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Tripura

Tripura is a small, green state in the far north-east, almost wrapped by Bangladesh. Around 37 lakh people live here — a Bengali-speaking majority alongside the indigenous Tripuri and other tribes. Once a princely kingdom of the Manikya dynasty, it is among India's most literate states and its second-largest rubber producer.

Capital Agartala · A state since 21 January 1972

  • Almost surrounded by Bangladesh — 84% of its border
  • A centuries-old royal line — the Manikya dynasty
  • Among India's most literate states
  • India's 2nd-largest natural rubber producer
  • Unakoti — ancient rock-cut carvings
  • Neermahal — a palace on the water
Tap a district to highlight it

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

The Basics

Tripura at a Glance

Tripura is a small hill state in the far north-east, all but encircled by Bangladesh. Once a princely kingdom, it joined India in 1949 and became a full state in 1972.

  • Agartala Capital & largest city
  • 21 Jan 1972 Became a full state — a princely Manikya kingdom that merged with India in 1949
  • 10,486 km² Area — India's 3rd-smallest state (after Goa & Sikkim)
  • 8 districts About two-thirds of the state is under the TTAADC tribal council (Sixth Schedule)
  • Bengali & Kokborok Official languages (English is also used)
  • 60 seats Legislative Assembly — 2 Lok Sabha seats (West & East)
  • Borders Bangladesh on three sides — about 84% of its border; Assam & Mizoram within India
  • Hills & rivers The Jampui and other ranges; rivers Gumti, Haora, Khowai & Manu
  • Tribes Around 19 Scheduled Tribes — the Tripuri (Tiprasa) are the largest, speaking Kokborok
  • State symbols Animal: Phayre's langur · Bird: green imperial pigeon · Tree: agar

People

Population & Society

Census 2011 is the last full count. Tripura blends a Bengali-speaking majority with its indigenous tribes, and ranks among India's most literate states. Figures below are Census 2011.

  • 36.7 lakh Population, 2011 (3,673,917) — the 2nd most populous NE state, after Assam
  • 14.8% Decadal growth, 2001–2011
  • 350 /km² Population density, 2011
  • 960 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011
  • 87.2% Literacy rate, 2011 — among the highest in India
  • ~31% Scheduled Tribes — the Tripuri (Tiprasa) largest, with the Reang, Jamatia, Chakma & others
  • Kokborok The Tripuri language — an official language of the state since 1979
  • Faiths Hindu majority (~83%), with Muslim (~9%), Christian (~4%) & Buddhist (~3%) communities — Census 2011

Economy

Rubber, Bamboo & Gas

Tripura is a small, largely agrarian economy that leans on the Centre — but it is India's second rubber state, a bamboo powerhouse, and sits on useful reserves of natural gas.

  • ₹1.01 L cr GSDP 2025-26 (budget estimate) — past ₹1 lakh crore for the first time
  • ~10% Nominal GSDP growth, 2025-26 over 2024-25
  • ~₹1.9 lakh Per-capita income — about a tenth below the national average
  • Farm-led Agriculture is about 48% of the economy; manufacturing is thin

Resources & industry

  • Rubber India's 2nd-largest natural rubber producer, after Kerala — the "second rubber capital of India"
  • Bamboo A bamboo-rich state that supplies much of India's agarbatti (incense-stick) raw material
  • Natural gas ONGC gas fields feed the 726 MW Palatana power plant
  • Tea & agar A long-standing tea producer; among India's leading agarwood (oudh) states
  • Centre-dependent: like other small north-eastern states, Tripura relies heavily on central transfers, with a narrow own-revenue base.
  • Figures here are the latest Tripura Budget estimates (via PRS) and MoSPI. The India GDP page compares all states at FY2024-25.

Agriculture

Pineapples, Rubber & the Hills

Rice and rubber dominate the land, with the famous Queen pineapple of the hills, jackfruit and tea among Tripura's prized produce.

  • Queen pineapple Tripura's fragrant hill pineapple — GI-tagged (2015) and the state fruit
  • Rubber India's second-largest natural rubber producer
  • Rice The staple food crop across the valleys
  • Tea A plantation crop dating to the early 1900s
  • Bamboo & agar Bamboo for crafts & incense sticks; agarwood (oudh) plantations
  • GI produce The Matabari Pera sweet, and Risa & Rignai-Pachra handloom (all GI, 2024)
  • Orchard fruit Jackfruit and the hill oranges of the Jampui range

Administrative

The Eight Districts

Tripura has eight districts. About two-thirds of the state falls under the Tripura Tribal Areas Autonomous District Council (TTAADC). Select a district 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; soon each will open its own page.

    What Makes Tripura Unique

    Strengths, Heritage & Nature

    For a small state, Tripura is rich in heritage — the palaces of the Manikya kings, the ancient carvings of Unakoti, and forests that shelter the clouded leopard.

