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'''Job Charnock''' (d. 1693) was a British trade agent who has been controversially described as the founder of [[Calcutta]].<ref>Thankappan Nair, Job Charnock: The Founder of Calcutta, Calcutta: Engineering Press, 1977</ref>
'''Job Charnock''' (d. 1693) was a British trade agent who has been controversially described as the founder of [[Calcutta]].<ref>Thankappan Nair, Job Charnock: The Founder of Calcutta, Calcutta: Engineering Press, 1977</ref> <ref>[http://banglapedia.org/ht/C_0140.HTM Banglapedia Atricle on Job Charnock]</ref> <ref>[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9022634/Job-Charnock Encyclopedia Britannica article on Charnock]</ref>


==Life==
==Life==
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{{main|History of Kolkata}}
{{main|History of Kolkata}}
The [[Calcutta High Court]] ruling ([[May 16, 2003]]) <ref>{{cite news| first = Subhrangshu | last = Gupta| authorlink =| author = | coauthors =| title =Job Charnock not Kolkata founder: HC
The [[Calcutta High Court]] ruling ([[May 16, 2003]]) <ref>{{cite news| first = Subhrangshu | last = Gupta| authorlink =| author = | coauthors =| title =Job Charnock not Kolkata founder: HC
Says city has no foundation day| url = http://www.tribuneindia.com/2003/20030518/nation.htm#3| format = HTML| work = | publisher = [[The Tribune]] online edition| pages = | page = | date = [[May 17, 2003]]| accessdate = December 17, 2006| language = English| quote = }}</ref> based on an Expert Committee Report pronounced that a "highly civilized society" and "an important trading centre" had existed on the site of Calcutta long before the first European settlers came down the Hooghly. The place then called ''Kalikatah'' was also an important religious centre due to the [[Kali]] Temple at [[Kalighat]]. The first literary reference of the city is found in Bipradas Piplai's magnum opus ''Manasa Mangala'' which dates back to [[1495]]. Abul Fazl's ''[[Ain-I-Akbari]]'' dating [[1596]] also mentions about the place. The [[Sabarna Roy Choudhury]] family was granted the Jaigirdari of Kalikatah by [[Emperor Jehangir]] in [[1608]]. The Court therefore concluded that Job Charnock cannot be regarded as the founder of Calcutta. <ref>Bangiya Sabarna Katha Kalishetra Kalikatah by Bhabani Roy Choudhury, Manna Publication. ISBN-81-87648-36-8</ref>
Says city has no foundation day| url = http://www.tribuneindia.com/2003/20030518/nation.htm#3| format = HTML| work = | publisher = [[The Tribune]] online edition| pages = | page = | date = [[May 17, 2003]]| accessdate = December 17, 2006| language = English| quote = }}</ref> based on an Expert Committee Report pronounced that a "highly civilized society" and "an important trading centre" had existed on the site of Calcutta long before the first European settlers came down the Hooghly. The place then called ''Kalikatah'' was also an important religious centre due to the [[Kali]] Temple at [[Kalighat]]. The first literary reference of the city is found in Bipradas Piplai's magnum opus ''Manasa Mangala'' which dates back to [[1495]]. Abul Fazl's ''[[Ain-I-Akbari]]'' dating [[1596]] also mentions about the place. The [[Sabarna Roy Choudhury]] family was granted the Jaigirdari of Kalikatah by [[Emperor Jehangir]] in [[1608]]. The Court therefore concluded that Job Charnock could not be regarded as the founder of Calcutta. <ref>Bangiya Sabarna Katha Kalishetra Kalikatah by Bhabani Roy Choudhury, Manna Publication. ISBN-81-87648-36-8</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 11:09, 11 January 2008

Job Charnock (d. 1693) was a British trade agent who has been controversially described as the founder of Calcutta.[1] [2] [3]

Life

Job Charnock went out to India in 1655 or 1656, apparently not in the British East India Company's service, but he soon joined it thereafter. He was first stationed at Cossimbazar, and subsequently at Patna. In 1685 he became chief agent at Hooghly, a Portuguese trading settlement on the river of the same name. Being besieged there by the Mughal viceroy of Bengal, he put the Company's goods and servants on board his light vessels and dropped down the river 27 miles (43 km) to the village of Sutanati, a place well chosen for the purpose of defence, which occupied the site of what is now Calcutta. It was only, however, at the third attempt that Charnock finally settled down at this spot, though as a fugitive running away from the Mughal soldiers.

He instituted a practice (adopted across British-ruled India by 1812) that sati had to be completed in the presence of an official. Such practices had been required across the Mughal empire since the time of Humayun, though they were not always enforced. Charnock was involved in reducing the incidence of sati arguably in part because [4] he wed a woman whom he rescued from her first husband's pyre. The official required to attend was to ensure that the widow was not under the age of 16, not pregnant, not the mother of children under three nor drugged. This implies both social and legal acceptance without those conditions, and the existence of incidences with those conditions. Of course, these officials were Indian and not British officials simply by sheer number. In 1829 the practice was banned, to be re-instated as legal after the Indian rebellion of 1857.[5]

He was always a faithful man to the Company, which rated his services very highly[citation needed] . He is said to have married a Hindu widow and they had three daughters. His tomb, with its Latin epitaph, can still be seen in the graveyard of St. John's Church, which is the oldest building in Calcutta. His tombstone is made from a kind of rock named after him as Charnockite.[6]

Calcutta Founding Controversy

The Calcutta High Court ruling (May 16, 2003) [7] based on an Expert Committee Report pronounced that a "highly civilized society" and "an important trading centre" had existed on the site of Calcutta long before the first European settlers came down the Hooghly. The place then called Kalikatah was also an important religious centre due to the Kali Temple at Kalighat. The first literary reference of the city is found in Bipradas Piplai's magnum opus Manasa Mangala which dates back to 1495. Abul Fazl's Ain-I-Akbari dating 1596 also mentions about the place. The Sabarna Roy Choudhury family was granted the Jaigirdari of Kalikatah by Emperor Jehangir in 1608. The Court therefore concluded that Job Charnock could not be regarded as the founder of Calcutta. [8]

References

  1. ^ Thankappan Nair, Job Charnock: The Founder of Calcutta, Calcutta: Engineering Press, 1977
  2. ^ Banglapedia Atricle on Job Charnock
  3. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica article on Charnock
  4. ^ http://www.boi-mela.com/Banglapedia/ViewArticle.asp?TopicRef=1195
  5. ^ Thankappan Nair, Job Charnock: The Founder of Calcutta, Calcutta: Engineering Press, 1977
  6. ^ Job Charnock's memorial in Calcutta
  7. ^ Gupta, Subhrangshu (May 17, 2003). "Job Charnock not Kolkata founder: HC Says city has no foundation day" (HTML). The Tribune online edition. Retrieved December 17, 2006. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); line feed character in |title= at position 37 (help)
  8. ^ Bangiya Sabarna Katha Kalishetra Kalikatah by Bhabani Roy Choudhury, Manna Publication. ISBN-81-87648-36-8
  • H.E. Busteed Echoes from Old Calcutta (Calcutta) 1908
  • Bhabani Roy Choudhury Bangiya Sabarna Katha/ Kalishetra Kalikatah