The  National Geographic Traveler has quoted Kerala as India’s most verdant  state with one of the world’s 50 “must see” destinations. “The god who  made Kerala had a green thumb”, true to the popular Malayali saying,  Kerala’s rich resources have long attracted visitors from across the  oceans. It is in fact here that the first seafarers set foot on Indian  soil.  Legend has  it that long before Vasco Da Gama discovered India, when he landed on  the coast of Kerala, King Solomon's ships traded off the Malabar coast  between 972 and 932 B.C., followed by the Phoenicians, Romans,  Christians, Arabs, and Chinese. They all came to stock up on monkeys,  tigers, parrots, timber, sandalwood, and ivory along with the abundance  of spices.   Kerala  is sandwiched between the Lakshadweep Sea and the forested Western  Ghats that define its border with Tamil Nadu to the east. In 1956, the  state of Kerala was formed from the former princely states of  Travancore, Kochi, and Malabar. Despite its high population density,  Keralites have the country's highest life expectancy and the lowest  infant mortality rates. As it was largely ruled by benevolent Maharajas  who introduced social reforms emphasizing the provision of education and  basic services, Kerala remains one of the most progressed and educated  states in India. In those days, Kerala was more caste-divided than any  other area. It was only in this region that untouchability was highly  predominant. But today, it is one of the least caste-conscious and  communally tranquil areas of India.  Kerala  has a high percentage (22%) of Christians whose traditions go back to  St. Thomas the Apostle. Another cultural rarity can be seen in the white  Jews of Cochin. The first democratically elected Communist Party came  to power in Kerala for the first time in the whole world.  The  state capital is Thiruvananthapuram. Being a land of spices, realm of  Ayurveda, heart-throbbing sceneries, exciting array of dances, Kerala is  a microcosm of multi-religious India, co-habited by the Hindus, the  Christians and the Muslims. Malabar and Kerala  The  word Malabar was first used by Al-Biruni (973-1048 A.D.). The Arab  writers are believed to have derived Malabar from the word mala (hill)  as mentioned by the Cosmas Indicopleustus of 6th century. He  refers to the Kerala Coast as male and varam (country). The medieval  Tamil writers called the land as malainadu meaning the land of hills.  The  word Keralam is found in the Ashoka inscriptions of the third century  B.C. It is formed from Chera (the Kera/Chera people) and alam (land)  meaning "the land of Cheras."  The  second rock-edict of Ashoka refers to "Keralaputra" along with the  Cholas, Pandyas, and Satyaputra as the border kingdoms of the Maurya  Empire.  In the  first century A.D., the Roman historian Pliny refers Kerala as  Caelobrothas and the author of Periplus of the Erithryan Sea mentions it  as Cerobothra. The 2nd century geographer Ptolemy called Kerala as Kerobothro.  
KERALA is one of the most graceful lands on earth filled with nature and beauty.  It’s a land of the Leal, a happy-land in INDIA. Its salubrious nature is pantheism to the people who visit its atmosphere, here.  Every step you make and every breath you take will make you understand the power of GOD and creation. So, awesome to feel and no words to describe.
Referred  as the “Spice Garden of India”, Kerala is a beautiful state with an  excellent landscape of palm-lined beaches, thick jungles,  plantation-covered hills, and enthralling rivers and lakes. It is  considered to be one of the cleanest and the most peaceful parts of  India, with the state remaining a major source of India's bananas,  rubber, cardamoms, coconuts, cashews, and ginger. 
About Kerala
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