Brajendranath De
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Brajendranath Dey | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 20 September 1932 | (aged 79)
Nationality | Indian |
Alma mater | Hare School, Canning Collegiate School, Canning College, Lucknow, Calcutta University |
Occupation | Orientalist |
Spouse | Nagendranandini De (nee Bose) |
Relatives | Barun De (Grandson) Uma Bose(Great Granddaughter) Subrata Mitra (Great-Grandson) |
Brajendranath Dey (23 December 1852 – 20 September 1932) was an early Indian member of the Indian Civil Service.[1]
Early life and education
[edit]De studied at Hare School, Calcutta, and then Canning Collegiate School and Canning College, Lucknow. Always ranking at the top of his class in school, he was placed in the first division in all his final examinations. He came first from his school in the Entrance examination of Calcutta University and fourth in the first division in the First Arts (F.A.) examination of Calcutta University. A student of English (Honours), he ranked sixth in the first division in his Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) examination. Since he was a first divisioner, he was allowed to take the Master of Arts (M.A.) examination of the Calcutta University soon after the completion of his B.A. (Honours) examination. He was ranked second in the M.A. examination and was awarded the silver medal of Calcutta University.[2]
Later, he travelled to England for his higher studies, on the advice of his grand-uncle, Peary Charan Sarkar and his father's mentor, Raja Dakshinaranjan Mukherjee, the taluqdar of Shankarpore, United Provinces[dubious – discuss] and for some time assistant commissioner of Lucknow. In England, he joined University College, London to appear in the Open Competitive Services examination. Having taken the examination successfully, he joined the Indian Civil Service in 1873, emerging 17th in a batch of 35 successful probationers selected from a total of 360 candidates.[3] He was the 8th Indian member of the ICS.[4] Subsequently, he was called to the Bar by the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple on 7 June 1875.[5] He was admitted to St. Mary Hall, Oxford, where he spent one year, from 1874 to 1875, on a Boden Sanskrit Scholarship, having attended the lectures of Professor Max Mueller and Mr. Ruslan.[6] He was the first Indian ICS officer to have studied in a college in Oxford.[7]
His second son-in-law was Sir Sarat Kumar Ghosh, ICS, Chief Justice of Jaipur and Kashmir and the only interim Chief Justice of the High Court of Rajasthan, his fifth daughter and son-in-law were the social reformer Saroj Nalini Dutt, MBE,[4] and Gurusaday Dutt, ICS, Secretary, Local Self Government and Public Health, Government of Bengal, his sixth son-in-law was Lieutenant Colonel Jyotish Chandra De, IMS,[8] 2nd Indian Principal of the Calcutta Medical College, his seventh son-in-law was Captain (Hon.) Dr. Paresh Chandra Datta, first Chief Medical Officer of the B.R. Singh Memorial Hospital, Calcutta then of the East Bengal Railway and Director of Public Health, Government of West Bengal and his third son was Major (Hon.) Basanta Kumar De, Traffic Superintendent General and then Commercial Traffic Manager of the BNR.
Two of his grandsons were Ranajit Datta, chairman and managing director of Braithwaite, Burn and Jessop Limited and the historian Barun De, chairman, West Bengal Heritage Commission. Two of his great-grandchildren were the singer Uma Bose[9] and the cameraman Subrata Mitra.[10]
Career
[edit]Administrative
[edit]He took up his first posting in the civil service as assistant magistrate and collector of Arrah, Behar in 1875. He served in districts where the rulers of erstwhile zamindari estates, such as Darbhanga and Dumrao, had a strong presence. After serving in a number of districts in Behar, he was posted in Raniganj, Bengal in 1881.[11] He officiated as the district magistrate and collector of Bankura, Burdwan and Faridpore. He served as the full district magistrate and collector of Khulna, where he was befriended by Dr. Krishnadhan Ghosh, the civil surgeon of the district, and the father of Aurobindo Ghosh.[12][13] He became the magistrate and collector of Balasore in Orissa and then of Malda and Hooghly.[14] He was the first Indian to be elected as chairman of the Hooghly Municipal Corporation. He was an (acting) commissioner of the Burdwan Division.[15][16]
As the district officer of Hooghly, he started the Duke Club there which was meant to be exclusively for Indians.[17] One of his Commissioners once told him not to entertain the thought of wanting to join a British club in the district.[18]
After retirement he remained actively involved in the work of the Calcutta Improvement Trust.[19][20]
Academic
[edit]While still in service he translated Kalidas's 'Vikramarvasi' and 'Manichudabadana' from Sanskrit to English.[19] He edited an English-Bengali dictionary[16] and published an article on inter dining in the Madras Social Reformer (1910).
In his post-retirement years he served as a vice-president of the council of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta.[21][22]
He was the translator and editor, in two volumes, Nizamuddin Ahmad's Tabaqat-i-Akbari. The third volume, which he had left fully prepared, was published posthumously by Baini Prasad and also M. Hidayat Hosain.[23][24][2]
Legacy
[edit]A road in Chinsura, Hooghly is named after him.[25]
At the time of his centenary celebration in 1952, his second son, Basanta Kumar De, Esq., a senior officer of the BNR[26] took the initiative to publish in three articles sections of his reminiscences in the Calcutta Review. This work was entrusted to Tapan Raychaudhuri, then of the Department of Islamic History and Culture of the University of Calcutta.[27]
In 2001, approximately 2,000 photographs of himself and his family members were given in loan by one of his grandsons, Barun De,[28][self-published source?][29] to the photographic archives of the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta. Later, when the archive was shifted to the newly established Jadunath Bhavan Museum and Resource Centre, CSSSC, Calcutta, the photographs too were deposited there.[30]
Publications
[edit]A member of a Kayastha family of Bengal, he was a scholar of Persian and Sanskrit. He edited and translated a few works from those languages into English. They were as follows:
- (ed. & tran.), Kālidāsa's play Vikramorvasi, 'Vikramorvaçi', Canto I., in Calcutta Review, Oct. 1884, pp. 440–2.[31]
- (ed. & tran.), The Tabaqat-i-Akbari of Khwaja Nizamuddin Ahmad: A History of India from the Early Musalman Invasions to the Thirty-eighth year of the Reign of Akbar (in 3 Vols.), (Calcutta, reprint, 1973)[32]
- "Reminiscences of an Indian Member of the Indian Civil Service", in Calcutta Review, (1953–5).[33]
References
[edit]- ^ Indiasaga Who's Who
- ^ a b Full Text of 'Tabaqat-i-Akbari'
- ^ India Office, Great Britain (1905). The India List and India Office List 1905. Harrison and Sons. p. 447.
