Sobriquets and famous nicknames of Indian places are among the most reliably tested topics in competitive exam General Knowledge — every major city, region, and landmark in India has earned a distinctive title based on its geography, industry, culture, or historical significance.
From the “City of Joy” (Kolkata) to the “Silicon Valley of India” (Bengaluru), from the “Venice of the East” (Alappuzha) to the “Manchester of India” (Ahmedabad), these nicknames carry rich stories. Questions on city sobriquets appear in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, Railways, and State PSC exams every year — making this one of the highest-scoring GK topics with near-guaranteed questions in any competitive exam.
⚡ Quick Facts
- Bengaluru — “Silicon Valley of India”: hosts India’s largest IT concentration including Google, Microsoft, Infosys, Wipro campuses and India’s largest IT export earnings.
- Kolkata — “City of Joy”: popularised by Dominique Lapierre’s 1985 novel of the same name, reflecting the city’s vibrant culture and resilient spirit.
- Jaipur — “Pink City”: in 1876, Maharaja Ram Singh II ordered all buildings painted pink — the colour of hospitality — to welcome Prince Albert of Wales.
- Mumbai — “City of Dreams,” “Financial Capital,” “Bollywood Capital”: simultaneously called all three, reflecting its economic, cinematic, and aspirational identity.
- Varanasi — “City of Lights (Kashi),” “Spiritual Capital of India”: one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities with over 2,000 temples and 84 ghats.
Both Alappuzha (Alleppey) in Kerala AND Udaipur in Rajasthan are sometimes called “Venice of the East.” The standard exam answer is Alappuzha — its extensive backwater canal network and houseboat culture directly parallel Venice. If a question mentions backwaters or Kerala, choose Alappuzha without hesitation. Similarly, “Manchester of India” = Ahmedabad (national level), while “Manchester of South India” = Coimbatore — both are tested independently.
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🗺️ Sobriquets of Places in India — Complete List
| # ↕ | City / Place ↕ | State | Sobriquet / Nickname | Reason / Basis | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mumbai | Maharashtra | City of Dreams; Financial Capital of India; Bollywood Capital; Urbs Prima in Indis Primary | Bollywood; BSE; RBI HQ; SEBI; largest metropolis | “Urbs Prima in Indis” = Latin; “Maximum City” (Suketu Mehta book) |
| 2 | Delhi | Delhi (NCT) | Heart of India; City of Monuments; Dilli | Political capital; over 2,000 monuments | Lutyen’s Delhi; Shahjahanabad; New Delhi vs Old Delhi |
| 3 | Kolkata | West Bengal | City of Joy; Cultural Capital of India; City of Palaces Novel | Dominique Lapierre’s 1985 novel; Bengali culture; colonial architecture | City of Joy = Lapierre’s book; cultural hub; Durga Puja |
| 4 | Chennai | Tamil Nadu | Detroit of India; Gateway to South India Automobile | Automobile manufacturing hub (Hyundai, Ford, BMW plants) | India’s auto industry HQ; Marina Beach (longest); “Detroit” = auto hub |
| 5 | Bengaluru | Karnataka | Silicon Valley of India; Garden City; IT Capital Primary IT | IT/tech hub; over 2,500 tech companies; pleasant climate | ISRO, HAL HQ; Infosys, Wipro founded here; India’s IT export capital |
| 6 | Hyderabad | Telangana | City of Pearls; City of Nawabs; Cyberabad Historic | Pearl trading history; Nizam’s rule; IT corridor (Hi-Tec City) | Golconda Fort = diamond/pearl trade; Charminar; Qutub Shahi dynasty |
| 7 | Jaipur | Rajasthan | Pink City; Paris of India; Gem City 1876 Story | Pink paint for Prince Albert’s visit (1876); gem cutting industry | Maharaja Ram Singh II; pink = hospitality colour; UNESCO WHC 2019 |
| 8 | Jodhpur | Rajasthan | Blue City; Sun City Blue Brahmin | Blue-painted houses in Brahmin areas (caste tradition + pest control); sunny climate | Mehrangarh Fort; blue = Brahmin tradition; also “Sun City” |
| 9 | Udaipur | Rajasthan | City of Lakes; Kashmir of Rajasthan Lakes | Pichola, Fateh Sagar, Udai Sagar lakes; scenic lake city | Udai Singh II founded; Lake Palace; Mewar region; sometimes “Venice of East” |
| 10 | Jaisalmer | Rajasthan | Golden City; City in the Desert Desert | Yellow sandstone buildings; Thar Desert location | Jaisalmer Fort (living fort); Sam Sand Dunes; camel safaris |
