceania
2.4.1Australia
2.4.1.1Victoria
2.4.1.2South Australia
2.4.1.3Queensland
2.4.1.4Western Australia
2.4.1.5New South Wales
3See also
4References
5Bibliography
6External links
History
In South Asia
Some view Nandi Hills, an 11th-century hilltop fortress developed by the Ganga dynasty in present-day Karnataka, India, as a precursor to the hill station concept.[3][4] Tipu Sultan (1751 - 1799) notably used it as a summer retreat.[5]
Hill stations in British India were established for a variety of reasons. One of the first reasons in the early 1800s, was for the place to act as a sanitorium for the ailing family members of British officials.[6] After the rebellion of 1857, the British "sought further distance from what they saw as a disease-ridden land by [escaping] to the Himalayas in the north". Other factors included anxieties about the dangers of life in India, among them "fear of degeneration brought on by too long residence in a debilitating land". The hill stations were meant to reproduce the home country, illustrated in Lord Lytton's statement about Ootacamund in the 1870s as having "such beautiful English rain, such delicious English mud."[7] Shimla was officially made the "summer capital of India" in the 1860s and hill stations "served as vital centres of political and military power, especially after the 1857 revolt."[8][9]
As noted by Indian historian Vinay Lal, hill stations in India also served "as spaces for the colonial structuring of a segregational and ontological divide between Indians and Europeans, and as institutional sites of imperial power."[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18] William Dalrymple wrote that "The viceroy was the spider at the heart of Simla's web: From his chambers in Viceregal Lodge, he pulled the strings of an empire that stretched from Rangoon in the east to Aden in the west."[19] Meanwhile Judith T Kenny observed that "the hill station as a landscape type tied to nineteenth-century discourses of imperialism and climate. Both discourses serve as evidence of a belief in racial difference and, thereby, the imperial hill station reflected and reinforced a framework of meaning that influenced European views of the non-western world in general."[20] The historian of Himalayan cultures Shekhar Pathak speaking about the development of Hill Stations like Mussoorie noted that “the needs of this (European) elite created colonies in Dehradun of Indians to cater to them."[21] This "exclusive, clean, and secure social space – known as an enclave – for white Europeans ... evolved to become the seats of government and foci of elite social activity", and created racial distinctions which perpetuated British colonial power and oppression as Nandini Bhattacharya notes.[22][23] Dale Kennedy observed that "the hill station, then, was seen as an exclusive British preserve: here it was possible to render the Indian into an outsider".[1]
Kennedy, following Monika Bührlein, identifies three stages in the evolution of hill stations in India: high refuge, high refuge to hill station, and hill station to town. The first settlements started in the 1820s, primarily as sanitoria. In the 1840s and 1850s, there was a wave of new hill stations, with the main impetus being "places to rest and recuperate from the arduous life on the plains". In the second half of the 19th century, there was a period of consolidation with few new hill stations. In the final phase, "hill stations reached their zenith in the late nineteenth century. The political importance of the official stations was underscored by the inauguration of large and costly public-building projects."[8]:14
The concept of Hill Station has been used loosely in India (and more broadly South Asia) since the mid-20th century to qualify any town or settlement in mountainous areas, which attempt to expand its local economy toward tourism, or have been invested by recent mass tourism practices. Kullu and Manali in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh, are two example of that misuse of Hill Station or more accurately deviation of its meaning. These two historical settlements existed prior to the British, and haven't been specially frequented by them or even extensively modified or shaped by them. However, the rise of internal domestic tourism in India from the eighties and the subsequent reproduction of Hill Station practice by urban middle-class Indians contributed to the labelling of these two localities as Hill Stations. Munnar, a settlement in the state of Kerala whose economy is primarily based on tea cultivation and processing, as well as plantations agriculture, is another example of a hill town transformed by contemporaneous tourism practices as a hill station.
List of hill stations
Most hill stations, listed by region:
Africa
Madagascar
Antsirabe, Madagascar
Antsirabe
Morocco
Ifrane, Morocco.
Ifrane
Nigeria
Jos
Uganda
Fort Portal
Americas
Brazil
Petropolis
Campos do Jordão
Costa Rica
Monteverde
United States
Beech Mountain
Sky Valley, Georgia
Big Bear Lake, California
Cloudcroft, New Mexico
Summerhaven, Arizona
Asia
Bangladesh
Sajek Valley, Rangamati Hill District, Bangladesh, the most popular hill station and summer destination in Bangladesh.
