Srinagar is the largest city and summer capital of the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, located in the Kashmir Valley on both banks of the Jhelum River at an elevation of 1,585 metres above sea level.[1][2]
As of the 2011 census, the Srinagar district had a population of 1,219,516, with a literacy rate of 71 percent and approximately 95 percent of residents identifying as Muslim.[3]
The city is historically significant, with origins tracing back to ancient settlements in the region, and it has served as a political and cultural center for centuries, featuring landmarks such as Mughal gardens and traditional houseboats on Dal Lake.[1]
Srinagar's economy relies heavily on tourism, drawn to its natural landscapes and water-based markets, though this sector contributes around 6.8 percent to the local GDP and employs about two million people amid periodic disruptions.[4]
However, since the late 1980s, the city has been at the epicenter of the Kashmirinsurgency, marked by Pakistan-supported militant groups pursuing separatism or unification with Pakistan, leading to widespread violence, targeted killings, and a sharp decline in tourism following events like the 2025 Pahalgam attack that claimed 26 tourist lives.[5][6][7]
Etymology
Name Origins and Linguistic Evolution
The name Srinagar derives from the Sanskrit compound Śrīnagara, combining śrī—denoting "auspiciousness," "radiance," prosperity, or the goddess Lakṣmī—and nagara, meaning "city" or "fortified settlement." [8] This designation appears in classical Kashmiri historiography, notably Kalhaṇa's Rājataraṅgiṇī (composed c. 1148–1150 CE), which references Śrīnagara as a longstanding urban center predating later capitals like Pravarapura established by King Pravarasena II in the early 6th centuryCE. [9] The term's connotation of a "royal" or "prosperous city" aligns with its role as Kashmir's political and economic hub, reflecting the region's ancient Shaivite and Vaishnava cultural milieu where śrī evoked divine abundance. [8]Linguistically, Śrīnagara transitioned from Vedic and classical Sanskrit usage into Prakrit-influenced forms during Kashmir's early medieval period, with phonetic softening evident in local Dardic and Indo-Aryan dialects spoken by inhabitants. [10] By the 12th century, as documented in Rājataraṅgiṇī, the name had stabilized as Śrīnagara in literary Sanskrit, though vernacular pronunciation approximated "Srinagar" without the aspirated initial consonant, a pattern common in Kashmiri phonology that favors simpler consonant clusters. [10] Alternative interpretations, such as a derivation from Kashmiri siri ("sun") yielding "city of the sun," appear in some modern travel accounts but originate from unverified local traditions rather than epigraphic or textual evidence, and they contradict the Sanskrit primacy in pre-Islamic Kashmiri records. [11]Under subsequent Muslim sultanates (14th–16th centuries) and Mughal rule (1586–1752 CE), Persian administrative influence introduced qualifiers like Srinagar-i-Kashmir ("Srinagar of Kashmir") in chronicles, preserving the core name while adapting it to Perso-Arabic script and nomenclature conventions. [12] This form persisted into Afghan (1752–1819 CE) and Sikh (1819–1846 CE) governance, where Srinagar reemerged prominently in revenue records as the valley's principal city, with no substantive alteration beyond transliteration. [13] British colonial mappings from the late 19th century, such as those in the 1893 Constable's Hand Atlas of India, standardized the anglicized "Srinagar," reflecting its enduring phonetic form amid English cartographic practices. [13] Post-independence Indian usage has retained this without evolution, underscoring the name's resilience across linguistic shifts from Sanskrit to Perso-Indo-Aryan hybrids.
History
Ancient and Early Medieval Periods
Human habitation in the Kashmir Valley, encompassing the Srinagar basin, dates to the Neolithic period, with archaeological sites like Burzahom revealing pit dwellings, bone tools, and polished stone implements from circa 3000–1500 BCE, indicating early agrarian and pastoral communities.[14]The area's integration into larger polities occurred during the Mauryan Empire, when Emperor Ashoka (r. 268–232 BCE) reportedly established a settlement named Srinagari in the 3rd century BCE, promoting Buddhism through stupas and monasteries, though direct archaeological confirmation for this specific foundation remains elusive.[15][16]Srinagar's development as a structured urban center is historically attributed to King Pravarsena II of the Gonandiya dynasty, who, according to Kalhana's Rajatarangini (12th century CE), reclaimed marshy land from Dal Lake around the 6th century CE to build the city, initially called Pravarapura, serving as the valley's capital amid Hindu-Buddhist cultural synthesis.[17][18]In the early medieval era, the Karkota dynasty (c. 625–855 CE) solidified Srinagar's role as a political hub, with rulers like Lalitaditya Muktapida (r. 724–760 CE) fostering temple architecture and territorial expansion, though grander constructions like the Martand Sun Temple lay outside the city. Local Shaivite shrines, such as the Shankaracharya Temple on the Zabarwan hill—traditionally dated to the 4th century BCE under King Gopaditya and rebuilt subsequently—exemplify enduring Hindu devotional practices, featuring a simple octagonal design overlooking the valley.[19]The Utpala dynasty (855–1003 CE) saw further cultural patronage, including the Pandrethan Temple near Srinagar, constructed in the 9th century CE as a Shiva shrine with characteristic Kashmiri trabeate stonework, a water tank for ritual ablutions, and a cubical sanctum, reflecting architectural continuity despite political flux.[20][21]
Sultanate and Mughal Eras
The Shah Mir dynasty, established in 1339 by Shams-ud-Din Shah Mir following the end of Hindu Lohara rule, marked the beginning of Muslim sultanate governance in Kashmir with Srinagar designated as the permanent capital.[22][23] This dynasty, lasting until 1561, centralized administration in Srinagar, fostering Islamic institutions amid a population that retained significant Hindu and Buddhist elements until intensified conversions. Sultan Sikandar (r. 1389–1413), advised by Sufi saint Mir Muhammad Hamadani, pursued iconoclastic policies, demolishing temples such as the Martand Sun Temple and constructing the Jamia Masjid in Srinagar in 1394–1395 as a central congregational site accommodating 30,000 worshippers. These measures, enforced through taxes on non-Muslims and forced conversions, reduced overt Hindu practice but drew criticism in contemporary chronicles like the Baharistan-i-Shahi for excess, though they solidified Srinagar's role as an Islamic political hub.The Chak dynasty, which supplanted the Shah Mirs in 1561 under Ghazi Shah Chak, maintained Srinagar as capital until internal strife weakened defenses against external threats. In 1586, Mughal Emperor Akbar dispatched an army under Qasim Khan via the Bhimber-Rajouri route, defeating Chak ruler Yusuf Shah and entering Srinagar unopposed on October 14 after negotiations with local elites.[24]Kashmir was integrated as the empire's northernmost subah, with Srinagar functioning as the summer administrative center, governed initially by mirzas and later subahdars reporting to Delhi; Akbar's revenue settlements extracted an annual tribute of 12 lakh dams while allowing local jagirdars autonomy in collection.[25]![Shalimar Bagh][center]Mughal emperors elevated Srinagar's status through repeated summer sojourns, with Jahangir visiting 13 times between 1605 and 1627 and declaring Kashmir a paradise for its landscapes.[26] He commissioned Shalimar Bagh in 1619 as a terraced charbagh garden with pavilions and water channels symbolizing imperial control over nature, spanning 22 hectares along Dal Lake's edge.[27]Nur Jahan developed Nishat Bagh nearby around 1620, featuring 12 terraces representing the zodiac, while Shah Jahan built Chashme Shahi in 1632 with spring-fed fountains for therapeutic use.[28] These gardens, blending Persian symmetry with Kashmiri hydrology, not only beautified Srinagar but served as venues for courtly assemblies, boosting local horticulture—introducing fruits like apricots and almonds—and trade, though heavy taxation and corvée labor for maintenance strained agrarian output.[26] By Aurangzeb's reign (1658–1707), Srinagar's population grew to support a cosmopolitan Mughal elite, but governance devolved amid rebellions, culminating in Afghan Durrani control by 1752.[25]
Afghan, Sikh, and Dogra Rule
Afghan control over Kashmir was established in 1753 following the dispatch of forces by Ahmad Shah Durrani after the Mughal Empire's weakening grip on the region.[29] Governors administered from Srinagar, including Isk Aquasi from 1753 to 1754 and Haji Karim Dad Khan from 1776 to 1783, enforcing tyrannical policies characterized by extortion and terror.[29] Taxation was punitive, with demands like nazrana equaling four to six times annual income, revival of jizya, and specific levies such as 50,000 rupees annually on Kashmiri Pandits under Karim Dad Khan.[29]Social impacts included widespread repression, with around 2,000 Hindus forcibly converted under Faqir Ullah Khan in 1767 and a mass exodus of Pandits, leaving only 11 families by 1819.[29] Economic strain led to famines, such as under Azad Khan, and the felling of fruit trees to evade taxes, further impoverishing the valley's agriculture-dependent population.[29]Sikh forces under MaharajaRanjit Singh ended Afghan rule through the conquest of Kashmir in 1819, defeating governor Jabar Khan at the Battle of Shopian on July 3 and securing Srinagar without resistance shortly thereafter.[30] From 1819 to 1846, Sikh governors like Diwan Moti Ram (1819–1820, 1821–1826) and Mihan Singh (1834–1841) governed, reducing the valley's tribute from 52 lakh to 26 lakh rupees, eliminating grain import duties, and fostering trade including the shawl industry.[31] Law and order improved, curbing Afghan-era practices like child abductions for sale, though Srinagar endured calamities such as a 1819 cholera outbreak, 1828 earthquake, and 1833 famine.[31]Policies prohibiting cow slaughter and the azancall to prayer alienated many Muslims, while Dogra intermediary Gulab Singh diverted shawl wool exports to Jammu, harming local economies.[31] The period concluded after the First Anglo-Sikh War, with the Treaty of Amritsar on March 16, 1846, transferring Kashmir to Gulab Singh for 7.5 million Nanakshahi rupees.[32]Dogra rule from 1846 to 1947 positioned Srinagar as the summer capital within the Kashmir Province, encompassing the valley and Muzaffarabad districts like Anantnag and Baramulla.[33] Maharaja Gulab Singh (1846–1858) consolidated administration across diverse territories.[33] His successor Ranbir Singh (1856–1885) enacted the Ranbir Penal Code, reformed the judiciary and army, and reconquered Gilgit in 1860.[33]Pratap Singh (1885–1925) expanded infrastructure with roads, colleges, and a hydroelectric plant at Mohra, while Hari Singh (1925–1947) prioritized modernization, education, and tourism beautification in the Srinagar valley.[33] These efforts marked relative peace and progress compared to prior eras, though British residents exerted influence and communal frictions arose amid a Hindu-ruled Muslim-majority populace.[33]