| 11 | Pushkar | Rajasthan | City of Brahma; City of Ghats | Only Brahma temple in the world; 52 ghats on Pushkar Lake | Pushkar Camel Fair (November); only Brahma temple in world |
| 12 | Ahmedabad | Gujarat | Manchester of India; City of Textiles; Karnavati 1st UNESCO WHC | Textile mills; cotton industry legacy | India’s first UNESCO World Heritage City (2017); Sabarmati Ashram; Gandhi |
| 13 | Surat | Gujarat | Silk City; Diamond City of India 90% Diamonds | Surat silk sarees; 90% of world’s rough diamond polishing done here | World’s diamond polishing capital; 600,000+ workers; clean city rankings |
| 14 | Vadodara | Gujarat | Cultural Capital of Gujarat; Baroda | Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad’s legacy; arts and education | Maharaja Baroda; Laxmi Vilas Palace |
| 15 | Pune | Maharashtra | Oxford of the East; Queen of the Deccan Education | Educational institutions; pleasant climate | Deccan College, Pune University; Maratha heritage; Peshwa capital |
| 16 | Nashik | Maharashtra | Wine Capital of India; City of Temples; Grape City | Sula Vineyards; Godavari river; Kumbh Mela site | Kumbh Mela held every 12 years; Nashik grapes exported |
| 17 | Nagpur | Maharashtra | Orange City; Centre of India; Zero Mile City Zero Mile | Nagpur oranges; geographic centre of India; Zero Mile Stone (1907) | National Highway zero mile; central most city; RSS HQ |
| 18 | Bhopal | Madhya Pradesh | City of Lakes; Heart of India | Upper and Lower Bhopal lakes; geographic centre of MP | 1984 Bhopal Gas Tragedy; Bharat Bhavan; cultural hub |
| 19 | Indore | Madhya Pradesh | Mini Mumbai; Food Capital of India; Cleanest City Cleanest | Commerce; Indori food culture; 7× consecutive Swachh Bharat champion | Holkar dynasty; cleanest city in India consecutively; Indori Poha + Jalebi |
| 20 | Lucknow | Uttar Pradesh | City of Nawabs; City of Tehzeeb; Golden City of the East Nawabi | Nawabi culture; Urdu poetry; Avadhi cuisine; refined etiquette | Chikankari embroidery; Imambara; Avadh cuisine; tehzeeb = refinement |
| 21 | Agra | Uttar Pradesh | City of the Taj; City of Love | Taj Mahal; Mughal heritage; symbol of love | Taj Mahal = UNESCO WHS; Fatehpur Sikri; Agra Fort |
| 22 | Varanasi | Uttar Pradesh | City of Lights (Kashi); Spiritual Capital; City of Temples Oldest City | Ghats; over 2,000 temples; oldest living city in world | Continuously inhabited 3,000+ years; 84 ghats; Ganga Aarti; Banarasi silk |
| 23 | Mathura | Uttar Pradesh | Birthplace of Lord Krishna; Religious Capital of Braj | Krishna birthplace; Braj cultural region; Holi celebrations | Vrindavan nearby; Holi celebration; Janmashtami |
| 24 | Prayagraj | Uttar Pradesh | City of Kumbh; Sangam City; Allahabad Renamed 2018 | Triveni Sangam (Ganga, Yamuna, Saraswati); Kumbh Mela site | Largest human gathering on Earth; renamed from Allahabad to Prayagraj (2018) |
| 25 | Haridwar | Uttarakhand | Gateway to God; Har ki Pauri | Ganga enters plains here; Char Dham starting point | Kumbh Mela; Har ki Pauri ghat; pilgrim city |
| 26 | Rishikesh | Uttarakhand | Yoga Capital of the World; Gateway to the Himalayas Yoga | International Yoga Festival; Ganga; Himalayan foothills | Beatles connection (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi ashram); International Yoga Day |
| 27 | Amritsar | Punjab | Golden City; City of the Golden Temple Sikh Holy | Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple); holiest Sikh city | Jallianwala Bagh massacre (1919); Wagah Border; Guru Granth Sahib |
| 28 | Chandigarh | Punjab/Haryana | City Beautiful; Le Corbusier’s City Planned City | Planned city by architect Le Corbusier; Rock Garden; gardens | Shared capital of Punjab + Haryana; Union Territory; Rock Garden (Nek Chand) |
| 29 | Shimla | Himachal Pradesh | Summer Capital of British India; Queen of Hills | British India’s summer capital; mountain beauty; cool climate | Viceregal Lodge; Kalka-Shimla toy train (UNESCO); apple orchards |
| 30 | Srinagar | J&K | Paradise on Earth; City of Gardens | Dal Lake; Mughal gardens (Shalimar Bagh, Nishat Bagh); scenic beauty | Dal Lake shikaras; Mughal gardens; Winter capital of J&K |
| 31 | Guwahati | Assam | Gateway to Northeast India; Pragjyotishpura (ancient) | Entry point to all Northeast states; Brahmaputra River | Kamakhya Temple; Umananda Island Temple; NE gateway |
