Location : Goa
Attractions : Church Square, Adilshahi Palace, Shopping and Carnival
Language : Konkani
Panaji or Panjim is the capital and largest city of
Goa state in south-western
India. It lies in the North Goa district on the bank of the Mandovi estuary and has a
population of 60,000, or 100,000 including suburbs. During the day, its population swells
due to the large number of government employees and others who visit the state capital.
The current official name is Panaji, though in the local language
Konkani this gets pronounced as Ponnji, Ponnje, or Ponjhe.
The Portuguese name was Pangim. Many mostly English-speaking people use the name
Panjim.
Earlier a small village on the riverfront, in 1843 the city had been renamed Nova Goa
(Portuguese for New Goa) when it offically replaced the city of Goa
(now Old Goa) as the administrative seat of Portuguese India, though the viceroy
had already moved there in 1759.
Incorporated into India in December 1961, Panaji became a state capital on Goa's elevation
to statehood in May 1987. Between 1961 and 1987, it was the capital of the
Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu. A new Legislative Assembly complex was inaugurated
in March 2000, across the Mandovi river, in the suburb of Porvorim.
Goa's state secretariat, the seat of the bureaucracy, is also to shift to Porvorim .
The heart of the city is the Church Square or Municipal Garden with the Portuguese
Baroque Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Church, originally built in 1541.
Other tourist attractions include the Adilshahi Palace (or Idalcao palace),
dating from the 16th century, the Menezes Braganza Institute and the central library,
the Hindu Mahalaxmi Temple, the Jama Masjid mosque,
the Chapel of St. Sebastian and the Fontainhas area in general which is considered to be the
Old Latin Quarter, as well as the nearby beach Miramar.
Tourists find the 18th June Road a destination for shopping, particularly during the evenings.
The Carnival celebrations in February include a colorful parade on the streets.