Chittagong
Sajek Valley
Bandarban,Chittagong
Jaflong
Khagrachari,Chittagong
Moulvibazar
Rangamati,Chittagong
Sreemangal
Cambodia
Former residence of King Sisowath Monivong at Phnom Bokor
Bokor Hill Station
China
Kuling (Guling) in Jiangxi Province
Mount Mogan
Mount Jigong
Guling, Fujian Province
Beidaihe
Cyprus
Platres, Cyprus
Platres
Hong Kong
Victoria Peak
Sunset Peak
India
Hundreds of hill stations are located in India. The most popular hill stations in India include:
A summer evening view on the Nainital lake and town, in the state of Uttarakhand, India. Hill stations are often created or shaped according to European aesthetics. Here, the natural lakes of the Kumaon hills echo the lakes of the Swiss Alps, celebrated at the same time in Western Europe. In Ooty and Kodaikanal, the lack of water bodies has been compensated by the creation of artificial lakes.
Tea plantations in Darjeeling, West Bengal, India
The Stone House at Ooty, the first colonial mansion built in the Nilgiris.
Achabal, Jammu and Kashmir
Amarkantak, Madhya Pradesh
Ambanad Hills, Kerala
Amboli, Maharashtra
Almora, Uttarakhand
Araku Valley, Andhra Pradesh
Aritar, Sikkim
Aru, Jammu and Kashmir
Askot, Uttarakhand
Auli, Uttarakhand
Baba Budan giri, Karnataka
Badrinath, Uttarakhand
Baltal, Jammu and Kashmir
Barog, Himachal Pradesh
Berinag, Uttarakhand
Bhaderwah, Jammu and Kashmir
Bhowali, Uttarakhand
Chail, Himachal Pradesh
Chakrata, Uttarakhand
Chamba, Himachal Pradesh
Champhai, Mizoram
Chaukori, Uttarakhand
Cherrapunjee, Meghalaya
Chikhaldara, Maharashtra
Chitkul, Himachal Pradesh
Coonoor, Tamil Nadu
Daksum, Jammu and Kashmir
Dalhousie, Himachal Pradesh
Daringbadi, Odisha
Darjeeling, West Bengal
Dawki, Meghalaya
Diskit, Ladakh
Doodhpathri, Jammu and Kashmir
Dhanaulti, Uttarakhand
Dharamkot, Himachal Pradesh
Dharchula, Uttarakhand
Dras, Ladakh
Dzuluk, Sikkim
Dzüko Valley, Nagaland and Manipur
Gairsain, Uttarakhand
Gangtok, Sikkim
Ghum, West Bengal
Gulmarg, Jammu and Kashmir
Geyzing, Sikkim
Haflong, Assam
Hemkund Sahib, Uttarakhand
Hmuifang, Mizoram
Kalpa, Himachal Pradesh
Jogindernagar, Himachal Pradesh
Jogimatti, Karnataka
Joshimath, Uttarakhand
Kalimpong, West Bengal
Katra, Jammu and Kashmir
Kangra, Himachal Pradesh
Kargil, Ladakh
Karzok, Ladakh
Kedarnath, Uttarakhand
Keylong, Himachal Pradesh
Khajjiar, Himachal Pradesh
Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu
Kolli Hills, Tamil Nadu
Kotagiri, Tamil Nadu
Kohima, Nagaland
Kokernag, Jammu and Kashmir
Khandala, Maharashtra
Kufri, Himachal Pradesh
Kullu, Himachal Pradesh
Kurseong, West Bengal
Lachen, Sikkim
Lachung, Sikkim
Lansdowne, Uttarakhand
Lava, West Bengal
Leh, Ladakh
Lonavala, Maharashtra
Lolegaon, West Bengal
Lunglei, Mizoram
Mahabaleshwar, Maharashtra
Mainpat, Chhattisgarh
Matheran, Maharashtra
Manali, Himachal Pradesh
Mawsynram, Meghalaya
McLeod Ganj, Himachal Pradesh
Meghamalai, Tamil Nadu
Mirik, West Bengal
Mount Abu, Rajasthan
Murgo, Ladakh
Munnar, Kerala
Munsiyari, Uttarakhand
Mussoorie, Uttarakhand
Nainital, Uttarakhand
Narkanda, Himachal Pradesh
New Tehri, Uttarakhand
Ooty (Udhagamandalam), Tamil Nadu
Pachmarhi, Madhya Pradesh
Palampur, Himachal Pradesh
Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir
Patnitop, Jammu and Kashmir
Pauri, Uttarakhand
Pelling, Sikkim
Pfütsero, Nagaland
Pithoragarh, Uttarakhand
Ramgarh, Uttarakhand
Ranikhet, Uttarakhand
Reckong Peo, Himachal Pradesh