| 32 | Kochi | Kerala | Gateway to Kerala; Queen of the Arabian Sea Port City | Arabian Sea port; Chinese fishing nets; historical trading | Dutch, Portuguese, British history; Jew Town; backwaters; Fort Kochi |
| 33 | Thiruvananthapuram | Kerala | Evergreen City of India; City of the Sacred Serpent | Padmanabhaswamy Temple (sacred serpent symbol); lush greenery | Kerala’s capital; Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) nearby |
| 34 | Alappuzha (Alleppey) | Kerala | Venice of the East; Backwater Capital of Kerala Exam Standard | Backwater canals, houseboats, network of waterways resembling Venice | Nehru Trophy Boat Race on Punnamada Lake; standard exam answer for “Venice of East” |
| 35 | Kozhikode | Kerala | City of Spices; City of Merchants | Historical spice trade port (Calicut); Vasco da Gama landed here (1498) | Vasco da Gama’s first India arrival; Zamorin kings; Malabar spice trade |
| 36 | Coimbatore | Tamil Nadu | Manchester of South India; Pump City of India South Manchester | Textile mills; water pumps manufacturing hub | Kovai; textile + engineering hub; distinct from Manchester of India = Ahmedabad |
| 37 | Mysuru | Karnataka | City of Palaces; Sandalwood City; Silk City Dussehra | Mysore Palace; sandalwood products; famous Mysore silk sarees | Dussehra celebrations; Mysore Pak sweet; Chamundi Hills |
| 38 | Mangaluru | Karnataka | Cashew City; Rome of the East | Cashew processing hub; multiple churches (Christianity influence) | St. Aloysius College; Kudla (Tulu name); Canara Bank origin |
| 39 | Visakhapatnam | Andhra Pradesh | City of Destiny; Jewel of the East Coast Naval HQ | Eastern Naval Command; natural harbour; steel city | Vizag Steel; Eastern Naval Command HQ; AP’s new executive capital |
| 40 | Tirupati | Andhra Pradesh | Temple City; India’s Spiritual Capital Richest Temple | Venkateswara Temple — richest temple in world by donations | TTD manages temple; highest daily footfall of any temple globally |
| 41 | Aurangabad | Maharashtra | City of Gates; now Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar Renamed 2023 | Mughal era gates; Ellora and Ajanta nearby | Renamed Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar (2023); Ellora and Ajanta UNESCO sites nearby |
| 42 | Gwalior | Madhya Pradesh | City of Music; Gibraltar of India | Tansen’s birthplace; legendary Gwalior Fort | Tansen Samaroh music festival; Gwalior Fort = “Gibraltar of India” |
| 43 | Patna | Bihar | City of Temples; Patliputra (ancient) | Harmandir Takht (Sikh shrine); historic capital Patliputra | Patliputra = Maurya and Gupta capital; one of India’s oldest cities |
| 44 | Shillong | Meghalaya | Scotland of the East; Rock Capital of India Scotland | Hilly terrain, climate similar to Scotland; rock music culture | Capital of Meghalaya; Nohkalikai Falls nearby; cloud bursts |
| 45 | Gangtok | Sikkim | City of Happiness; Orchid Capital of India | Positive vibes; over 600 orchid species in Sikkim | Smallest state capital; Himalayan views; Kanchenjunga backdrop |
| 46 | Imphal | Manipur | Jewel of India; City of Sports Polo Origin | Loktak Lake; polo sport originated here; clean and scenic | Sangai Festival; Ima Keithel (market run by women); polo birthplace |
| 47 | Itanagar | Arunachal Pradesh | Land of the Rising Sun’s Capital | Sunrise state capital; Arunachal = “Land of the Rising Sun” | Ganga Lake; Ita Fort; Arunachal = first to receive sunlight in India |
| 48 | Kohima | Nagaland | Scotland of the East (shared); Battle of Kohima City | Hilly terrain; Battle of Kohima (WWII) — turning point in Burma Campaign | “Gateway of Northeast” (shared); Hornbill Festival; WWII War Cemetery |
| 49 | Port Blair | Andaman & Nicobar | Emerald Islands Capital; Cellular Jail City Kala Pani | Cellular Jail (Kala Pani); British colonial prison for freedom fighters | Independence movement history; Ross Island; Radhanagar Beach |
| 50 | Puri | Odisha | City of Lord Jagannath; Shrine of Jagannath | Jagannath Temple; Rath Yatra (chariot festival); one of Char Dham | Jagannath Rath Yatra; one of four Char Dham pilgrimage sites; Konark nearby |
🔁 Multiple Sobriquets for the Same City — Key Exam Trap
Many cities have 2–3 sobriquets. Questions often ask “which of these is NOT a sobriquet of City X” — so you must know all sobriquets for the most prominent cities.