Partition, Accession to India, and Early Independence
The Partition of India on August 15, 1947, left the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, with Srinagar as its summer capital, in a precarious position as its Hindu ruler, Maharaja Hari Singh, delayed accession to either India or Pakistan amid communal tensions.[34] Pakistani-backed Pashtun tribesmen, supported by elements of the Pakistani military, launched an invasion on October 22, 1947, rapidly advancing toward Srinagar, capturing Baramulla and reaching the city's outskirts by October 24, prompting widespread panic and the flight of the Maharaja from Srinagar to Jammu.[35] In response to the Maharaja's plea for aid, Hari Singh signed the Instrument of Accession to India on October 26, 1947, formally integrating Jammu and Kashmir into the Indian Union while retaining autonomy over internal affairs except defense, communications, and foreign affairs.[36]Indian forces were airlifted to Srinagar's airfield on October 27, 1947, successfully repelling the invaders and securing the city, which marked the beginning of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948.[37] The conflict, centered around Srinagar and the Kashmir Valley, involved intense fighting, with Indian troops establishing control over Srinagar and much of the Valley by late 1947, while Pakistani forces occupied parts of the state's western regions.[38] A United Nations-mediated ceasefire took effect on January 1, 1949, establishing the Line of Control that divided the state, with Srinagar remaining under Indian administration.[39]In the early years of Indian independence, Srinagar served as the administrative hub for the integration of Jammu and Kashmir. Sheikh Abdullah, leader of the National Conference, was appointed head of the emergency administration in October 1947 and later sworn in as prime minister on March 5, 1948, initiating land reforms that redistributed jagirs and excess land to tillers, fundamentally altering Srinagar's agrarian socio-economic structure.[40] Indian Prime MinisterJawaharlal Nehru visited Srinagar multiple times, including in May 1948 for military parades, symbolizing federal commitment to the region's defense and development amid ongoing tensions.[41] By the early 1950s, Srinagar experienced infrastructural improvements and the influx of Indian administrative personnel, though the city's status fueled diplomatic disputes, leading to UN resolutions calling for a plebiscite contingent on demilitarization, which neither side fully implemented.[42]
Insurgency Period (1980s–2010s)
The insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir escalated significantly in the late 1980s, with Srinagar as the epicenter of militant activities and protests against Indian administration. The disputed state assembly elections of November 1987, widely perceived as rigged in favor of the National Conference-Congress alliance, eroded faith in electoral democracy and catalyzed the formation of armed groups such as the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), initially focused on independence, and later Islamist outfits like Hizbul Mujahideen seeking merger with Pakistan.[34] These groups, often supported by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence through training and arms in camps across the Line of Control, launched attacks on security forces and government installations in Srinagar, including the kidnapping of Rubaiya Sayeed, daughter of the Union Home Minister, on December 8, 1989, which led to the release of jailed militants and emboldened further operations.[43]By early 1990, targeted killings and threats by militants forced the mass exodus of Kashmiri Pandits, the Hindu minority comprising about 4-5% of the Valley's population, from Srinagar and surrounding areas. On January 19, 1990, mosques in Srinagar broadcast calls urging Pandits to leave or face death, amid assassinations like that of Tika Lal Taploo, a BJP leader, on September 14, 1989, and subsequent rapes and murders, including a Pandit nurse at Soura Medical College Hospital. Estimates indicate 150,000 to 300,000 Pandits fled the Valley between January and March 1990, reducing their numbers from around 160,000-170,000 to a few thousand today, an event described by analysts as ethnic cleansing driven by Islamist militants to homogenize the region.[44][45][46]Violence intensified in Srinagar throughout the 1990s, with frequent grenade attacks, ambushes on convoys, and clashes between militants and Indian security forces, including the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and army. A pivotal incident occurred on May 21, 1990, when CRPF personnel fired on a funeral procession in Hawal for assassinated Mirwaiz Maulvi Mohammad Farooq, killing over 50 civilians and injuring hundreds amid chaotic protests following his death, which militants attributed to Indian agents though later linked to Hizbul rivals.[47] Srinagar saw repeated sieges, such as the 1993 Hazratbal shrine standoff where militants held hostages, and bombings targeting markets and temples, contributing to thousands of civilian and security personnel deaths across the Valley. Indian counterinsurgency operations, including the deployment of over 500,000 troops by the mid-1990s, dismantled urban militant networks in Srinagar through intelligence-led raids, though allegations of excesses persisted.Into the 2000s, militancy in Srinagar persisted with attacks like the January 7, 2000, assault on the Meteorological Centre killing four security personnel, but overall incidents began declining due to reduced cross-border infiltration following the 2003 India-Pakistan ceasefire, successful neutralization of over 1,000 militants annually by security forces, and local fatigue with prolonged violence.[48][49] By the late 2000s, grenade and firing incidents in Srinagar dropped significantly, from hundreds yearly in the 1990s to dozens by 2010, as groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba shifted focus to fidayeen (suicide) strikes, though urban control was largely restored through fortified checkpoints and community policing.[50] This period marked a transition from peak insurgency to sporadic unrest, with Srinagar's streets witnessing fewer daily confrontations by the early 2010s, though underlying grievances fueled intermittent stone-pelting protests.
Abrogation of Article 370 and Post-2019 Developments
On August 5, 2019, the Indian Parliament passed the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, abrogating Article 370 of the Constitution, which had granted special autonomy to the state, and bifurcating it into two union territories: Jammu and Kashmir, with Srinagar as its summer capital, and Ladakh.[51] The move, justified by the central government as necessary to integrate the region fully, curb terrorism, and enable development, was accompanied by a security lockdown in Srinagar, including communication blackouts lasting until February 2021 and detentions of political leaders.[51][52] The Supreme Court of India upheld the abrogation's legality in December 2023, ruling it constitutional while directing assembly elections by September 2024.[53]Post-abrogation, Srinagar and the Kashmir Valley experienced a marked decline in militancy and civil unrest, with terror-related incidents dropping significantly due to intensified security measures and reduced infiltration.[54] This improvement facilitated a tourism boom, with J&K recording 2.11 crore visitors in 2023—contributing 7% to the local economy—and over 23 million domestic tourists in 2024, many passing through Srinagar's Dal Lake and Mughal gardens.[55][56] Srinagar's economy benefited from increased employment in hospitality and handicrafts, though seasonal security concerns occasionally tempered growth.[55]Infrastructure advancements accelerated, enhancing Srinagar's connectivity. The Sheikh ul-Alam International Airport underwent expansion plans to quadruple capacity with a Rs 1,788 crore investment, targeting completion by June 2027, amid doubled air traffic reflecting rising passenger volumes.[57][58] The Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla Rail Link (USBRL) progressed, with Srinagar Railway Station integrating into the national network; the first freight train arrived in August 2025, and Vande Bharat services were introduced, reducing transport costs and boosting goods movement.[59][60] The Srinagar Smart City Project modernized roads, sanitation, and surveillance, supporting an 11% GSDP growth for J&K.[61][62]The Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly elections, held from September 18 to October 1, 2024—the first since 2014—saw the National Conference (NC) secure 42 of 90 seats, forming a coalition government with Congress; NC swept all Srinagar seats.[63][64] The NC campaigned on restoring statehood while acknowledging ongoing development, though Chief Minister Omar Abdullah attributed infrastructure gains to pre-existing momentum rather than the abrogation alone.[65]Voter turnout exceeded 63%, signaling renewed political engagement in Srinagar amid persistent calls for autonomy.[66]
Geography
Location, Topography, and Physical Features
Srinagar is situated in the Kashmir Valley within the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir, India, at approximately 34°05′N latitude and 74°48′E longitude.[67] The city lies about 880 kilometers north of New Delhi and serves as the summer capital of the region.[68]The urban area occupies an elevation of roughly 1,585 to 1,589 meters above sea level, nestled in a broad alluvial valley floor formed by glacial and fluvial processes.[69] Topographically, Srinagar is hemmed in by the Pir Panjal Range of the Lesser Himalayas to the southwest and the Zabarwan Range to the east, with the Greater Himalayan ranges further north; these features create a temperate basin prone to seasonal snow accumulation and avalanche risks in surrounding uplands.[70] The valley's northwest-southeast orientation spans about 134 kilometers in length and averages 32 kilometers in width, with Srinagar positioned centrally along this axis.[71]Key physical features include the Jhelum River, which meanders through the city core, originating from the Verinag spring and draining southward into the Wular Lake before joining the Chenab; its course has shaped urban settlement patterns via natural levees and floodplains.[72] Prominent lakes such as Dal Lake (elevation 1,581 meters, coordinates 34°9′N 74°8′E) and adjacent Nigeen Lake form expansive wetlands integral to the city's hydrology, supporting floating markets and houseboat communities while buffering against floods.[73] Local hills like Hari Parbat to the west and Shankaracharya (Takht-e-Sulaiman) to the south rise sharply from the valley floor, providing vantage points over the terrain and influencing microclimates with their forested slopes.[74]
Climate and Environmental Challenges