Reiek, Mizoram
Rishyap, West Bengal
Samsing, West Bengal
Saputara, Gujarat
Shillong, Meghalaya
Shimla, Himachal Pradesh
Sonamarg, Jammu and Kashmir
Soordelu Hill Station, Kerala
Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh
Thekkady, Kerala
Triund, Himachal Pradesh
Tosa Maidan, Jammu and Kashmir
Topslip, Tamil Nadu
Turtuk, Ladakh
Uttarkashi, Uttarakhand
Valparai, Tamil Nadu
Vagamon, Kerala
Verinag, Jammu and Kashmir
Wilson Hills, Gujarat
Yercaud Tamil Nadu
Yelagiri Tamil Nadu
Yusmarg, Jammu and Kashmir
Yuksom, Sikkim
Yumthang, Sikkim
Indonesia
Puncak, West Java, Indonesia
Garut in, West Java
Sukabumi in West Java
Puncak in West Java
Batu in East Java
Tretes in East Java
Kaliurang in Central Java
Munduk in Bali
Bedugul in Bali
Berastagi in North Sumatra
Lembang in West Java
Baturaden in Central Java
Wonosobo in Central Java
Tawangmangu in Central Java
Bandungan, Semarang in Central Java
Bukittinggi in West Sumatra
Padang Panjang in West Sumatra
Sawahlunto in West Sumatra
Solok in West Sumatra
Payakumbuh in West Sumatra
Takengon in Aceh
Tomohon in North Sulawesi
Tana Toraja in South Sulawesi
Malino in South Sulawesi
Salatiga in Central Java
Iraq
Amadiya in northern Iraq.
Shaqlawa
Amedi
Rawanduz
Sulaymaniyah
Batifa
Israel
Metula
Safed
Japan
Karuizawa in Nagano, Japan
Hakone[24]
Karuizawa[24]
Nikkō[24]
Lake Chūzenji[24]
Jordan
Jabal al-Ashrafiyeh in Amman, Jordan
A few suburbs in Amman:
Al-Ashrafiya
Jabal Amman
Malaysia
Cameron Highlands, Malaysia.
Bukit Larut
Bukit Tinggi
Cameron Highlands
Fraser's Hill
Penang Hill
Myanmar
Kalaw
Pyin Oo Lwin
Taunggyi
Thandaung
Nepal
Village of Namche Bazaar in Nepal
Pokhara
Namche Bazaar
Bandipur
Dhulikhel
Tansen
Nagarkot
Kakani
Gorkha Bazaar
Daman
Dharan
Dhankuta
Illam
Sarangkot
Baglung
Resunga
Kunde
Khumjung
Lukla
Tengboche
Phortse
Bhimeshwar
Besisahar
Sandhikharka
Tamghas
Jomsom
Phidim
Phungling
Fikal
Bhedetar
Dunai, Nepal
Pakistan
Murree, a popular hill station in Pakistan
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Abbottabad
Behrain
Kalam Valley
Malam Jabba
Nathia Gali
Shogran
Chitral
Jahaz Banda
Naran
Kaghan
Punjab
Bhurban
Charra Pani
Murree
Patriata
Sindh
Gorakh Hill
Bado Hill Station
Balochistan
Ziarat
Gilgit Baltistan
Hunza Valley
Skardu
Astore Valley
Gilgit
Nagar Valley
Philippines
Baguio, Philippines
Baguio
Salvador Benedicto
Mambukal
Tagaytay
Sagada
Malaybalay
Sri Lanka
Nuwara Eliya, Sri Lanka
Nuwara Eliya
Syria
Bloudan, Syria
Bloudan
Masyaf
Qadmous
Zabadani
Madaya
Vietnam
Da Lat, Vietnam
Da Lat
Sa Pa
Tam Đảo
Bà Nà Hills
Bạch Mã National Park
Oceania
Australia
Mount Macedon, Victoria
Bardon, Queensland
Victoria
Mount Macedon
Harrietville
South Australia
Mount Gambier
Adelaide Hills
Queensland
Toowoomba
Merewether
The Gap
Chapel Hill
Bardon
Ferny Grove
Buderim
New Auckland
Mount Archer
Western Australia
Lesmurdie
Kalamunda
Jarrahdale
Bedfordale
New South Wales
Blue Mountains
Mount Pleasant
Woonoona
Kariong
Illawarra escarpment (Stanwell Tops)
Prospect Hill (Pemulwuy)
Terrey Hills
Berowra Heights
See also
Tierra templada
Tierra fría
Plateau
Tableland
Mesa
References
↑ 1.01.1Kennedy, Dane. The Magic Mountains: Hill Stations and the British Raj. Berkeley: University of California Press, c1996 1996. | http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft396nb1sf/
↑"Hill Stations: Pinnacles of the Raj". https://southasia.ucla.edu/hill-stations-pinnacles-raj/.