| City | Multiple Sobriquets | Exam Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Bengaluru | Silicon Valley of India + Garden City + IT Capital + Pensioner’s Paradise | “Silicon Valley” is now primary; “Garden City” is older historical nickname |
| Mumbai | City of Dreams + Financial Capital + Bollywood Capital + Urbs Prima in Indis | All four are tested separately — know the Latin phrase |
| Varanasi | City of Lights + Spiritual Capital + City of Temples + Kashi + Banaras | All valid; Kashi = “to shine” in Sanskrit; Banaras = Mughal-era name |
| Kolkata | City of Joy + Cultural Capital + City of Palaces + Octopus City | “City of Joy” = Lapierre’s 1985 novel; “Octopus City” = colonial British term |
| Jaipur | Pink City + Gem City + Paris of India | Pink = primary; Paris of India = old sobriquet; Gem City = gem cutting industry |
| Hyderabad | City of Pearls + Cyberabad + City of Nawabs | Pearl = historic; Cyberabad = modern IT nickname; Nawabs = Nizam’s rule |
| Jodhpur | Blue City + Sun City | Both tested; Blue = more famous; comes from Brahmin house painting tradition |
| Chennai | Detroit of India + Gateway to South India + Madras + Cultural Capital of South India | Detroit = automobile; Gateway = geographic; Madras = colonial name |
| Alappuzha | Venice of the East + Backwater Capital of Kerala | Venice = international comparison; Backwater = tourist context |
| Mysuru | City of Palaces + Sandalwood City + Silk City of India | Palace = primary sobriquet; all three are independently tested in exams |
⚖️ Same Nickname — Multiple Cities (Critical Disambiguation)
These shared sobriquets are the most common source of wrong answers. Always check the qualifier in the question — “South India,” “Kerala,” “national level,” etc.
| Nickname | Primary Answer (Standard Exam) | Secondary / Alternate | Rule to Remember |
|---|---|---|---|
| Venice of the East | Alappuzha (Kerala) — backwaters, canals | Udaipur (Rajasthan) — also sometimes called so | Alappuzha = standard exam answer; choose it unless question specifies Rajasthan |
| Manchester of India | Ahmedabad, Gujarat — national level | Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu = “Manchester of South India” | Ahmedabad = national; Coimbatore needs “South India” qualifier |
| Silicon Valley of India | Bengaluru = clear primary | Hyderabad (“Cyberabad”) = partial/informal | Bengaluru = unambiguous answer |
| Detroit of India | Chennai — automobile manufacturing | No major alternate | Clear primary answer — Chennai only |
| Oxford of the East | Pune, Maharashtra = most accepted | Banaras (Varanasi) — some scholars | Pune = standard exam answer |
| Scotland of the East | Shillong, Meghalaya = most accepted | Kohima, Nagaland = also called | Shillong = primary answer |
| City of Joy | Kolkata = undisputed (Lapierre’s novel) | No ambiguity | Kolkata only — no confusion possible |
| Pink City | Jaipur = undisputed (1876 story) | No ambiguity | Jaipur only — no confusion possible |
📋 State-wise “Famous For” — Quick Reference
| State | City / Place | Primary Sobriquet / Famous For |
|---|---|---|
| Rajasthan | Jaisalmer | Golden Fort; Sam Sand Dunes; desert city |
| Rajasthan | Jodhpur | Blue City; Mehrangarh Fort |
| Rajasthan | Jaipur | Pink City; UNESCO World Heritage City |
| Rajasthan | Udaipur | City of Lakes; Mewar region |
| Gujarat | Ahmedabad | First UNESCO World Heritage City (2017); Manchester of India |
| Gujarat | Surat | Diamond City; 90% of world’s diamond polishing |