Srinagar features a humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cfa) with distinct seasonal variations: winters from December to February bring sub-zero temperatures averaging -2°C to 2°C alongside heavy snowfall, while summers from June to August see highs of 25–30°C with moderate rainfall. Annual precipitation totals around 650–700 mm, concentrated in spring and summer from western disturbances and monsoons, supporting the valley's agriculture but contributing to flood risks in the Jhelum River basin.[75][76]The city faces acute environmental degradation, particularly in Dal Lake, where untreated sewage inflow, plastic waste, and encroachments have shrunk its marshy area from 2,547 hectares in 1971 to 1,620 hectares by 2023, fostering eutrophication and invasive weed proliferation that threaten biodiversity and tourism. Siltation from upstream erosion has reduced water depth, exacerbating summer stagnation and winter freezing, while houseboat sewage adds to biochemical oxygen demand levels exceeding safe thresholds.[77][78] Flooding remains a recurrent hazard, as seen in the 2014 deluge that submerged 80% of Srinagar due to Jhelum overflow and inadequate drainage, worsened by upstream deforestation reducing natural water retention.[79]Air quality deteriorates sharply in winter, with PM2.5 concentrations often surpassing 100 µg/m³ from biomass burning for heating and vehicular emissions amid stagnant cold air, pushing the Air Quality Index into "poor" or "very poor" categories for months. Vehicle exhaust from congested roads and reliance on coal/fuelwood due to power shortages contribute over 50% of particulate matter, correlating with elevated respiratory illnesses. Deforestation across the Kashmir Valley, driven by timber extraction and urban expansion, has accelerated soil erosion and landslides, diminishing groundwater recharge and amplifying drought vulnerability.[80][81]Climate change intensifies these pressures through declining snowfall—down 75% in January 2025 compared to norms—and accelerated glacial retreat in the Himalayas, initially boosting river flows but projecting water scarcity by mid-century as accumulation lags melt rates. Reduced winter precipitation shifts to erratic rains, disrupting apple orchards that rely on consistent snowpack for irrigation, while warmer temperatures hasten Dal Lake's algal blooms. These trends, observed in 1980–2017 data showing rising minimum temperatures and variable precipitation, underscore causal links between anthropogenic emissions and hydrological instability, independent of political narratives.[82][83][84]
Demographics
Population Statistics and Composition
As of the 2011 Indian census, Srinagar district had a total population of 1,236,829, comprising 651,124 males and 585,705 females, yielding a sex ratio of 899 females per 1,000 males.[85] The urban agglomeration of Srinagar city recorded approximately 1,273,312 residents, reflecting its status as a densely populated urban center with a population density exceeding 4,000 persons per square kilometer in core areas.[86] The decade from 2001 to 2011 saw a growth rate of about 21.6% for the district, lower than the state average, attributable in part to migration outflows amid security challenges.[85]Projections based on census trends estimate Srinagar district's population at around 1.49 million in 2023, with continued urban concentration driven by administrative and economic centrality, though the absence of a 2021 census introduces uncertainty in precise figures.[85] Independent estimates for the city proper place it at approximately 1.63 million in 2023, incorporating natural growth and limited inflows.[87]Religiously, the district's composition is overwhelmingly Muslim at 95.19% (1,177,342 individuals), followed by Hindus at 3.44% (42,540), Sikhs at 0.99% (12,187), and Christians at 0.22% (2,746), with negligible others; this distribution aligns closely with city-level data, where Islam predominates at over 95%.[88][3] The low Hindu proportion reflects historical demographic changes, including the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits in the late 20th century, though official counts capture remaining residents. Ethnically, the population is predominantly Kashmiri, an Indo-Aryan group native to the valley, with linguistic ties to the Kashmiri language spoken by the vast majority as a mother tongue.[3] Minor ethnic presences include Sikhs and small communities like Burushos from northern origins, but these do not alter the overarching Kashmiri Muslim majority.
Historical Migrations and Demographic Shifts
Srinagar's demographic history reflects a transition from a predominantly Hindu and Buddhist population in ancient times to a Muslim-majority composition by the medieval period, driven primarily by conversions rather than large-scale migrations. The region, including Srinagar founded around the 6th century CE, was characterized by Shaivite Hinduism and Buddhism until the 14th century, when Islam arrived through the conversion of ruler Rinchana (Sadr-ud-Din) in 1323 following his marriage to a Muslim woman and influence from Sufi saint Bulbul Shah.[89] Subsequent Shah Mir dynasty rulers, particularly Sikandar Shah Miri (1389–1413), accelerated Islamization via policies including temple destruction, imposition of jizya tax on non-Muslims, and incentives for conversion, leading to a sharp decline in the Hindu population through assimilation and periodic emigrations of Kashmiri Pandits (Hindus).[90] By the 15th century, Muslims formed the overwhelming majority in the Kashmir Valley, including Srinagar, with limited influx of external Muslim migrants from Persia or Central Asia; the shift was largely endogenous, rooted in political patronage of Islam and socio-economic pressures on non-Muslims.[91]Under later Afghan (1750s–1819) and Sikh (1819–1846) rule, Srinagar's demographics stabilized with Muslims comprising over 70% of the Valley's population by the early 19th century, while Kashmiri Pandits retained a urban minority presence in Srinagar as administrators and scholars, numbering around 5-10% locally. The Dogra era (1846–1947) saw no major shifts, with the 1901 census recording Muslims at 74% and Hindus at 24% across Jammu and Kashmir, trends mirrored in Srinagar where higher Hindu concentrations persisted in the city core.[92] Post-1947 accession to India, censuses showed gradual Muslim population growth: in Srinagar, Hindus (mostly Pandits) were 10% in 1971 and 8.4% in 1981, reflecting natural increase and stable residence patterns amid overall urbanization.[93]The most acute demographic rupture occurred during the 1989–1991 insurgency onset, when Islamist militants, supported by Pakistan-based groups, targeted Kashmiri Pandits with killings, threats, and mosque announcements demanding conversion or exile, prompting mass flight. An estimated 155,000–170,000 Pandits departed the Kashmir Valley, including tens of thousands from Srinagar, reducing the community's local share from 8.4% in 1981 to 2.75% by 2011; this exodus, the seventh major Pandit migration since the 14th century, was characterized as ethnic cleansing by analysts citing over 650 Pandit murders and systemic intimidation.[91][44] Post-exodus, Srinagar's population composition shifted to approximately 95% Muslim by recent estimates, with minimal Hindu return and no significant counter-migration until potential post-2019 changes following Article 370's abrogation, though data on new inflows remains preliminary and unverified in official censuses.[3]
Srinagar District is headed by the Deputy Commissioner, who serves as the chief executive officer responsible for revenue collection, law and order maintenance, and developmental administration, while also acting as the District Magistrate and District Development Commissioner. As of June 2025, this position is held by Akshay Labroo, an IAS officer.[94][95]The district encompasses two sub-divisions, seven tehsils—including Srinagar, Harwan, and others—four community development blocks, and 21 panchayats, which facilitate local governance in rural and semi-urban areas.[96][97]The urban core of Srinagar falls under the jurisdiction of the Srinagar Municipal Corporation (SMC), the civic body tasked with managing essential services such as sanitation, water supply, sewerage, solid waste management, and urban infrastructure maintenance.[98][99]The SMC operates through an elected council comprising councilors from numerous wards—evidenced by references to at least 69 wards in official records—and is administratively led by a commissioner, currently Shri Faz Lul Haseeb (IAS), under oversight from the Union Territory's Lieutenant Governor.[100][101] The corporation coordinates with district authorities on broader planning while focusing on city-specific functions like grievance redressal and environmental initiatives.[99]
Political Evolution and Current Status
Srinagar has served as the summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir since the establishment of the princely state under Dogra rule in 1846, a status retained after the region's accession to India on October 26, 1947.[38] Under the Indian Constitution's Article 370, enacted in 1949 and granting special autonomy, Srinagar functioned as the political center for the state assembly and successive governments led primarily by the Jammu and Kashmir National Conference (NC), including Sheikh Abdullah's administration from 1948 until his dismissal in 1953, and later restorations.[38] This era featured elected councils with limited central oversight, though periods of President's rule intervened, such as from 1986 to 1996 amid governance breakdowns following disputed 1987 elections.[102]The political landscape shifted dramatically on August 5, 2019, when the Indian Parliament abrogated Article 370, revoking Jammu and Kashmir's special status and reorganizing it into two union territories effective October 31, 2019, with Srinagar designated as the summer capital of the Jammu and Kashmir Union Territory (sharing winter duties with Jammu).[51] This centralization aimed to integrate the region fully into India's legal and administrative framework, extending all constitutional provisions and enabling direct application of national laws.[51] Srinagar's governance transitioned to Lieutenant Governor oversight, with the assembly suspended until delimitation in 2022 increased seats to 90.[53]Assembly elections, absent since 2014, occurred in three phases from September 18 to October 1, 2024, marking the first since abrogation; the NC secured 42 seats, primarily in the Kashmir Valley including Srinagar constituencies, enabling an NC-Congress alliance government.[63][103]Omar Abdullah was sworn in as Chief Minister on October 16, 2024, heading a coalition with 49 seats total, while the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won 29 seats concentrated in Jammu.[104] As of October 2025, Srinagar remains the summer administrative hub, with the traditional "Darbar move" revived after a four-year pause, shifting operations to Jammu for winter; however, the union territory status persists amid ongoing demands from the elected government for restoration of full statehood to enhance local legislative powers.[105][106] The Lieutenant Governor retains key authorities over security, finance, and executive orders, reflecting hybrid central-local control.[104]
Security and Militancy
Origins and Nature of Militancy
