There is a considerable difference of opinion today among the scholars over the identification of Kalinganagara, the reputed  capital of Kalingadesa. Almost all the copper-plate grants  of the Ganga kings of Kalinga were issued from their capital,  Kalinganagara.  There is two sites Mukhalingam and Kalingapatna, let us see the arguments
Mukhalingam
Kalinganagara is to be identified with the present site of Mukhalingam  or the  joint  site  of Mukhalingam  and Nagarakatakam, situated on the bank of the Vamsadhara and at a distance  of about  30 miles  from  the sea. This identification  has been arrived    from   the  evidence   of  some  dedicatory inscriptions found in the temple of God Madhukesvara. The inscriptions  differently  refer to a 'Nagara' of  Kalinga, not   Kalinganagara.  The  passages  occurring  in  the  inscriptions  are: Kalingavani  Nagare, Kalinga-Desa- Nagare, Nagare  Madhukesvarayam  (the  word 'Kalinga' omitted).
 The copper-plate inscription of Anantavarman,dated 1040 of an unspecified era, edited by Fleet  records  the fact  that  Kamanava  II, the nephew  of Kamarnava  I, had a town named  "Nagara," in which he built a lofty temple for an emblem  of God Isa in the linga form to which he had given the name of "Madhukesa"  because it was produced by a Madhuka tree. The temple still exists at Mukhalingam. The inscription  further informs us that Kamarnava I, the alleged founder of the Ganga dynasty, had for his capital the town named Jantavuram.  Jantavuram = Jayantapuram = Madhukesvaram = Mukhalingam.
However this is a far fetched theory.
An inscription found in the temple of Mukhalingesvara, which records a grant to the dancers and musicians of the God Madhukesvara issued from Kalinganagara itself by Anantavarman  "From Kalinganagara" is to be interpreted as "in Kalinganagara." , "Svasti! Srimat Kalinganagarat! etc." meaning "Hail! From the Victorious Kalinganagara." Thus, when there is a record concerning the dancers and musicians of the temple of Madhukesvara in Kalinganagara, issued from and inscribed in a prominent place in the temple  itself, in Kalinganagara, what stronger proof is required to identify Mukhalingam and Nagarakatakam with the ancient Kalinganagara?"
But this is just a guess work.
Kalingapatanam
The famous  Hathigumpha  Inscription  of   Kharavela.   King Kharavela clearly mentions  in his inscription  that just afterhis  coronation, in the first  year  of his reign, he repaired  his  capital Kalinganagara, of  which  the gates, city-walls and buildings had been destroyed by storm (Vata-vihata-      Gopura-pakara-nivesanampati-Samkharayati   Kalinga-Nagaram). The  storm which felled  down the strong  royal gate, city-walls (i.e., fort-walls)  and buildings, must  have been  a violent one. This undoubtedly proves the metropolitan city being situated  on the sea-side  as such furious hurricanes are only commonly experienced in seaporttowns on the east-coast.
Kalidasa in Raghu Vamsa says, Indumati's  Svayamvara, Sunanda, her companion, took         the  royal  princes  to the  king  of  Kalinga, named        Hemangada and described him as the ruler of a kingdom        of which  the Mahendra  Hill and the sea were the two        natural boundaries.  The place is described  as being         just  on the  sea-beach.  "......The  sea itself, the         waves  of which  are seen  from  the  windows  of his palace,  and  the  deep  resounding  roars  of  which surpass  the sound of the watch-drum  being  close at hand, awakes  him  as  it  were, when  slept  in  his palace-room. Sport, O Princess, with this king on the sea-shore, where the palm-trees grove make a rustling noise. This is  a clear proof of the sea- side capital of the king kalinga as kalidasa knew it.
 The Dasakumara-Carita, (the  Kalinga capital has been mentioned as Kalinganagara.  Mention is  made  of  the  Kalinga-Raja  named  Karddana,  as amusing  himself  with  his friends  and family  in a sportive party on the sea-beach.
The reference  to Kalinga  in the Mahabharata  is  equally    illuminating. Arjuna    entering    the Kalinga-gate  (Kalinga- Rastra-Dvara)  came  to  the sea-side.  Thence, returning, he went to the Mahendra Hill.
Pliny Wrote  "To  the  south, the  territory  of  the  Calinga  extended as far as the promontory of Calingon and the  town Dandagula  which  is said to be 625 Roman  miles (or  524  British   miles)  from  the  mouth  of  the Ganges."  This is exactly where kalinga nagara is.
The copperplate inscriptions of the Gangeya  Kings.  We read  in the  Achyutapuram grant of Indravarman  (Raja-Simha,)   the Chicacole  plates  of Devendravarman, the Parlakemdi  grant of Indravarman,   the Parlakemidi plates  of the time  of Vajrahasta ,  the Alamanda plates   of Ananta-arman,    the   Vizagapatam copper-plate   grant  of  Devendra   arman, the victorious Kalinga-nagara  (the issuing place of the charter) is regularly described  as Sarvartu-ramaniya or  Sarvarthu-Sukha-ramaniya, i.e., pleasant  in  all seasons.   This   passage   is of   importance   as emphatically  calling  our attention  to the pleasant and temperate  climate  of the capital as held by the Gangeya Kings.  What other place except Kalingapatam, by its name  and moderate  climate  can satisfy  this condition?
In Sanskrit  the words  Nagara, Pattana, and Pura  are synonymous.  No Sanskrit dictionary nor a book of literature  can  say anything  on this  point  to the contrary.  According  to some authorities, however, a nagara  means  a large  town  in  the  midst  of  800 villages  and a pattana is a place, where a king with his  retinue  resides.
Further lot of artifact have been found at kalingapatana to prove that it has ancient history.
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how the north and south historians neglected the history of kalinga ie Madhya or middle kalinga being the centre of the kingdom
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