| Maharashtra | Pune | Oxford of the East; Peshwa capital |
| Maharashtra | Nashik | Wine capital of India; Kumbh Mela site |
| Maharashtra | Nagpur | Orange City; geographic centre; Zero Mile City |
| Uttar Pradesh | Varanasi | Oldest continuously inhabited city; City of Lights (Kashi) |
| Uttar Pradesh | Agra | City of the Taj; Taj Mahal UNESCO WHS |
| Uttar Pradesh | Lucknow | City of Nawabs; Chikankari embroidery |
| Karnataka | Bengaluru | Silicon Valley of India; IT Capital |
| Karnataka | Mysuru | City of Palaces; Silk City; Dussehra celebrations |
| Kerala | Alappuzha | Venice of the East; backwaters; Nehru Trophy Boat Race |
| Kerala | Kozhikode | City of Spices; Vasco da Gama landed 1498 |
| Tamil Nadu | Chennai | Detroit of India; Marina Beach (longest in India) |
| Tamil Nadu | Coimbatore | Manchester of South India; Pump City |
| Andhra Pradesh | Visakhapatnam | City of Destiny; Eastern Naval Command HQ |
| Andhra Pradesh | Tirupati | Richest temple in world by donations (TTD) |
| Himachal Pradesh | Shimla | Summer Capital of British India; Queen of Hills |
| J&K | Srinagar | Paradise on Earth; Dal Lake; Mughal gardens |
| Meghalaya | Shillong | Scotland of the East; Rock Capital of India |
| Uttarakhand | Rishikesh | Yoga Capital of the World; Gateway to Himalayas |
⚖️ Compare Two Cities
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
Ahmedabad was designated India’s first UNESCO World Heritage City in July 2017 — before Jaipur (which received the designation in 2019). Both are now UNESCO World Heritage Cities, but the “FIRST” in India is Ahmedabad. The historic walled city was recognised for its pol (traditional housing clusters), mosques, temples, and step-wells (vav). This distinction is directly and frequently tested — do not confuse the order.
Nagpur is called the “Zero Mile City” because it contains the Zero Mile Stone — a marker erected by the British Survey of India in 1907 to indicate India’s geographic centre. All national highway distances were historically measured from Nagpur. It is also the “Orange City” (Vidarbha oranges are famous) and is home to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) headquarters.
Surat processes approximately 90% of the world’s rough diamonds — making it the undisputed world capital of diamond polishing, not just India. Over 600,000 workers in Surat cut and polish diamonds mined primarily in Africa, Russia, Canada, and Australia. The diamonds are then sold through global markets. Surat is also famous for Surat silk sarees and has ranked among India’s cleanest cities consistently in Swachh Bharat rankings.
Both Alappuzha (Alleppey) in Kerala AND Udaipur in Rajasthan are called “Venice of the East.” The standard competitive exam answer is Alappuzha — its extensive backwater canal network and houseboat (kettuvallam) culture directly parallel Venice’s gondola-canal culture. The Nehru Trophy Boat Race is held on Punnamada Lake near Alappuzha — a direct exam connection. Choose Alappuzha unless the question specifies Rajasthan context.
In 1876, when Prince Albert (son of Queen Victoria; later King Edward VII) of Wales visited Jaipur, Maharaja Ram Singh II ordered the entire old walled city to be painted pink — the traditional colour of hospitality in Rajputana culture. The order has been maintained by city law ever since — all buildings within the walled city must remain pink. Jaipur received UNESCO World Heritage City status in 2019 (India’s second, after Ahmedabad).