The militancy in Srinagar and the broader Kashmir Valley emerged in the late 1980s amid political disillusionment following the perceived rigging of the 1987 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly elections. The National Conference-Congress alliance, led by Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah, secured a landslide victory amid widespread allegations of ballot stuffing, arbitrary arrests of opposition candidates, and the declaration of defeated candidates as winners in key constituencies like Amira Kadal in Srinagar.[107][108] The Muslim United Front (MUF), a coalition advocating greater Islamic governance and autonomy, polled strongly but saw over 400 supporters detained post-election, fostering a sense of betrayal among Kashmiri Muslim youth who viewed democratic participation as futile.[108]This alienation catalyzed the formation of armed groups, with early militants crossing into Pakistan-occupied Kashmir for training provided by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). The Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), initially focused on secular independence (azaadi) from India, conducted high-profile actions like the 1989 kidnapping of Rubaiya Sayeed, daughter of Union Home Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, in Srinagar to secure the release of jailed militants.[50] However, by the early 1990s, the JKLF was overshadowed by Hizbul Mujahideen, an Islamist outfit founded in 1989 with Pakistani backing, which prioritized merger with Pakistan and enforced religious ideology through fatwas against secular nationalists.[109][110]The nature of militancy centered on asymmetric guerrilla tactics in urban Srinagar, including assassinations of political leaders, security personnel, and civilians perceived as collaborators, alongside bombings and ambushes that disrupted daily life and targeted non-Muslims, contributing to the exodus of over 100,000 Kashmiri Pandits by 1990.[108]Hizbul Mujahideen, drawing ideological inspiration from Jamaat-e-Islami, imposed coercive social controls such as bans on music and Western attire, while relying on infiltration across the Line of Control for arms and recruits, with Pakistan's role evident in the supply of trained cadres from Afghan jihad veterans.[109][111] Though initially framed as a quest for self-determination, the insurgency's Islamist turn and external sustenance shifted its character toward sustained proxy warfare, with Srinagar as a focal point for protests masking militant operations.[112]
Counter-Insurgency Efforts and Pakistani Involvement
Indian security forces, primarily the Indian Army's Rashtriya Rifles battalions, Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), and Jammu and Kashmir Police, have conducted sustained counter-insurgency operations in the Kashmir Valley, including Srinagar, employing cordon-and-search tactics, intelligence-led targeted strikes, and non-kinetic measures like community engagement to dismantle militant networks.[113] These efforts intensified following the resurgence of militancy in the late 1980s, with a focus on neutralizing active militants, disrupting logistics, and preventing infiltration across the Line of Control (LoC).[114]Launched in 2017, Operation All Out targeted top militant leadership and overground workers, resulting in the elimination of over 200 militants in its initial phases through precise encounters, with security forces reporting 78 militants killed in 2017 and 150 in 2016 across Jammu and Kashmir.[115] By 2020, the operation had reduced active local militants to around 170-180, emphasizing surgical strikes to avoid collateral damage in urban areas like Srinagar.[116] Post-2019 abrogation of Article 370, operations expanded to dismantle the terror ecosystem, including financial networks and radicalization hubs, leading to a reported decline in incidents while sustaining high neutralization rates.[117]Quantitative outcomes include the neutralization of over 1,000 militants between 2014 and 2024, with Indian government data indicating dozens killed annually in counter-terror incidents, particularly foreign militants originating from Pakistan.[118] Infiltration attempts, often involving Pakistani nationals, have been thwarted at rates exceeding 90% along the LoC, with forces recovering arms and explosives traced to Pakistani ordnance.[119]Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) has provided logistical, training, and financial support to insurgent groups operating in Srinagar and the Valley, such as Hizbul Mujahideen and Lashkar-e-Taiba, enabling infiltration and sustained violence through proxy warfare since the 1990s.[120] Evidence includes confessions from captured militants, intercepted communications, and seizures of Pakistani-issued currency and documents, confirming state-sponsored backing that sustains groups like The Resistance Front, which claimed attacks in the region.[121][122] This involvement, documented in Indian Ministry of External Affairs reports, frames the insurgency as externally fueled rather than purely indigenous, with ISI directing operations to destabilize Indian administration.[121]
Post-2019 Security Trends and Data
Following the abrogation of Article 370 on August 5, 2019, Jammu and Kashmir, including Srinagar, experienced a marked decline in overall terror-related fatalities, with official data indicating 1,230 deaths from August 5, 2019, to August 4, 2025—comprising 189 civilians, 204 security personnel, 833 terrorists, and 4 unidentified individuals—representing a 33% reduction compared to 1,845 deaths in the preceding six years (2013–2019). [123][124] This trend reflects intensified counter-insurgency operations that neutralized a higher number of militants while reducing casualties among non-combatants and forces, though some analysts note a temporary uptick in incidents during 2020–2022 before stabilization. [125][126]Incidents of stone pelting, a form of low-level unrest prevalent in Srinagar and surrounding areas, plummeted post-2019, dropping from 1,328 cases in 2018 to zero reported in 2023, a 100% decline from peak levels around 2010 when over 2,600 incidents occurred. [127][128] By mid-2021, stone-pelting events in the first seven months numbered just 77, an 88% decrease from 620 in the same period of 2019, correlating with enhanced security deployments and the cessation of organized protests and strikes. [129][130]Terrorist incidents overall decreased by approximately 70% in the first year post-abrogation, with acts of terrorism falling 32% from August 5, 2019, to June 6, 2022, relative to the prior equivalent period, driven by operations dismantling terror infrastructure and recruitment networks. [126][131] In Srinagar, urban militancy shifted toward targeted assassinations of non-local workers and officials, but such events remained lower in frequency than pre-2019 mass violence, with security forces reporting sustained control over key areas like the city center and Dal Lake periphery. [132]
Year
Civilian Fatalities
Security Personnel Fatalities
Terrorist Fatalities
Total Incidents (J&K)
2019 (pre-Aug)
~100 (est.)
~50 (est.)
~150 (est.)
369
2020
37
60
221
415
2021
36
41
188
~300 (est.)
2022
25
30
150
253 deaths total
2023
18
25
120
<200 (est.)
Data compiled from Ministry of Home Affairs and SATP indicate that while foreign militants and Pakistan-backed infiltration attempts persisted, local recruitment fell sharply, contributing to the overall stabilization in Srinagar's security landscape. [119][126] Critics from outlets like The Wire argue incidents rose post-initial drop, but aggregate official metrics from multiple periods refute a net increase, emphasizing operational successes over sporadic attacks. [133]
Economy
Primary Economic Sectors
The primary economic sectors in Srinagar district include agriculture, livestock rearing, and traditional manufacturing, particularly handicrafts, which sustain employment in peri-urban and rural pockets amid the city's urbanization. Agriculture focuses on field crops such as rice, maize, and wheat, alongside vegetable cultivation suited to the valley's temperate climate and irrigated floodplains; rice remains the staple, with paddy fields covering significant portions of cultivable land outside the urban core. Vegetable farming, including off-season production of cabbage, cauliflower, and spinach, supports local markets and contributes to J&K's total vegetable output of 520 thousand quintals in 2023-24, bolstered by initiatives like high-value cropping under the Holistic AgricultureDevelopment Plan.[134][135][136]Livestock and allied activities, accounting for 5.39% of J&K's gross value added (GVA) with 5.73% growth in 2024-25, are integral to Srinagar's rural economy, encompassing dairy (milk production at 2,081 thousand metric tons by November 2024), sheep and goat rearing for mutton (298.7 lakh kg by November 2024), and poultry. These sectors employ a substantial workforce, with 7.77 million livestock heads across J&K per the 20th LivestockCensus, and support schemes like Kisan Credit Cards for dairy (1.87 lakh accounts, Rs. 1,483 crore sanctioned) and sheep (30,950 accounts, Rs. 303 crore). Fisheries, though minor at 0.34% of GVA, involve trout farming in local water bodies, yielding 19,530 metric tons by November 2024.[134]Handicrafts, classified under secondary manufacturing but rooted in traditional primary-like artisan labor, form a cornerstone of Srinagar's economy as the valley's production epicenter, employing over 4.22 lakh artisans region-wide in crafts like Pashmina shawls, hand-knotted carpets, papier-mâché, and walnut woodwork—many holding GI tags. The sector drove J&K handicraft exports to Rs. 1,162 crore in 2023-24, up from Rs. 563 crore in 2021-22, generating foreign exchange of approximately Rs. 1,700 crore annually and ranking Srinagar's district first in industries and allied sectors per 2025 performance metrics. Small-scale manufacturing units, numbering 334 operational in J&K by December 2024 with Rs. 2,977 crore investment and 8,443 jobs, include food processing and textiles concentrated around Srinagar, supported by MSME schemes like PMEGP (15,037 units aided in 2023-24, creating 1.2 lakh jobs). Overall, J&K's primary sector contributes 20% to GVA in 2024-25, down from prior decades due to service sector expansion, while secondary stands at 18.3%.[134][137][138][139]
Tourism and Horticulture
Srinagar's tourism industry revolves around its scenic lakes, historic gardens, and cultural sites, drawing visitors primarily to Dal Lake and the Mughal Gardens complex. Dal Lake, spanning approximately 18 square kilometers including its floating islands, features traditional wooden houseboats and shikara gondolas for sightseeing, with a unique floating vegetablemarket operating daily.[140] The lake supports over 1,000 houseboats, many converted from royal vessels dating back centuries, offering overnight stays amid lotus blooms and Himalayan views.[72]The Mughal Gardens—Shalimar Bagh (built 1619 by Emperor Jahangir), Nishat Bagh (1633 by his wife Nur Jahan), and Chashme Shahi (1632 by Shah Jahan's governor)—exemplify Persian-influenced terraced layouts with cascading fountains, central water channels, and pavilions overlooking Dal Lake and the Zabarwan Range.[141][142] These UNESCO tentative list sites host seasonal flower displays, including tulips in spring. Visitor arrivals to Jammu and Kashmir surged post the August 2019 abrogation of Article 370, with improved security enabling 2.35 crore tourists in 2024, up from 2.11 crore in 2023, predominantly domestic travelers to Srinagar's attractions.[143][144]Kashmir division alone recorded nearly 3 million visitors in 2024, reflecting Srinagar's role as the primary gateway.[145]Horticulture underpins Srinagar's economy, with the Kashmir Valley producing high-value crops like apples, saffron, and ornamentals on terraced orchards and fields. Apples dominate, yielding 1.8 million metric tons annually as of 2020-21, supporting exports worth thousands of crores and employing over 35 lakh people regionally.[146][147]Saffron from nearby Pampore fields near Srinagar produces 15-20 tons yearly, prized for its GI-tagged quality and contributing to the sector's Rs 5,000 crore economic input.[146][148] Srinagar's Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden, Asia's largest at 55 hectares, blooms over 1.5 million tulip bulbs in spring, boosting off-season tourism and floriculture revenue.[140] The sector accounts for about 9% of Jammu and Kashmir's GSDP, though challenged by climate variability and market access.[149]
