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Indian States: Formation and Capitals

A compact, tabular revision of India's 28 States and 8 Union Territories, their capitals and formation years, the reorganisation chronology and statehood milestones, for CAPF Paper I

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SubjectGeography
RevisionGeographyStatesCapitalsFormationReorganisationPaper 1

One screen per section. Cover the right column and test yourself. The number of States and Union Territories and the capitals are stable static facts, but the map has changed several times in recent years, so verify the latest count and any newly bifurcated entity. Article 1 calls India a "Union of States"; the First Schedule lists the States and Union Territories. As of the latest position India has 28 States and 8 Union Territories. The detailed paper-1 treatment is in states uts and capitals.

States and their capitals (north and central)

State Capital
Jammu and Kashmir (now a UT) Srinagar (summer), Jammu (winter)
Himachal Pradesh Shimla
Punjab Chandigarh (shared with Haryana)
Haryana Chandigarh (shared with Punjab)
Uttarakhand Dehradun
Uttar Pradesh Lucknow
Rajasthan Jaipur
Madhya Pradesh Bhopal
Chhattisgarh Raipur

States and their capitals (east and northeast)

State Capital
Bihar Patna
Jharkhand Ranchi
West Bengal Kolkata
Odisha Bhubaneswar
Sikkim Gangtok
Assam Dispur
Arunachal Pradesh Itanagar
Nagaland Kohima
Manipur Imphal
Mizoram Aizawl
Tripura Agartala
Meghalaya Shillong

States and their capitals (west and south)

State Capital
Gujarat Gandhinagar
Maharashtra Mumbai (Nagpur is the winter session seat)
Goa Panaji
Karnataka Bengaluru
Telangana Hyderabad
Andhra Pradesh Amaravati (verify the latest, given relocation debates)
Kerala Thiruvananthapuram
Tamil Nadu Chennai

Union Territories and their capitals

Union Territory Capital
Delhi (NCT) New Delhi
Puducherry Puducherry
Jammu and Kashmir Srinagar/Jammu
Ladakh Leh (no legislature)
Chandigarh Chandigarh
Andaman and Nicobar Islands Port Blair (renamed Sri Vijaya Puram; verify the latest)
Lakshadweep Kavaratti
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu Daman (merged into one UT in 2020)

Reorganisation chronology

Year Milestone
1953 Andhra State created (first State on a linguistic basis)
1956 States Reorganisation Act, on the basis of language; States and Union Territories restructured
1960 Bombay State split into Maharashtra and Gujarat
1963 Nagaland created
1966 Punjab reorganised; Haryana created; Chandigarh became a UT
1971-1972 Himachal Pradesh, Manipur, Tripura, Meghalaya attained statehood
1975 Sikkim became the 22nd State
1987 Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram and Goa attained statehood
2000 Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand and Jharkhand created
2014 Telangana carved out of Andhra Pradesh (29th State at the time)
2019 Jammu and Kashmir reorganised into two Union Territories (J&K and Ladakh)
2020 Dadra and Nagar Haveli merged with Daman and Diu

Statehood "firsts" and pegs

Item Fact
First State on linguistic basis Andhra (1953), after the agitation led by Potti Sriramulu
Basis of 1956 reorganisation Language, on the recommendation of the States Reorganisation Commission (Fazl Ali, K M Panikkar, H N Kunzru)
Latest full State created Telangana (2014)
Constitutional authority to alter States Parliament under Article 3
Provision listing States and UTs First Schedule

States sharing capitals or with multiple seats

Arrangement Detail
Chandigarh Shared capital of Punjab and Haryana, itself a UT
Maharashtra Mumbai (main) and Nagpur (winter session)
Himachal Pradesh Shimla (summer) and Dharamshala (winter session)
Jammu and Kashmir Srinagar (summer) and Jammu (winter), the "Durbar Move" tradition

Border States quick check (security angle)

Bordering country Indian States that touch it
Pakistan Gujarat, Rajasthan, Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir (UT)
China Ladakh (UT), Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh
Nepal Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Sikkim
Bhutan Sikkim, West Bengal, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh
Bangladesh West Bengal, Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram
Myanmar Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram

For the forces guarding these borders see the five capfs quick facts and important boundary lines of the world.

Cross-references

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