“Bengaluru = Silicon; Kolkata = Joy; Jaipur = Pink; Mumbai = Dreams; Varanasi = Lights; Hyderabad = Pearls; Ahmedabad = Manchester; Surat = Diamonds; Nagpur = Orange + Zero Mile; Pune = Oxford”
Water cities: “Alappuzha = Venice of East (backwaters); Udaipur = City of Lakes; Srinagar = Paradise (Dal Lake)”
Firsts & Uniques: “First UNESCO WHC = Ahmedabad (2017) → Second = Jaipur (2019); Zero Mile = Nagpur; Diamond Capital = Surat (90%); Yoga Capital = Rishikesh; Blue City = Jodhpur (Brahmin tradition)”
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In 1876, Maharaja Ram Singh II of Jaipur ordered the entire walled old city to be painted pink \u2014 the colour of hospitality in Rajputana culture \u2014 to welcome Prince Albert (son of Queen Victoria; later King Edward VII) of Wales. City regulations since then have mandated that all buildings within the walled city maintain their pink colour. Jaipur received UNESCO World Heritage City status in 2019.
Ahmedabad in Gujarat was designated India’s first UNESCO World Heritage City in July 2017. The historic walled city of Ahmedabad was recognised for its rich architectural heritage including traditional pol housing, mosques, temples, stepwells, and Gujarat Sultanate period structures. Jaipur became India’s second UNESCO World Heritage City in 2019. This “first” distinction is directly tested in competitive exams.
Nagpur in Maharashtra is called the “Zero Mile City” because it contains the Zero Mile Stone \u2014 a marker erected by the British Survey of India in 1907 to indicate India’s geographic centre. National highway distances were historically measured from this point. Nagpur is also the “Orange City” (famous for Vidarbha oranges) and hosts the headquarters of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
Surat processes approximately 90% of the world’s rough diamonds \u2014 making it the global capital of diamond cutting and polishing. Diamonds mined in Africa, Russia, Canada, and Australia are shipped to Surat for processing before being sold globally. Surat’s diamond industry employs over 600,000 workers. Surat is also famous for its silk textiles and has been among India’s cleanest cities in Swachh Bharat rankings.
Alappuzha (also called Alleppey) in Kerala is known as the “Venice of the East” because of its extensive network of backwater canals, lakes, and lagoons, with houseboats (kettuvallam) navigating through them \u2014 similar to Venice’s gondola-canal culture. The Punnamada Lake near Alappuzha is the venue for the famous Nehru Trophy Boat Race (snake boat race). While Udaipur is also sometimes called the “Venice of the East,” Alappuzha is the standard competitive exam answer.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Bengaluru (Bangalore) in Karnataka is called the “Silicon Valley of India” because it hosts India’s largest concentration of information technology companies, software parks, and technology start-ups. Major global tech companies including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, IBM, Intel, and Oracle have their largest Indian offices here. Indian IT giants like Infosys, Wipro, and Tata Consultancy Services were founded or have major operations in Bengaluru. The city contributes a significant share of India’s annual IT export earnings. Bengaluru’s pleasant climate also historically attracted retirees, earning it the older nicknames “Garden City” and “Pensioner’s Paradise.”
Kolkata earned the nickname “City of Joy” from Dominique Lapierre’s 1985 bestselling novel of the same name, which portrayed the extraordinary spirit, resilience, and communal warmth of Kolkata’s residents — particularly in the city’s slums. Despite the poverty and challenges, the book highlighted the city’s vibrant culture, festivals, intellectual life, and the joy that residents find in everyday life. Kolkata is also known as the “Cultural Capital of India” for its contributions to literature (Tagore), cinema (Satyajit Ray), art, and intellectual traditions.
Varanasi (also called Kashi or Banaras) in Uttar Pradesh is one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities — with a history of continuous settlement spanning over 3,000 years, making it older than Rome or Athens. It is situated on the banks of the Ganga and is considered the most sacred city in Hinduism. Known as the “City of Lights” (Kashi = “to shine” in Sanskrit), it has over 2,000 temples and 84 ghats along the Ganga. The Ganga Aarti at Dashashwamedh Ghat is one of India’s most iconic ceremonies. It is also famous for Banarasi silk sarees and Benares Gharana music.
City sobriquets are tested in UPSC Prelims (Geography + Culture), SSC CGL, Banking PO, Railway exams, and virtually all State PSC exams. Common patterns include: Silicon Valley (Bengaluru), City of Joy (Kolkata), Pink City (Jaipur — 1876 Prince Albert story), Zero Mile City (Nagpur), Diamond City (Surat — 90%), Venice of the East (Alappuzha), First UNESCO WHC (Ahmedabad 2017), Detroit of India (Chennai), Oxford of the East (Pune), Manchester of India (Ahmedabad), City of Pearls (Hyderabad), City of Nawabs (Lucknow), Paradise on Earth (Srinagar), and Yoga Capital (Rishikesh). This page covers all major sobriquet patterns for 2026 competitive exams.