Infrastructure Investments and Growth Metrics
The completion of the Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla Rail Link (USBRL) in June 2025 marked a major infrastructure milestone, connecting Srinagar to the Indian railway network after 28 years of construction at a total cost of Rs 37,012 crore.[150] This 272 km line, featuring engineering feats like the Chenab Bridge, has enabled the first freight trains to Srinagar by October 2025, facilitating industrial inputs such as salt from Gujarat and reducing dependency on road transport vulnerable to weather disruptions.[151] The rail link's operationalization is projected to lower logistics costs and boost Srinagar's cargo handling, with initial passenger services already integrating into the valley's transport matrix.[152]Srinagar International Airport has undergone expansion planning to increase capacity fourfold, with a Rs 1,788 crore investment in a new integrated terminal building, apron extension, and allied facilities, targeting completion by June 2027.[57] Daily flights to Srinagar rose from 35 in 2019 to higher volumes post-upgrades, enhancing tourism access amid improved security, though full terminal tripling to 15,000 sq m remains under phased implementation.[61] Road infrastructure investments exceeded Rs 30,000 crore on national highways over five years ending 2024, including the Noor Jehan Bridge over Jhelum River set for opening in late 2025 and broader four-laning of Jammu-Srinagar highway segments.[153][154] Under Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana, over 12,000 km of rural roads were upgraded region-wide, improving Srinagar's peri-urban connectivity.[155]The Srinagar Metro Rail project, estimated at Rs 4,893 crore for urban congestion relief, remains stalled as of October 2025 pending central approval of its revised detailed project report.[156] These investments correlate with Jammu and Kashmir's gross state domestic product (GSDP) growth of 7.06% in real terms for 2024-25, with nominal projections exceeding 11%, driven partly by enhanced connectivity in tourism and logistics sectors concentrated in Srinagar.[157]Unemployment fell to 6.1% in 2023-24, amid rising per capita income, though critics note a slowdown in compound annual growth rate to 8% post-2019 from prior 10.2%, attributing it to transitional disruptions rather than investment shortfalls.[157][158]
Key Infrastructure Project
Investment (Rs Crore)
Status/Impact as of 2025
USBRL Rail Link
37,012
Fully operational; enables year-round freight and passenger access to Srinagar.[150]
Awaiting approval; potential for urban mobility once funded.[156]
Infrastructure and Transport
Road and Urban Connectivity
Srinagar's road connectivity relies heavily on National Highway 44 (NH-44), which links the city southward to Jammu over approximately 247 kilometers, serving as the primary all-weather artery to the rest of India despite vulnerabilities to landslides and heavy rains.[159] This highway, upgraded with tunnels and bypasses, has seen restorations nearing completion as of September 2025 following monsoon-induced damages that disrupted full traffic flow.[160] The 2.35-kilometer Banihal bypass, part of the four-laning project, was slated for operationalization by late July 2025 to enhance safety and reduce congestion.[161]Within the city, the road network has expanded significantly, with OpenStreetMap data indicating growth from 1,154 kilometers in 2014 to 2,259 kilometers by 2022, reflecting incremental urban infrastructure development amid population pressures.[162] Key intra-urban links include bridges over the Jhelum River, such as the forthcoming 127-meter Noor Jehan Bridge at Qamarwari, expected to open in October 2025 to alleviate river-crossing bottlenecks.[154] However, persistent delays plague projects like a 130-meter bridge intended to ease central congestion, which has missed multiple deadlines over 15 years due to administrative and execution shortfalls.Urban traffic management faces chronic gridlock from unregulated minibuses, taxis, and narrow roads, exacerbated by outdated planning and insufficient public enforcement.[163] Authorities have pursued remedies including road widening, one-way systems in dense areas, and traffic calming under the Jammu and Kashmir Road Safety Policy-2025, alongside calls for detailed congestion plans integrating flyovers and subways.[164][165] Federal investments totaling ₹29,903 crore in Jammu and Kashmir's national highways since 2020 have constructed over 1,003 kilometers of new stretches, bolstering regional access, while 100 ongoing projects valued at ₹1,957 crore target further enhancements as of July 2025.[166][167]![Engineer directing patch macadamisation on roads][float-right]
Air, Rail, and Water Transport
Srinagar International Airport, officially Sheikh Ul-Alam International Airport (IATA: SXR), serves as the primary air gateway to the city and the Kashmir Valley, handling both domestic and limited international flights from an integrated terminal spanning 212,000 square feet with capacity for 950 passengers at a time, including 500 domestic and 450 international. The airport connects to 11 domestic destinations operated by five airlines, predominantly IndiGo, with direct flights to major hubs such as New Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Kolkata, Amritsar, and Chandigarh, facilitating over 425 incoming and outgoing passengers per terminal peak. As a dual-use facility shared with the Indian Air Force, it supports seasonal surges in tourism and pilgrimage traffic, though international operations remain minimal compared to domestic routes spanning up to 2,329 km to Bengaluru.[168][169][170]The Udhampur–Srinagar–Baramulla Rail Link (USBRL), a 272 km engineering feat completed and declared fully operational on June 7, 2025, provides Srinagar with its first all-weather rail connectivity to the Indian mainland via Jammu, crossing challenging Himalayan terrain including the world's highest rail bridge over the Chenab River. Srinagar Railway Station now accommodates passenger services, including the Vande Bharat Express trains linking the city to Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Katra station, with additional halts such as at Reasi introduced from October 29, 2025, to enhance regional access. This infrastructure enables direct express services from Katra onward to broader networks, reducing dependence on road travel amid seasonal closures of highways like the Jammu-Srinagar National Highway.[171][172][173]Water transport in Srinagar centers on Dal Lake, where traditional wooden shikara boats—narrow, oar-propelled vessels—serve as the primary means for ferrying tourists to houseboats, navigating canals, and accessing the lake's floating markets, the latter being India's only such vegetable bazaar conducted entirely on water. Houseboat operations, regulated under Jammu and Kashmir tourism policies, rely on shikaras for guest transfers, with each shikara defined as a vessel for lake traversal and subject to capacity limits and safety mandates including mandatory life jackets for all passengers and displayed maximum loads. In December 2024, Uber introduced 'Uber Shikara', a pioneering app-based service for booking these boats at government-fixed rates, requiring reservations 12 hours to 15 days in advance to formalize what was previously an informal, haggle-based system while preserving cultural practices.[174][175][176]
Recent Development Projects
Srinagar has seen accelerated infrastructure development under the Smart Cities Mission, with 90% of sanctioned projects completed by March 2025, encompassing 288 initiatives worth ₹6,597 crore across Jammu and Srinagar.[177] Specific efforts include urban rejuvenation along the Jhelum River, enhanced public transport integration, and smart solutions like integrated command centers, with ongoing reviews in September 2025 emphasizing timely completion of remaining works.[178] These projects, initially targeting full smart city status by June 2024, have progressed amid commitments from regional leadership to resolve bottlenecks and integrate advanced urban planning.[179]Key transport connectivity enhancements include the Z-Morh Tunnel, a 6.5 km bidirectional structure on the Srinagar-Leh Highway, inaugurated on January 13, 2025, reducing travel time and enabling all-weather access to Sonamarg from Kangan.[180] Complementing this, over 100 road projects valued at ₹1,957 crore were underway as of July 2025, focusing on national highways and urban links to bolster Srinagar's integration with Jammu and border regions.[167] Srinagar International Airport underwent upgrades to handle increased capacity post-2019, including terminal expansions and runway enhancements to support international flights and tourism recovery.[155]Ongoing mega-projects like the Zojila Tunnel, advancing toward 60% completion by August 2025 with a revised deadline of 2028, promise to link Srinagar to Ladakh year-round, mitigating seasonal disruptions on NH-1.[181] These initiatives, part of broader post-2020 investments exceeding ₹41,735 crore in 47 highway stretches totaling 810 km, aim to enhance strategic mobility and economic linkages.[182]
Culture and Society
Religious and Cultural Heritage