    Heritage

    • Ujjayanta Palace The Manikya kings' grand Agartala palace (1901), now the state museum
    • Neermahal A palace built on Rudrasagar Lake (1938) — a rare Indian "water palace"
    • Unakoti Ancient rock-cut Shiva carvings (c. 7th–9th century), the "Angkor Wat of the North-East" — on UNESCO's tentative list
    • Tripura Sundari The Matabari temple at Udaipur — one of the 51 Shakti Peethas
    • Pilak An archaeological site of Buddhist & Hindu sculptures (8th–12th century)

    Nature

    • Clouded leopard Sepahijala shelters it, plus the Phayre's langur (the state animal); India's first Clouded Leopard National Park is here (2007)
    • Jampui Hills The "eternal hill of spring," famed for its oranges
    • Sanctuaries Trishna (Indian gaur), Gumti & Rowa wildlife sanctuaries

    Culture & Traditions

    Festivals, Dance & Mui Borok

    Tripura's culture weaves together the Manikya court, the Tripuri tribes and a Bengali heartland — from the fourteen-gods festival to the balancing Hojagiri dance.

    • Kharchi Puja The week-long worship of the fourteen ancestral deities, at Old Agartala
    • Garia & Ker Puja Tripuri festivals for prosperity and the protection of the land
    • Hojagiri The Reang dance, performed balancing on earthen pitchers — known across India
    • Durga Puja The grandest festival for the Bengali-Hindu majority
    • Mui Borok Traditional Tripuri cuisine, built on berma (fermented fish), bamboo shoot & herbs
    • Risa & bamboo The handwoven Tripuri attire (GI-tagged) and the state's renowned cane & bamboo craft

    Places to Visit

    Palaces, Temples & Hills

    From the lake palace of Neermahal to the carvings of Unakoti and the orange hills of Jampui, Tripura packs a lot of heritage and green into a small space.

    • Neermahal The fairy-tale lake palace on Rudrasagar
    • Unakoti The colossal rock-cut carvings near Kailashahar
    • Ujjayanta Palace The royal palace and state museum in Agartala
    • Tripura Sundari The Shakti Peetha temple at Udaipur (Matabari)
    • Jampui Hills Orange country and the "hill of eternal spring"
    • Sepahijala The clouded-leopard sanctuary, zoo & botanical garden
    • Pilak The ancient Buddhist–Hindu sculpture site in the south

    Rail, Road & Air

    The Bangladesh Gateway

    Long one of India's most cut-off states, Tripura is rewiring its connectivity — newly on the rail map, and reaching toward Bangladesh and its ports.

    • MBB Airport Agartala's airport — among the busiest in the North-East; a new terminal opened in 2022
    • On the rail map Agartala joined India's broad-gauge network in 2016, with a direct train to Delhi
    • Akhaura rail link A cross-border rail line to Akhaura in Bangladesh, inaugurated in 2023, to shorten the route toward Kolkata
    • Maitri Setu The "Friendship Bridge" over the Feni at Sabroom (2021), opening a path toward Chittagong port
    • NH-8 The highway lifeline north to Assam (the old NH-44)
    • Learning hubs NIT Agartala and the central Tripura University

    People & Royalty

    The Manikya Legacy

    Tripura was ruled for centuries by the Manikya dynasty, whose court drew Rabindranath Tagore and gave India a music legend.

    • Manikya dynasty One of India's longest-ruling royal houses, its kings chronicled in the Rajmala
    • Bir Bikram Manikya The last ruling king (1923–47) who planned modern Agartala and built Neermahal
    • Bir Chandra Manikya A 19th-century king — a pioneer of photography and Tagore's first royal patron
    • S.D. Burman The legendary composer, of the Tripura royal line; his son R.D. Burman followed him
    • Rabindranath Tagore A close friend of the Manikya court — Tripura inspired his Rajarshi & Visarjan
    • Dipa Karmakar The Agartala gymnast — the first Indian gymnast to reach an Olympic final

    Through the Ages

    A Short History of Tripura

    From the long reign of the Manikya kings to a merger with India and a state of its own, a few of the milestones that shaped Tripura.

    Key milestones in the history of Tripura, from the 15th century to 2023.
    WhenMilestone
    Early 1400sThe Manikya dynasty takes power over the Tripuri kingdom
    c. 1458The royal chronicle, the Rajmala, is begun
    16th centuryThe kingdom reaches its height under Dhanya & Vijaya Manikya
    1761Tripura becomes a British princely protectorate, the Manikyas still ruling
    19th centuryThe capital settles at Agartala
    1923–1947Maharaja Bir Bikram modernises Agartala and builds Neermahal
    15 October 1949Tripura merges with the Indian Union (agreement signed 9 September 1949)
    1 November 1956Tripura becomes a Union Territory
    21 January 1972Tripura becomes a full state
    2022Unakoti is added to UNESCO's tentative list
    2023The Agartala–Akhaura cross-border rail link is inaugurated

    Spotted an error, or know this state well?

    This profile is compiled from Census 2011, the Tripura budget (via PRS), MoSPI and ministry/tourism sources. If you find an inaccuracy or have a better source, tell us and we'll review and correct it.

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