- ^ a b Forbes, Geraldine Hancock (1996). Women in Modern India. The New Cambridge History of India. Vol. IV.2. Cambridge University Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-0-521-65377-0.
As one of the first eight Indians appointed to the Indian Civil Service (ICS), Brajendra Nath ... He insisted on educating his daughters and one of them, Saroj Nalini Dutt, led the way in organizing rural women's organizations in the years immediately following World War I.
- ^ University of Wisconsin Law Library
- ^ Oxford University Calendar, 1875, p. 366
- ^ Renu Paul (in consultation with Mitra Sharafi), 'South Asians at the Inns of Court: Middle Temple, 1863-1944', compilation based on H. A. C. Sturgess, (eds.) Register of Admissions to the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple. From the Fifteenth Century to the Year 1944 (London: published for the Hon. Society of the Middle Temple by Butterworth & Co., 1949), volumes II (1782-1909) and III (1910-44), p. 2.
- ^ "Lives Less Forgotten: Lieutenant Colonel Jyotish Chandra De". Archived from the original on 9 July 2020. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
- ^ Lives Less Forgotten: Uma Bose[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Lives Less Forgotten: Subrata Mitra". Archived from the original on 7 July 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ Military and ICS Manual
- ^ Heehs, Peter (2008). The Lives of Sri Aurobindo. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-231-14098-0.
- ^ "Govt. Notifications: Orders by the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal". The Liberal and the New Dispensation. XII (30). Calcutta: R.S. Bhattacharji: 9. 6 August 1893.
- ^ "Mr. B. De", in Bengalee, 7 September 1910; see also Indian Daily News, 3 September 1910
- ^ a b "Late Mr. B. De.: Passing Away of an Old Civilian" in Liberty, Friday, 30 September 1932
- ^ Sinha, Mrinalini (October 2001). "Britishness, Clubbability, and the Colonial Public Sphere: The Genealogy of an Imperial Institution in Colonial India". The Journal of British Studies. 4 (44): 489–521. doi:10.1086/386265. JSTOR 3070745. S2CID 143900100.
- ^ Ballantyne, Tony; Burton, Antoinette M. (2005). Bodies in Contact. Duke University Press. p. 193. ISBN 0-8223-3467-4.
- ^ a b 'Late Mr. B.De: Passing Away of An Old Civilian' in Liberty, Friday, 30 September 1932
- ^ "Late Mr. B. De, Calcutta Corporation Tributes", in Liberty, Saturday, 1 October 1932
- ^ "Birth Centenary of B.De Celebrated" in The Statesman, Wednesday, 24 December 1952
- ^ "He Rehabilitated Persian in Bengal: Tributes to Late B.De: Birthday Celebration" in Amrita Bazar Patrika, Wednesday, 24 December 1952
- ^ "Mr.B.De Dead Retired Member of the Civil Service" in The Statesman, 30 September 1932
- ^ Sudha Sharma, Status of Muslim Women in Medieval India, Allahabad
- ^ Map of Chinsura, Hooghly, Bengal
- ^ "Lives Less Forgotten: Basanta Kumar De". Archived from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
- ^ Mrinalini Sinha, "Reconfiguring Hiararchies: The Ilbert Bill Controversy, 1883-84", in Reina Lewis and Sarah Mills, Feminist Post-Colonialist Theory: A Reader, New York and London, Routledge, 2003, p. 456
- ^ "Situating an Eminent Historian Eminently" – Sabyasachi Bhattacharya. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
- ^ "Lives Less Forgotten: Barun De". Archived from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ Jadunath Bhavan Museum and Resource Centre, (Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta, 2009), p. 7
- ^ Schuyler, Montgomery Jr. (1902). "Bibliography of Kālidāsa's Mālavikāgnimitra and Vikramorvaçī". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 23: 93–101. doi:10.2307/592384. JSTOR 592384.
- ^ Tabaqat-i-Akbari by Khwaja Nizamuddin Ahmed
- ^ Reminiscences of an Indian Member of the Indian Civil Service' in the Calcutta Review
External links
[edit]- 1852 births
- 1932 deaths
- Alumni of St Mary Hall, Oxford
- Bengali historians
- 19th-century Bengalis
- 20th-century Bengalis
- Bengali Hindus
- Brahmos
- Historians of South Asia
- Indian barristers
- Indian Civil Service (British India) officers
- Indian orientalists
- 19th-century Indian historians
- People from Hooghly district
- Persian–English translators
- Sanskrit–English translators
- Hare School alumni
- University of Calcutta alumni
- University of Lucknow alumni
- 20th-century Indian historians
- Scholars from Kolkata
- 19th-century Indian lawyers
- 20th-century Indian lawyers
- Members of the Middle Temple
- 19th-century Indian translators
- 20th-century Indian translators
- 20th-century Indian scholars
- 19th-century Indian scholars