Srinagar's religious heritage encompasses ancient Hindu temples and predominantly Islamic sites shaped by Sufi traditions, reflecting a historical syncretism known as Kashmiriyat. The city's sacred landscape includes pre-Islamic structures alongside mosques and shrines established after the 14th-century arrival of Islam, with Sufi saints of the Rishi order fostering communal harmony by integrating local Shaivite elements into Islamic mysticism.[183][184]The Shankaracharya Temple, perched on a hill 1,000 feet above the city, stands as Srinagar's oldest surviving Hindu site, dedicated to Lord Shiva. Believed to date back to around 200 BC under King Jaluka or Gopaditya in the 4th century BC, the current octagonal structure with its terraced base originates from the 9th century AD following multiple rebuilds after destructions.[185][186] Named after the 8th-century philosopher Adi Shankaracharya, who reportedly meditated there, it offers panoramic views of Dal Lake and the surrounding valley.[19]Islamic architecture dominates, exemplified by the Jama Masjid in Nowhatta, constructed in 1400 AD by Sultan Sikandar Butshikan of the Shah Mir dynasty. This expansive mosque, measuring approximately 381 feet by 212 feet, features Indo-Saracenic design with intricate wooden pillars and has undergone restorations, including expansions under Sultan Zain-ul-Abidin and Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb in 1672.[187][188] It serves as a central congregational site, accommodating thousands during Friday prayers and embodying the wooden craftsmanship central to Kashmiri religious buildings.[189]The Hazratbal Shrine on the western shore of Dal Lake houses the Moi-e-Muqaddas, a relic venerated as a hair of Prophet Muhammad, brought to Kashmir in the 18th century by Syed Abdullah Shah, a claimed descendant of the Prophet. Initially constructed in the 17th century under Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, the current marble edifice was rebuilt in 1968 by the Muslim Auqaf Trust, drawing massive pilgrim crowds during Eid and relic exhibitions.[190][191]Sufism profoundly influenced Srinagar's cultural fabric, with shrines like Khanqah-e-Moula and the tomb of Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani promoting tolerant practices that blended Persian mysticism with indigenous asceticism. This heritage manifests in traditions such as shrine-based rituals, devotional music (chakri), and ethical codes emphasizing vegetarianism and environmental harmony, as propagated by Rishi saints like Nund Rishi in the 14th century.[192][183]Other notable sites include the 8th-9th century Pandrethan Shiva Temple, an ancient Hindu remnant near the city center, underscoring pre-Islamic roots amid later Islamic dominance.[193] Culturally, these religious elements underpin Kashmiri identity through shared practices like urs festivals at Sufi dargahs, which historically mitigated sectarian divides and preserved a pluralistic ethos despite periodic iconoclasm under rulers like Sikandar.[194][195]
Performing Arts and Festivals
Kashmiri performing arts in Srinagar prominently feature Bhand Pather, a centuries-old folk theater form that integrates dance, music, satire, and improvisation to narrate social and historical tales, often performed by wandering troupes in open spaces during community gatherings.[196][197][198] This tradition, derived from Sanskrit roots meaning "actor's path," employs minimal props and live percussion like the dhol drum, with actors portraying exaggerated characters to critique local customs or politics through humor.[197]Folk dances constitute another core element, including Dumhal, performed exclusively by men of the Wattal tribe who don conical caps adorned with peacock feathers and vibrant robes while executing rhythmic leaps to the beat of the damal drum, symbolizing agricultural rituals and warrior prowess.[199]Rouf, a graceful women's dance forming human chains with synchronized handclaps and swaying movements, celebrates spring and is commonly enacted on auspicious occasions like Eid, evoking themes of fertility and communal harmony.[199] Other forms such as Kud, a masked dance mimicking shepherds, and Hafiza, involving women in elaborate attire, further enrich Srinagar's repertoire, typically accompanied by traditional instruments like the santoor and rubab.[199]Festivals in Srinagar amplify these arts through public spectacles. The Tulip Festival, held annually in April at Srinagar's botanical gardens, showcases over 1.5 million tulip bulbs alongside folk dance performances, music concerts, and handicraft exhibitions to promote tourism and cultural preservation since its inception in 2017.[200] Religious observances like Eid-ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-Adha, marking the end of Ramadan and the Hajj pilgrimage respectively, feature mass prayers at sites such as the Jamia Masjid followed by Rouf dances, Bhand Pather skits, and communal feasts, drawing thousands to Srinagar's streets and mosques.[201]Urs commemorations at shrines like Hazratbal draw Sufi qawwali singing and devotional dances, perpetuating mystical traditions tied to Kashmiri Islam.[202] The Gurez Festival in July highlights tribal dances and music from the region's pastoral communities, fostering inter-valley cultural exchange.[203] These events, while rooted in tradition, have faced disruptions from regional instability but continue to sustain performing arts amid efforts for revival.[204]
Social Structure and Family Life
Kashmiri society in Srinagar, predominantly Muslim, is organized around patrilineal kinship systems where descent and inheritance follow the male line, forming the core of family and household functions.[205] This structure emphasizes agnatic ties, with extended kinship networks providing social support, though urban pressures in Srinagar have increasingly favored nuclear units over traditional joint families.[206] Despite Islamic egalitarian ideals, a de facto social hierarchy persists among Muslims, resembling caste-like endogamy with groups such as Syeds (claiming prophetic descent) at the top, followed by occupational castes like artisans and service providers at lower levels, influencing marriage alliances and social interactions.[207][208]Family life traditionally revolves around the patriarchal household, where the male head holds authority over decisions including marriages, often arranged within kin or caste to preserve honor and property.[209] Consanguineous unions, particularly first-cousin marriages, remain prevalent, comprising over 50% of unions in nearby regions and similarly high in Srinagar due to kinship preferences.[210] Gender roles are distinctly divided, with men focused on economic provision and public life, while women manage domestic spheres, child-rearing, and family honor, though elderly women often wield informal influence in reinforcing patriarchal norms.[211][212] Islamic teachings underscore filial piety, mandating respect for parents, which sustains intergenerational co-residence, with elders typically integrated into adult children's homes rather than isolated in care facilities.[213][214]Recent shifts, driven by conflict, urbanization, and education, have eroded joint family dominance, promoting nuclear setups and individualism, which correlate with rising divorce rates and challenges to arranged marriages.[206][215] Women's increasing access to education and employment is altering dynamics, yet patriarchal enforcement persists, limiting autonomy and contributing to domestic tensions.[211] Inter-caste unions face social stigma, highlighting the enduring grip of hereditary hierarchies despite official denial.[216]
Tourism and Attractions
Iconic Sites Within Srinagar
Dal Lake serves as Srinagar's central aquatic landmark, spanning approximately 18 square kilometers across five interconnected basins linked by channels, and functions as an integral hub for tourism and local commerce through its houseboat accommodations and shikara rides.[217] The lake, an urban freshwater body formed from ancient geological remnants potentially tracing to Pleistocene origins, supports a unique floating market for vegetables and handicrafts, distinguishing it as India's sole such venue.[218]Houseboats, introduced during British colonial restrictions on land stays in the 19th century, number over 1,000 and embody Kashmiri hospitality, often featuring carved walnut wood interiors.[219] Environmental challenges, including eutrophication from pollution and weed proliferation, have prompted restoration efforts, such as weed harvesting and sewage diversion, to preserve its ecological balance.[220]The Mughal Gardens, exemplifying Persian-influenced terraced landscapes with fountains, pavilions, and chinar trees, represent imperial engineering feats from the 17th century. Shalimar Bagh, constructed around 1620 by Emperor Jahangir for retreats and festivities, features three descending terraces symbolizing earthly, heavenly, and divine realms, with water channels fed by ancient springs.[26]Nishat Bagh, laid out in 1633 by Asaf Khan—brother of Empress Nur Jahan—mirrors the Zeban mountain contours with 12 terraces evoking zodiac signs, boasting over 300 fountains operational via gravity-fed aqueducts.[27]Chashme Shahi, the smallest at 12 acres and built in 1632 under Shah Jahan, centers on a perennial spring believed to hold medicinal properties, incorporating a three-tiered garden with a central pavilion for royal sojourns.[221] These sites, maintained by the Archaeological Survey of India, draw visitors for their symmetrical charbagh layouts and seasonal tulip blooms, though siltation and urban encroachment necessitate ongoing conservation.[222], whose population numbered around 250 as of recent surveys.[233][234] Covering altitudes from 1,700 to 4,300 meters, the park supports over 50 mammal species and permits guided jeep safaris, birdwatching for species like the Himalayan monal, and moderate treks from April to October, subject to permits issued by the Jammu and Kashmir Forest Department to regulate visitor impact.[235][236] Efforts include habitat restoration to counter poaching and habitat loss, promoting low-impact activities like camping in designated zones.[237]
Tourism Recovery and Challenges
Following the abrogation of Article 370 on August 5, 2019, tourism in Srinagar and the broader Kashmir Valley underwent a marked recovery, fueled by bolstered security protocols, infrastructure investments, and targeted marketing under initiatives like "Incredible India." Annual tourist arrivals in the Kashmir region climbed from 5.65 lakh in 2019 to approximately 2.95 million by 2024, with domestic visitors comprising the majority and serving as the primary driver of economic resurgence in Srinagar's houseboat and hospitality sectors.[238][239] This uptick reflected a causal link between reduced militancy incidents—down over 70% from pre-2019 peaks according to official security data—and renewed investor confidence, evidenced by the addition of over 5,000 hotels and guesthouses across Jammu and Kashmir since 2019.[240][241]The momentum persisted into 2025, with Jammu and Kashmir recording over 95 lakh domestic tourists and nearly 20,000 foreign visitors in the first half of the year, many routing through Srinagar's Sheikh ul-Alam International Airport as the valley's primary entry point.[242] Srinagar-specific assets, including Dal Lake's shikara rides and Mughal gardens, benefited disproportionately, contributing an estimated 40% of regional tourism revenue through extended stays averaging 4-5 days.[243] However, this recovery remained uneven, as foreign arrivals lagged at under 1% of totals, constrained by lingering international travel advisories from select governments despite India's assertions of normalcy.[55]Persistent challenges undermine full stabilization, chief among them intermittent terrorist violence that exploits Srinagar's proximity to border areas and amplifies media-driven perceptions of risk. The April 22, 2025, Pahalgam attack, killing over a dozen civilians, triggered an immediate 80-95% drop in bookings across Srinagar's hotels and houseboats, idling thousands of shikaras and stranding local operators amid peak season cancellations.[244][245] Infrastructure deficits, such as overburdened roads and limited high-altitude connectivity beyond Srinagar, exacerbate vulnerability to seasonal closures from harsh winters, while ecological pressures from overtourism—evident in Dal Lake's pollution levels rising 15% annually—pose long-term sustainability risks without stricter carrying capacity enforcement.[246][247] These factors, compounded by occasional over-reliance on government subsidies rather than diversified revenue streams, highlight the need for resilience-building measures like enhanced intelligence-sharing to decouple tourism from security volatility.[248]
