1839- Coringa Cyclone
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Coringa, India is a small village situated near the mouth of the
Godavari River on the southeastern coast of India. It once was a
bustling port city. In 1789, it was brutally hit by a
cyclone
that left some 20,000 dead. Though devastated, the port city was still
able to function. On November 25, 1839, Coringa was slammed by a
disastrous cyclone that delivered terrible winds and a giant 12 m (40
ft)
storm surge.
The port was destroyed (some 20,000 vessels were lost) and 300,000
people were killed. Never fully rebuilt, Coringa today remains a simple
village.
Fast Facts:
- This storm caused the third largest loss of life from any
tropical cyclone worldwide, tied with Vietnam’s 1881 Haiphong typhoon
(also causing 300,000 fatalities). Storms in the Bay of Bengal actually
account for seven of the 10 deadliest hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones
in recorded history.
- Henry Piddington, an official of the British East India Company,
coined the term cyclone sometime around 1840 after looking at the
destruction caused in 1789 and 1839 by a “swirling circle.”
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