Land of Festivals

Nagaland

Nagaland is a hill state in India's far north-east, the homeland of the Naga peoples — around 16 major tribes, each with its own language, dress and festivals. About 19.8 lakh people live across its forested ranges. Unusually for India, English is the official language, and Christianity is the faith of nearly nine in ten Nagas.

Capital Kohima · A state since 1 December 1963

  • English is the official language — unusual in India
  • Nearly 88% Christian, mostly Baptist
  • Around 16 major Naga tribes
  • The Hornbill Festival — the "Festival of Festivals"
  • Battle of Kohima, 1944 — a WWII turning point
  • The Naga King Chilli — once the world's hottest
Tap a district to highlight it

Illustrative district boundaries (derived from open data) — a reference, not an official survey map.

The Basics

Nagaland at a Glance

Nagaland is a small hill state in India's far north-east, carved out as the country's 16th state in 1963. It is the homeland of the Naga peoples and is governed with special constitutional protections under Article 371A.

  • Kohima Capital — Dimapur is the largest city and commercial hub
  • 1 Dec 1963 Became India's 16th state, following the 1960 16-Point Agreement
  • 16,579 km² Area — among India's smaller states
  • 17 districts Reorganised rapidly from 11; Meluri, created in 2024, is the newest
  • English The official language — unusual among Indian states; Nagamese, a creole, is the common tongue
  • 60 seats Legislative Assembly — with 1 Lok Sabha and 1 Rajya Sabha seat
  • Borders Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and Manipur within India; Myanmar to the east
  • Article 371A Special provisions protecting Naga customary law, social practice and land
  • ~16 tribes Major Naga tribes — Konyak, Ao, Angami, Sumi, Lotha, Chakhesang and more
  • State symbols Animal: mithun · Bird: Blyth's tragopan · Tree: alder · Flower: rhododendron

People

Population & Society

Census 2011 is the last full count. Nagaland is overwhelmingly tribal and Christian — and is the only Indian state that recorded a fall in population between 2001 and 2011, a quirk traced to an over-count in the earlier census. Figures below are Census 2011.

  • 19.8 lakh Population, 2011 (1,978,502)
  • −0.6% Decadal change, 2001–2011 — the only state to record a fall (after an inflated 2001 count)
  • 119 /km² Population density, 2011 — sparsely settled
  • 931 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011
  • 79.6% Literacy rate, 2011
  • ~86% Scheduled Tribes — the Naga tribes; the Konyak are among the largest
  • ~88% Christian Faith of most Nagas, predominantly Baptist — Census 2011 (Hindu ~9%, Muslim ~2%)
  • Nagamese An Assamese-based creole — the lingua franca across tribes (English is official)

Economy

Farms, Forests & the Centre

Nagaland is a small, largely agrarian economy that leans heavily on central transfers. Most households farm, services dominate output, and large-scale industry is thin.

  • ₹45,020 cr GSDP 2025-26 (budget estimate)
  • ~12% Nominal GSDP growth, 2025-26 (budget estimate)
  • ~₹1.78 lakh Per-capita income (2024-25) — below the national average
  • ~87% Share of state revenue that comes from the Centre

Land & resources

  • Jhum & terraces Shifting cultivation is widespread; the Angami are famed for their terraced wet-rice
  • Forests Among India's most forested states — about three-quarters of its area (ISFR 2021)
  • King Chilli The GI-tagged Naga "Raja Mircha" — a small but distinctive export
  • Oil & minerals Foothill oil, coal and limestone — largely untapped, and some long disputed
  • Centre-dependent: like other small north-eastern states, Nagaland relies heavily on central transfers, with a narrow own-revenue base.
  • Figures here are the latest Nagaland Budget estimates (via PRS) and the state Economic Survey. The India GDP page compares all states at FY2024-25.

Agriculture

Jhum, Rice & the King Chilli

Farming follows the hills — terraces on the slopes, jhum (shifting cultivation) on the rest — and a basket of distinctive GI-tagged produce led by the fiery Naga King Chilli.

  • Naga King Chilli "Raja Mircha" (Bhut Jolokia) — GI-tagged in 2008; it once held the Guinness record as the world's hottest chilli
  • Rice The staple, grown both on terraces and in jhum fields
  • Zabo farming A Chakhesang rainwater-harvesting system blending fields, forest and fish ponds
  • Naga tree tomato The tangy hill "tamarillo" — GI-tagged
  • Naga cucumber A prized local cucumber — GI-tagged in 2021
  • Chakhesang shawl Handwoven cloth from Phek district — GI-tagged in 2017
  • Hill crops Large cardamom, oranges, pineapple and passion fruit from the slopes

Administrative

The Districts

Nagaland now has 17 districts, reorganised rapidly from 11 over the last few years — Meluri, created in 2024, is the newest. The map shows the 11 historic districts that open boundary data covers. Select one to highlight it on the map above.

    The map and this list share the same data. Clicking a district highlights it on the interactive map in the hero; the six newer districts (Chümoukedima, Niuland, Tseminyü, Noklak, Shamator and Meluri) are not yet on this open-data outline.

    What Makes Nagaland Unique

    Strengths, Heritage & Nature

    Nagaland's pull is its living culture and its hills — the Hornbill Festival, a moving war cemetery at Kohima, flower-filled valleys and a village often called India's first "green" one.