Education
Higher Education Institutions
The University of Kashmir, established in 1948 as the Jammu and Kashmir University and bifurcated into a separate entity in 1969, serves as the primary state university in Srinagar, located in the Hazratbal area with a focus on arts, sciences, and humanities.[249] It offers undergraduate, postgraduate, and doctoral programs across multiple faculties, enrolling thousands of students annually despite regional security challenges that have periodically disrupted operations.[249] Affiliated colleges in Srinagar, such as Amar Singh College and Sri Pratap College, contribute to its network, providing degree programs in various disciplines.[250]The National Institute of Technology Srinagar, founded in 1960 as a Regional Engineering College under the Government of India's second five-year plan, was upgraded to full NIT status in 2003 and specializes in engineering, technology, and architecture.[251] Situated on a 67-acre campus overlooking Dal Lake, it admits students via national entrance exams like JEE Main and emphasizes research in fields such as civil, electrical, and computer engineering, with an annual intake of around 700 undergraduates.[251] The institute has faced infrastructure limitations due to its location in a seismically active zone but maintains accreditation from bodies like the National Board of Accreditation.[251]Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology of Kashmir (SKUAST-K), established in 1982 and headquartered in Shalimar, Srinagar, focuses on agricultural, veterinary, and allied sciences tailored to the Himalayan region's agro-climatic conditions.[252] It operates research stations and extension centers across Kashmir, offering programs in horticulture, animal husbandry, and food technology, with an emphasis on improving local crop yields like saffron and apples amid challenges from climate variability and conflict-related disruptions.[252] The university's Shalimar campus includes facilities for biotechnology and soil science, supporting farmer outreach in a state where agriculture employs over 60% of the workforce.[253]Other notable institutions include the Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS), a deemed university in Soura, Srinagar, established in 1982 for postgraduate medical education and super-specialty training, handling tertiary care and research in cardiology and oncology. These institutions collectively face systemic issues like funding shortages and enrollment fluctuations tied to political instability, yet they remain central to regional human capital development.[250]
Primary and Secondary Education
Primary and secondary education in Srinagar encompasses government-operated schools under the Directorate of School Education and a growing network of private institutions, serving the urban population of approximately 1.2 million. Elementary education (classes 1-8) and secondary education (classes 9-10) face persistent challenges including enrollment declines in public schools and suboptimal learning outcomes, amid a regional shift where nearly half of students in Jammu and Kashmir opt for private schooling due to perceptions of superior quality.[254][3]Enrollment in government schools across Jammu and Kashmir dropped by over 52,000 students between 2021-22 and 2023-24, from 1,473,022 to 1,421,225, reflecting broader trends in Srinagar where low-attendance public institutions have prompted mergers and closures of nearly 4,400 schools region-wide by late 2024. In Srinagar district, secondary school enrollment data for 2020 indicated participation rates aligned with urban averages, but recent audits reveal hundreds of schools statewide with fewer than 50 students, including 119 with zero enrollment as of early 2025, straining resources and teacher deployment. Dropout rates have decreased at the primary level but worsened at secondary stages, exacerbated by inadequate infrastructure and transportation barriers in peripheral areas.[255][256][257]Learning proficiency remains low, with a 2025 government report finding that 52% of Class VIII students in Jammu and Kashmir government schools unable to read Class II-level texts, signaling foundational skill deficits despite increased overall enrollment of 1.2 lakh students region-wide in 2024. Literacy in Srinagar's urban agglomeration stood at about 71% per the 2011 census, lagging the national average of 74%, though Jammu and Kashmir's rate has risen to 77.3-82% in recent estimates, with urban Srinagar likely benefiting from denser school access. Historical insurgency disruptions reduced school density and attendance, with pre-2001 data showing higher-than-national averages of primary and secondary institutions per capita, but persistent quality issues like teacher shortages and curriculum mismatches continue to drive private sector preference.[258][259][3]Government efforts under Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan emphasize universal elementary enrollment, infrastructure upgrades, and computer education in higher secondary facilities, coordinated by district-level officers including the Chief Education Officer. Gender disparities persist, with rural female literacy in Jammu and Kashmir below national averages, though urban Srinagar shows progress in girls' retention; challenges like single-teacher schools (over 1,300 statewide serving 31,000 students) and resource misallocation undermine efficacy.[260][261][262]
Recent Educational Reforms
Following the abrogation of Article 370 in August 2019, which integrated Jammu and Kashmir more fully with central government schemes, educational reforms in Srinagar and the broader Union Territory emphasized infrastructure expansion and reduced dropout rates in government schools. Central funding enabled the construction of thousands of new classrooms and the application of national programs like Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan without prior restrictions. By 2022, government efforts had notably lowered student dropout rates across Jammu and Kashmir, attributing this to improved access and facilities in urban centers like Srinagar.[263]The adoption of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 marked a pivotal shift, with Jammu and Kashmir ranking among top performers in its implementation by August 2025, including the allocation of art and vocational education teachers to all schools. Key measures involved holistic curriculum reforms promoting multidisciplinary learning, vocational integration from secondary levels, and pre-primary education linkage with early childhood care. In Srinagar, this included completing approximately 3,000 new classrooms and providing scholarships to over 5,000 students pursuing higher studies to mitigate financial barriers. Discussions in September 2025 between the Chief Secretary and the Union Education Secretary focused on accelerating NEP-aligned infrastructure upgrades and teacher accountability to enhance learning outcomes.[264][265][266]Recent initiatives extended reforms to non-traditional institutions; in October 2025, the Kashmir Students Federation incorporated madrasas, Darul Ulooms, and coaching centers into a unified regulatory framework to standardize quality and oversight in Srinagar's diverse educational landscape. Events like the NEP Conclave 2025 in Srinagar and the CII J&K Education Summit underscored emphasis on "design your degree" flexibility and inclusive adaptation to local contexts. However, foundational learning levels in reading and arithmetic have shown declines in government schools as of early 2025, highlighting persistent challenges amid these structural changes despite policy emphasis on remedial and personalized learning.[267][268][269][270]
Media and Broadcasting
Print and Electronic Media
Srinagar is home to several English-language daily newspapers that serve the Kashmir Valley and broader Jammu and Kashmir region. Greater Kashmir, published from the city since its inception as a weekly in 1987 before expanding to daily editions, offers extensive coverage of local politics, security developments, and cultural events.[271] Rising Kashmir, another key English daily based in Srinagar, emphasizes regional news, editorials, and analysis on governance and societal issues.[272] Kashmir Observer, headquartered at Haza Complex in Srinagar, provides reporting on current affairs, with a focus on in-depth features and opinion pieces.[273] Kashmir Times, while maintaining operations across Jammu and Kashmir, publishes editions from Srinagar addressing regional and national topics.[274]The print media landscape in Srinagar has encountered significant pressures since 2019, including reduced governmentadvertising revenue—often withheld from outlets critical of policies—and a surge in digital news consumption, prompting staff reductions and some publication suspensions.[275][276] As of 2025, these economic constraints have led to a contraction in the sector, with legacy newspapers adapting through e-papers and hybrid models amid competition from social media platforms.[277]Electronic media in Srinagar is primarily anchored by public service broadcasters. All India Radio (AIR) Srinagar, operational since July 1948, transmits on AM 1116 kHz and FM frequencies, delivering news, talk shows, and music in Kashmiri, Urdu, and Hindi to cover local, national, and international content.[278][279]Doordarshan Kendra Srinagar operates the Kashir Channel, broadcasting television programs in Urdu and Kashmiri, including news bulletins and cultural transmissions tailored to the region.[280] Private FM options are limited, with BIG FM 92.7 Srinagar providing commercial entertainment, music, and light news segments since its entry into the market.[280]Journalistic operations in Srinagar's electronic media face ongoing restrictions, including internet shutdowns during unrest and regulatory scrutiny, which have curtailed live reporting and prompted reliance on delayed or state-approved feeds in some instances.[281] AIR and Doordarshan, as government entities under Prasar Bharati, maintain steady infrastructure with transmitters at key sites like Residency Road, ensuring wide reach despite these challenges.[282]
Digital and Film Industry Developments