↑"Plans include beautification of the entire hill station to attract tourists". Outlook India. 26 February 2021. https://www.outlookindia.com/outlooktraveller/travelnews/story/71232/nandi-hills.
↑Muni Nagraj. Āgama Aura Tripiṭaka, Eka Anuśilana: Language and Literature. p. 500.
↑Myer, H. (1995). India 2001: Reference Encyclopedia. South Asia Publications. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-945921-42-4. https://books.google.com/books?id=F_BtAAAAMAAJ.
↑Dane Keith Kennedy (1996). The Magic Mountains: Hill Stations and the britishBritishRaj. University of California Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-520-20188-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=UveLzKDlZBEC&pg=PR9.
↑Barbara D. Metcalf; Thomas R. Metcalf (2002). A Concise History of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-521-63974-3. https://books.google.com/books?id=jGCBNTDv7acC.
↑ 8.08.1Kennedy, Dane (1996). The Magic Mountains: Hill Stations and the British Raj. Berkeley: University of California Press. http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft396nb1sf;brand=ucpress. Retrieved 19 Aug 2014.
↑Vipin Pubby (1996). Shimla Then and Now. Indus Publishing. pp. 17–34. ISBN 978-81-7387-046-0. https://books.google.com/books?id=UrZ-ibfhMyMC&pg=PA17. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
↑"'But what about the railways ...?' The myth of Britain's gifts to India". March 8, 2017. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/08/india-britain-empire-railways-myths-gifts.
↑"Racism and stereotypes in colonial India's 'Instagram'". BBC News. 30 September 2018. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-45506092.
↑"Segregation and the Social Relations of Place, Bombay, 1890–1910". https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271900472.
↑"Login". http://searcharchives.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?dscnt=1&elementId=0&recIdxs=0&frbrVersion=&scp.scps=scope:(BL)&frbg=&tab=local&displayMode=full&dstmp=1613819543550&srt=rank&ct=display&mode=Basic&dum=true&indx=1&recIds=IAMS040-000155711&renderMode=poppedOut&doc=IAMS040-000155711&vl(freeText0)=proceedings of the third meeting of the general malaria committee at madras&fn=search&vid=IAMS_VU2&tabs=detailsTab&fromLogin=true.
↑Das, Shinjini. "India's initial coronavirus response carried echoes of the colonial era". http://theconversation.com/indias-initial-coronavirus-response-carried-echoes-of-the-colonial-era-135887.
↑Group, British Medical Journal Publishing (January 26, 1901). "The Prophylaxis of Malaria". Br Med J1 (2091): 240–242. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.2091.240. PMID 20759409. PMC 2400219. https://www.bmj.com/content/1/2091/240.
↑"Hill Stations: Pinnacles of the Raj". https://southasia.ucla.edu/hill-stations-pinnacles-raj/.
↑Climates & Constitutions: Health, Race, Environment and British Imperialism in India, 1600-1850. Oxford University Press. 1999. ISBN 978-0-19-564657-3. https://books.google.com/books?id=XyVuAAAAMAAJ.
↑Dalrymple, William (1999-09-26). "India's Green and Pleasant Land". The Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/magazine/1999/09/26/indias-green-and-pleasant-land/5f15d3b6-b6b3-4c24-83e6-56956313d87e/. Retrieved 2022-06-11.
↑Climate, Race, and Imperial Authority: The Symbolic Landscape of the British Hill Station in India | Judith T. Kenny | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-8306.1995.tb01821.x
↑"How not to develop a hill station". https://scroll.in/article/1012794/.
↑Contagion and Enclaves: Tropical Medicine in Colonial India | Nandini Bhattacharya | https://liverpool.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.5949/UPO9781846317835/upso-9781846318290-chapter-2
↑Bhattacharya N. (2013). Leisure, economy and colonial urbanism: Darjeeling, 1835-1930. Urban history, 40(3), 442–461. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0963926813000394
↑ 24.024.124.224.3Walters, Trudie; Duncan, Tara (2 Oct 2017). Second Homes and Leisure: New perspectives on a forgotten relationship. Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge. ISBN 9781317400264. https://books.google.com/books?id=3RA4DwAAQBAJ&q=hill+stations+in+japan&pg=PT74.
Bibliography
Crossette, Barbara. The Great Hill Stations of Asia. ISBN:0-465-01488-7.
Kennedy, Dane. The Magic Mountains: Hill Stations and the British Raj (Full text, searchable). Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996. ISBN:0-520-20188-4, ISBN:978-0520201880.
External links
Hill Stations in Nepal
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