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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Coromandel

Coromandel \Cor`o*man"del\ (k?r`?-m?n"del), n. (Geol.) The west coast, or a portion of the west coast, of the Bay of Bengal.

Coromandel gooseberry. See Carambola.

Coromandel wood, Calamander wood.

Wiktionary
coromandel

n. calamander.

Wikipedia
Coromandel

Coromandel may refer to:

Places;:
  • Coromandel, New Zealand, a town on the Coromandel Peninsula
  • Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand
  • Coromandel (New Zealand electorate)
  • Coromandel Coast, India
    • Presidency of Coromandel and Bengal Settlements
    • Dutch Coromandel
  • Coromandel, KGF, Karnataka, India
  • Coromandel, Minas Gerais, a Brazilian municipality
  • Coromandel, Mauritius
  • Coromandel Valley, South Australia, a suburb of Adelaide
Vessels:
  • HMS Coromandel, one of four former ships of the British Royal Navy
  • Coromandel (ship): a number of merchant vessels have also been named Coromandel
Other:
  • Coromandel International, an Indian corporation
  • Coromandel railway station, on the Belair railway line in Blackwood, South Australia
  • Coromandel!, 1955 historical novel by John Masters
  • Coromandel screen, an item of furniture
Coromandel (New Zealand electorate)

Coromandel is a New Zealand electoral division returning one member to the House of Representatives. It is currently represented by Scott Simpson, a member of the National Party.

Coromandel (1834 ship)

The Coromandel was 662 tons burthen ( bm), sailing ship built at Quebec in 1834. She was owned by Ridgeway and her home port was Glasgow. She was the first ship to bring settlers to South Australia after it was proclaimed a colony in 1836 and one of the early ships bringing New Zealand Company settlers to Wellington, New Zealand in 1840.

Coromandel (ship)

Numerous vessels have borne the name Coromandel, named for the Coromandel Coast.

  • Coromandel (1793) was the French sailing ship Modeste, captured in 1793 and repaired at Chittagong, India (now Bangladesh). She made two convict transport voyages to Port Jackson, the first for the British East India Company (EIC). She last appears in Lloyd's Register in 1819.
  • Coromandel (1806) was a sloop of 310 tons ( bm), built in Philadelphia. Lloyd's Register for 1813 gives her master's name as E. Hunt, and her owner as Davy & Co. This may have been the Coromandel, Messervy, master, that the letter of marque Echo, of Malta, captured on 18 September 1812 while Coromandel was sailing from Mocha, Yemen. Echo may have been the Echo, of 409 tons (bm), James Shaw, master, 35 crewmen, and ten 6-pounder guns, which had received a letter of marque on 4 February 1807. Echo sent Coromandel to Rio de Janeiro, where her own crew recaptured her the next day. They then sailed Coromondel to Salem, Massachusetts, where they arrived on 18 October.
  • Coromandel (1820), of 639 (or 643, or 645) tons burthen ( bm), was built at Shields Yard, London, and launched in 1820. In the first mention of her in Lloyd's Register for 1820 in the supplemental pages, her owner is given as "Scott & Co.", and her trade as London to India. She made two voyages on charter to the EIC, at which time her principal managing owner was Joseph Hare. Under the command of Captain William Hunter, she left The Downs on 24 April 1820, bound for Madras. She stopped in at Madeira on 5 May, and reached Madras on 3 August. On her return leg she left Madras on 14 October and stopped at the Cape of Good Hope on 17 December; she arrived at Gravesend, Kent on 6 March 1821. Some years later she made a second voyage for the EIC, this one a one-way to Bengal. Under the command of Captain Thomas Boyes, she left Portsmouth on 12 July 1826. She stopped at Colombo on 19 November, and reached Calcutta on 24 January 1829. Under the command of Captain W. Loader she made a voyage to Australia. leaving Sheerness on 27 June 1838. She reached Hobart on 26 October. According to her surgeon, J. Tweedale, she had embarked 340 convicts, of whom 338 disembarked at Hobart. She was wrecked in 1856, or broken up in 1857.
  • Coromandel (1834) was a sailing ship built at Quebec in 1834. She was the first ship to bring settlers to South Australia after it was proclaimed a colony in 1836 ( Coromandel Valley was named for her) and one of the early ships bringing New Zealand Company settlers to Wellington, New Zealand in 1840. She next carried passengers from Sydney to Melbourne, then in January 1841 took livestock and goods from Port Phillip (Melbourne) to Swan River Colony, Western Australia, in early 1841 and thence to Calcutta. She was last listed in Lloyds Register in 1855.
  • Coromandel (1843) was a 660 tons burthen (bm) wood ship built at Greenock in 1843 for Campbell. Her Captain was G. Poole and she sailed on the Glasgow- Adelaide service.
  • SS Coromandel (1872), of 1986 grt, was an iron, compound steam-engined merchant vessel built by Pile, William & Co., of Sunderland, and owned by J. & J. Wait. She foundered on a voyage to Liverpool after having left Bombay 30 June 1875.
  • Coromandel (1875) was an 849-ton barque built at Glasgow in 1875 for John Fairlie. Shaw Savill Co chartered the boat to bring immigrants to New Zealand. She made seven voyages and was then sold in 1884 for use on the intercolonial trade. After being retired she was damaged and sank at the Railway Wharf in Wellington. The ship was refloated after 12 months by Thomas Carmichael and converted to a coal hulk.
  • Coromandel (1885), was a 4,016-ton passenger liner built by Caird & Company Ltd, Greenock in 1885 for the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O company) and used on the United Kingdom India route. She served as a transport and hospital ship in the Ashanti War from 1895-1896. She was sold and renamed Shah Noor in 1906, and scrapped in 1908.
  • Coromandel (1948) was an 8,720-ton general cargo liner built by Barclay Curle & Co Ltd, Whiteinch, Glasgow for the P&O Company and used on the Europe India route until relocating to the Far East. She was sold and renamed Shun Hing in 1969. She was sold and renamed Hop Sing in 1973. She was scrapped 1973.

