Ujjain
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Ujjain, city, western Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It is located on the Malwa Plateau on the east side of the Sipra (Shipra) River, a tributary of the Chambal River. Ujjain is one of seven sacred Hindu cities. Its name is derived from the Sanskrit jai (“victory”).
The city, lying on the first meridian of the ancient Hindu geographers, was the capital (as Ujjayini) of the Aryan Avanti kingdom (6th–4th century bce). In the 2nd century bce Ujjain was the seat of the emperor Ashoka, the last of the Mauryan rulers and one of the most influential early Buddhists. The city was known to the Greek geographer Ptolemy in the 2nd century ce as Ozene, the capital of the western satraps—i.e., the Greek, Scythian, and Parthian rulers of western India. An important trade centre in ancient times, it passed to Chandra Gupta II of Magadha in 400 ce. In 1235 Iltutmish of Delhi sacked Ujjain, and it remained in Muslim hands until its capture in 1750 by the Sindhias, who made it their capital. With the transfer of the capital to Lashkar in Gwalior (1810) and the rise of Indore, Ujjain declined in importance. It was constituted a municipality in 1887.
Near the Sindhia palace is the Mahakala Temple (dedicated to the god Shiva), one of the most sacred Hindu sites in India, which was destroyed in 1235 but subsequently restored. Just southeast is the observatory built by Maharaja Jai Singh of Jaipur, governor of Malwa (1728–34) under the Mughals. Just north lies Bharathari Cave, an 11th-century subterranean temple on the banks of the Sipra.
The city is a rail junction and a major agricultural and textile trade centre. Cotton ginning and milling, oilseed milling, hand weaving, and the manufacture of metalware, tiles, hosiery, confectionery, strawboard, and batteries are important industrial activities. Ujjain is the seat of Vikram University (founded 1957). It is also one of the sites of the Kumbh Mela, a Hindu festival held there every 12 years. Pop. (2001) 430,427; (2011) 515,215.