The Jammu and Kashmir Film Policy of 2021, followed by an updated version in 2024, has facilitated the shooting of over 350 films and web series in the region since its inception, with many utilizing Srinagar's urban settings and proximity to scenic valleys for production.[283][284] These policies provide incentives such as single-window clearances and subsidies to attract domestic and international filmmakers, aiming to integrate film production with tourism and local employment.[285] In 2025, Bollywood units resumed shooting in Srinagar and nearby areas despite security incidents like the Pahalgam attack earlier that year, signaling renewed confidence in the area's logistics for large-scale productions.[286]Local Kashmiri cinema has seen incremental growth, with filmmakers like Ali Emran establishing production bases in Srinagar to create narratives rooted in regional socio-political contexts, as evidenced by independent projects exploring themes of identity and resistance.[287][288] Titles such as Harud (2010) and more recent works like Songs of Paradise demonstrate a slow but expanding slate of Kashmiri-directed films, often produced on modest budgets in Srinagar studios or locations.[289] The reopening of cinemas after a 23-year hiatus due to conflict, including Srinagar's first multiplex in 2022, has supported local distribution and audience engagement for both regional and mainstream content.[290]In the digital media domain, Srinagar has witnessed the emergence of tech-driven ventures, such as BrandSparc, an AI automation agency founded in 2025 by local entrepreneurs Fayzan Shah and Danish Showkat, focusing on digital marketing and automation tools tailored for Kashmiri businesses.[291] Broader digital adoption has accelerated with improved internet infrastructure over the past decade, enabling e-governance platforms and online content creation, though adoption rates lag due to connectivity challenges in rural peripheries.[292]Digital journalism in Srinagar faces hurdles including misinformation proliferation and regulatory pressures, prompting calls for enhanced training and verification standards among local outlets.[293]New media technologies have also facilitated community-driven content, particularly in religious and cultural dissemination, with Srinagar-based creators leveraging platforms for wider reach.[294]
Sports
Traditional and Modern Sports
Traditional sports in Srinagar trace their origins to historical practices patronized by regional rulers, with polo emerging as a prominent equestrian game introduced to Kashmir by Sultan Zain-ul-Abidin in the 15th century, involving mounted players striking a ball with mallets toward goals.[295] This sport, rooted in Central Asian traditions, was played on grounds near the city and symbolized martial skills and horsemanship among elites. Archery, another enduring activity, has been practiced for centuries in the valley, with local competitors honing precision skills in community events that reflect Kashmir's martial heritage.[296] Traditional wrestling variants, including forms akin to kushti conducted in open akharas, emphasized physical strength and were common in rural outskirts of Srinagar, often tied to festivals or seasonal gatherings.[297]Many indigenous games, such as saz loung (hopscotch) and baante zaar (marbles), once widespread among youth in Srinagar's neighborhoods, have declined due to urbanization and digital alternatives, though efforts like the Modern Pythian Games in 2024 aim to revive them through organized competitions.[298][299] These activities fostered community bonds but lacked formal infrastructure, contrasting with their informal, skill-based nature.Modern sports in Srinagar have shifted toward organized team games, with cricket dominating participation and viewership; the city hosts matches at venues like the TRC Ground, producing national talents through Jammu and Kashmir's domestic teams.[300]Football follows closely, with grassroots leagues in districts including Srinagar drawing thousands, supported by local clubs and recent infrastructure upgrades enabling year-round play.[300][301]Hockey and volleyball have gained traction indoors, while water sports on Dal Lake, such as kayaking, emerged via events like the 2025 Khelo India Water Sports Festival.[302][303]Winter adaptations, including snow rugby introduced in 2004, have engaged over 3,000 female participants by 2018 in Srinagar and nearby areas, blending global rules with local conditions to promote inclusivity.[304] Government initiatives since 2022 have positioned Srinagar as a venue for national events, enhancing facilities for badminton, athletics, and emerging disciplines like ice stock, though participation remains concentrated in urban youth amid security and economic challenges.[305][306]
Infrastructure and Events
Srinagar's primary sports infrastructure includes the Bakshi Stadium, a multi-purpose venue in Raj Bagh with a capacity of 30,000 spectators, primarily used for football matches, athletics, and occasionally cricket events.[307][308] The stadium features an international-standard athletic track and has undergone upgrades to support diverse competitions, though some downtown facilities face neglect and decay, limiting access for local athletes.[309][310]The Sher-i-Kashmir Stadium in Sonwar Bagh serves as the main cricket venue, accommodating up to 25,000 fans and hosting domestic tournaments like the Ranji Trophy.[311][312] Additional facilities include the TRC Football Stadium with FIFA-approved artificial turf for 12,000 spectators and ongoing developments such as indoor complexes and turf upgrades in areas like Shahr-e-Khaas, funded by allocations of ₹1 crore in 2025.[313][314] The Jammu and Kashmir Sports Council oversees 32 indoor stadiums across the region, with inspections in Srinagar confirming progress on synthetic tracks and multi-sport halls as of May 2025.[315][316]Major events have revitalized the scene, including the Indian Heaven Premier League (IHPL) 2025 cricket tournament opener at Bakshi Stadium on October 25, 2025, featuring teams like Gulmarg Royals.[317] Srinagar hosted the Khelo India Water Sports Festival on Dal Lake from August 21-23, 2025, with events in kayaking, canoeing, and rowing, where Madhya Pradesh secured 18 medals.[318][319] The 69th National School Games in September 2025 involved over 4,000 athletes across 16 disciplines, including football and boxing, with Srinagar as a key venue.[320]The second Kashmir Marathon is scheduled for November 2025, with preparations reviewed on October 25, 2025, emphasizing routes through the city to promote fitness amid improving security.[321] Other highlights include the Judo Cluster of national games in October 2025 and the historic return of international cricket exhibitions at Bakshi Stadium in 2024, signaling Srinagar's emergence as a host for Legends League matches.[322][307] These events, supported by the Youth Services and Sports Department, have boosted participation despite infrastructural challenges in older venues.[301]
Notable People
Historical Figures
King Pravarsena II established the city of Srinagar, originally known as Pravarapura, in the mid-6th century CE near Hari Parbat, marking it as a planned urban center with defensive structures and temples that laid the foundation for its enduring layout.[323] This development followed the earlier Srinagari built under Ashoka's influence, but Pravarsena's initiative integrated the settlement into the Kashmir Valley's strategic geography, promoting trade and governance continuity.[323]Lal Ded, also known as Lalla Arifa or Lalleshwari, born circa 1320 CE in Pandrethan—a suburb of Srinagar—emerged as a pivotal 14th-century Shaivite mystic and poet whose vakhs (verses) articulated non-dualistic philosophy and social critique, influencing Kashmiri literature and spiritual traditions.[324] Her rejection of ritualism in favor of direct experiential knowledge bridged Hindu and emerging Sufi thought, with her wanderings through Srinagar's environs embedding her legacy in the region's cultural identity despite familial and societal opposition.[325]Sultan Zain-ul-Abidin, reigning from 1420 to 1470 CE as the eighth ruler of the Shah Mir dynasty, transformed Srinagar into a prosperous hub through infrastructure like the Zainagir canal for irrigation and flood control, alongside patronage of arts, crafts, and interfaith tolerance that attracted scholars and artisans.[326] Known as Budshah ("Great King"), his policies fostered economic stability via paper-making and shawl-weaving industries centered in Srinagar, while restoring temples and mosques, averting famines through granaries, and dispatching embassies to Central Asia and Tibet, elevating the city's status as Kashmir's political and cultural capital.[327] His rule, documented in contemporary chronicles, represented a peak of administrative efficiency before later dynastic declines.[328]
Contemporary Contributors
Farooq Abdullah, born in 1937 in Soura on the outskirts of Srinagar, has been a pivotal figure in Jammu and Kashmir politics as the longtime president of the Jammu and Kashmir National Conference.[329] He served as Chief Minister of the state multiple times between 1982 and 2002, and later as Union Minister for New and Renewable Energy from 2009 to 2014, where he advanced solar and wind energy initiatives amid India's push for sustainable power.[330] His advocacy for greater autonomy for Jammu and Kashmir within the Indian union shaped regional discourse, though it drew opposition from central governments.[329]In human rights activism, Parveena Ahanger, born in Srinagar, founded the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons (APDP) in 1994 after her son Javed Ahmed Ahanger disappeared during a 1990 protest in the city.[331] As APDP chairperson, she has led weekly protests in Srinagar's Pratap Park since 2005, documenting over 8,000 cases of enforced disappearances linked to the Kashmir conflict, and mobilized families to demand accountability from security forces.[332] Her efforts earned the 2017 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emergent Leadership, recognizing her non-violent resistance despite state restrictions on assemblies.[333]The entertainment industry features Srinagar natives like Hina Khan, born on 2 October 1987 in the city, who rose to prominence as an actress in Indian television and film.[334] She gained fame portraying Akshara in the long-running soap Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai from 2009 to 2016, amassing over 1,800 episodes and establishing her as one of television's highest-paid stars with earnings reported at ₹35-40 lakh per month during peak years.[335] Khan expanded to films like Hasse Toh Phaseee (2014) and reality shows such as Bigg Boss 11 (2017), while publicly sharing her 2024 stage 3 breast cancer diagnosis to raise awareness.[334]Kunal Kemmu, born on 25 May 1983 in Srinagar to a Kashmiri Pandit family displaced by 1990 unrest, debuted as a child actor in Raja Hindustani (1996), earning a Filmfare Award for Best Child Artist.[336] As an adult, he starred in commercial successes including the Golmaal comedy series (2006-2019), contributing to box-office earnings exceeding ₹500 crore across installments, and transitioned to directing with Malang (2020).[337]In literature, Mirza Waheed, born and raised in Srinagar, has chronicled Kashmir's socio-political upheavals through novels like The Collaborator (2011), a bestseller shortlisted for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature, and The Book of Gold Leaves (2014), which explore themes of loss and identity amid conflict.[338] His works, informed by personal experiences of the region's violence, have been translated into multiple languages and featured in outlets like The Guardian, where he contributes essays on Kashmiri history.[339] Waheed's latest, Tell Her Everything (2021), addresses generational trauma from the 1990s insurgency.[340]