Usage examples of "coromandel".

Now her eyes rested on two handsome chests she had not really noticed last night, moved on to regard a Coromandel screen that was obviously very old and rare.

GOLDEN THRESHOLD BY SAROJINI NAIDU WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY ARTHUR SYMONS DEDICATED TO EDMUND GOSSE WHO FIRST SHOWED ME THE WAY TO THE GOLDEN THRESHOLD London, 1896 Hyderabad, 1905 CONTENTS FOLK SONGS Palanquin-Bearers Wandering Singers Indian Weavers Coromandel Fishers The Snake-Charmer Corn-Grinders Village-Song In Praise of Henna Harvest Hymn Indian Love-Song Cradle-Song Suttee SONGS FOR MUSIC Song of a Dream Humayun to Zobeida Autumn Song Alabaster Ecstasy To my Fairy Fancies POEMS Ode to H.

The tiger would rule from the snowy mountains of the north to the palm-edged beaches of the south, and from the Coromandel Coast to the seas off Malabar.

At the famous temple of Chillambrum, on the Coromandel coast, there were seven lofty walls, one within the other, round the central quadrangle, and as many pyramidal gate-ways in the midst of each side which forms the limbs of a vast cross.

He had been a privateer in the waters of the Indian Ocean, the Bay of Bengal, and the Red Sea, but mostly off the Coromandel and Malabar coasts of India.

She was fifty six days out from Plymouth, bound for the Coromandel coast.

Hal questioned him on the availability of seamen from the English factories on the Carnatic, that stretch of the shore of Further India from East Ghats down to the Coromandel coast, but Welles shook his head.

The common uses of four centuries were assembled here--crude English copies of Flemish tapestry, a Restoration cupboard, Georgian stools, a Coromandel screen, the drums of a Peninsular regiment, a case of Victorian samplers--the oddments left by a dozen generations.

On the Coromandel Coast, at Madagascar, in the African waters, and above all in the West Indian and American seas, the pirates were a constant menace.

Among the twelve thousand natives of India who have been attracted to Singapore, and among all the mingled foreign nationalities, the Klings from the Coromandel coast, besides being the most numerous of all next to the Chinese, are the most attractive in appearance, and as there is no check on the immigration of their women, one sees the unveiled Kling beauties in great numbers.

A colour television filled the fireplace and a valuable Coromandel screen completed the decor.

Without looking at her, he walked to the gold-leafed coromandel screen and opened it to reveal the bar.

Meanwhile, Batula sailed along the Coromandel coast and loaded his ship with tea and spices.

The best markets are still Zanzibar, the factories on the Coromandel Coast or at Bombay in the realm of the Great Mogul.

Dutch governor in Trincomalee of their trespasses in the colony of Good Hope, and they sailed on to the Coromandel Coast of south-eastern India, to reach it before the change of season.