    Heritage

    • Kohima War Cemetery Graves of Commonwealth soldiers from the 1944 Battle of Kohima, with its famous epitaph; maintained by the CWGC
    • Kisama The Naga Heritage Village near Kohima — a morung for each tribe; home of the Hornbill Festival
    • Kachari Ruins Carved monoliths of the medieval Dimasa Kachari kingdom, at Dimapur
    • Khonoma An Angami village widely called India's first "green village," with a community conservation area

    Nature

    • Mount Saramati The state's highest peak (3,826 m), on the Myanmar border
    • Dzükou Valley The "Valley of Flowers of the North-East," on the Manipur border near Kohima
    • Japfü Peak A high peak near Kohima, home to a Guinness-recognised giant rhododendron
    • Deep forests Among India's most forested states — about three-quarters green cover (ISFR 2021)

    Culture & Traditions

    Festivals, Food & the Morung

    Every Naga tribe has its own festivals, dress and dialect — and the state gathers them all each December at the Hornbill Festival. Fermented flavours, smoked pork and the village morung shape daily life.

    • Hornbill Festival The 10-day "Festival of Festivals" at Kisama (1–10 December), started in 2000
    • Tribe festivals Sekrenyi (Angami), Moatsü (Ao), Tuluni (Sumi), Aoleang (Konyak) & Tokhü Emong (Lotha)
    • The morung The traditional youth dormitory — a village's school of crafts, lore and song
    • Naga cuisine Smoked pork, axone (fermented soybean), bamboo shoot and the King Chilli; galho, a hearty one-pot rice dish
    • Music A strong choral and gospel tradition, with a lively contemporary scene backed by the state's music task force
    • Shawls & crafts Tribe-specific warrior shawls, wood carving and cane & bamboo work

    Places to Visit

    Hills, Valleys & the Hornbill

    From the war cemetery and museum at Kohima to the flower valleys, Konyak country and the great December gathering at Kisama, Nagaland rewards the traveller who climbs into its hills.

    • Kohima The hill capital — the war cemetery and the Nagaland State Museum
    • Hornbill Festival Kisama comes alive each December with all the Naga tribes
    • Dzükou Valley A trekkers' valley of seasonal flowers on the Manipur border
    • Mon Konyak country, known for the elder generation of facial-tattooed men — a vanishing tradition
    • Khonoma The Angami "green village" and conservation model near Kohima
    • Mokokchung The cultural heartland of the Ao Naga
    • Dimapur The gateway city and the ancient Kachari Ruins

    Rail, Road & Air

    Reaching the Hills

    Mountainous terrain has long kept Nagaland road-bound, with the rail and air network anchored on Dimapur — though new lines are slowly climbing toward Kohima.

    • Dimapur Airport The state's only operational airport
    • Dimapur railhead Long the state's principal railway gateway, on the NF Railway
    • Rail toward Kohima A new Dhansiri–Zubza line is under construction; trains have reached Shokhuvi (2021) and Molvom (2025), near Dimapur
    • Chiethu airport A second, greenfield airport is planned near Kohima
    • NH-29 The main highway artery, Dimapur–Kohima and on toward Imphal
    • Nagaland University The state's central university (operating since 1994), headquartered at Lumami

    People

    Naga Voices

    From the leaders who steered Nagaland to statehood to Olympians, ministers and musicians, a few of the Nagas who have left a mark.

    • Dr. Imkongliba Ao Led the Naga People's Convention that shaped the path to statehood
    • Neiphiu Rio The state's longest-serving Chief Minister
    • S.C. Jamir A several-term Chief Minister, later Governor of four states
    • Dr. T. Ao Footballer who captained independent India's first Olympic team (London, 1948)
    • Chekrovolü Swüro Olympic archer (London, 2012) and Arjuna awardee
    • Moa Subong Musician (Abiogenesis) who invented the bamboo "Bamhum" wind instrument
    • Temjen Imna Along A current state minister, widely known for his humour online

    Through the Ages

    A Short History of Nagaland

    From British contact in the Naga Hills to a state of its own and a still-unfinished peace process, a few of the milestones — told plainly.

    Key milestones in the history of Nagaland, from the 19th century to 2015.
    WhenMilestone
    1832The first British expedition enters the Naga Hills
    1872American Baptist missionary E.W. Clark begins work among the Ao at Molungkimong; Christianity spreads
    1881The Naga Hills are made a district of British Assam
    Apr–Jun 1944The Battle of Kohima — a turning point of the Second World War in the East
    1946The Naga National Council is formed
    1957The Naga Hills–Tuensang Area is created as a centrally administered unit
    1960The 16-Point Agreement provides for a Naga state within India
    1962Article 371A is added, protecting Naga customary law and land (in force from statehood)
    1 December 1963Nagaland is inaugurated as India's 16th state
    1975The Shillong Accord is signed with a section of the NNC
    2000The first Hornbill Festival is held
    2015A framework agreement is signed with the NSCN (IM); talks continue

    Spotted an error, or know this state well?

    This profile is compiled from Census 2011, the Nagaland budget (via PRS), MoSPI, the GI Registry, the CWGC and Nagaland Tourism. If you find an inaccuracy or have a better source, tell us and we'll review and correct it.

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