University of Calcutta
File:Uni-Calcutta-logo.png | |
Motto | Advancement of Learning |
---|---|
Type | Public Research University |
Established | January 24, 1857 |
Chancellor | Governor of West Bengal |
Vice-Chancellor | Professor Asis Kumar Banerjee |
Undergraduates | 200,000 plus |
Postgraduates | 12,400 plus |
Location | , , |
Campus | urban; 12 campuses (excluding affiliated colleges) |
Recognition | National Assessment and Accreditation Council's ‘Five Star’; University Grants Commission’s ‘Centre with Potential for Excellence’ |
Website | Official website |
Formally established on the 24 January 1857, the University of Calcutta (also known as Calcutta University) (Bengali: কলকাতা বিশ্ববিদ্যালয়), located in the city of Kolkata (previously Calcutta), India, is the first modern university in the Indian subcontinent. It is a state-government administered urban-based affiliating and research university. It has its main campuses in College Street, Rajabazar, Alipore, Hazra, South Sinthi and a host of affiliated colleges in greater Calcutta .
History
Pioneers and visionaries
As the first modern university in the Indian sub-continent the University saw its direction being steered by the first Indian vice-chancellor, Sir Gooroodas Banerjee and later by the Indian vice-chancellors Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee and his son Dr. Syama Prasad Mookerjee (also a vice chancellor).
Other renowned teachers and educationists such as:
- Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee,
- Acharya Prafulla Chandra Roy,
- Acharya Jagadish Chandra Bose,
- Acharya Satyendra Nath Bose,
- Meghnad Saha &
- P.C. Mahalanobis
have all worked at the university.
It was Dr. Fredrick John, the education secretary to the then British Government in India, who first tendered a proposal to the British Government in London for the establishment of a university in Calcutta, along the lines of London University, but at that time the plan failed to obtain the necessary approval.
However, a proposal to establish two universities, one in Calcutta and the other in Bombay was later accepted in 1854 and the necessary authority was given. The Calcutta University Act came into force on 24 January 1857 and a 41-member Senate was formed as the policy making body of the university.
During the British era and through the period until Independence in the 1960s, it was regarded as one of the few seats of academic excellence to the east of Suez.
When the university was first established it had a catchment area covering the area from Lahore to Rangoon (now in Myanmar) - the largest of any Indian university.
Early begininings
Members of the University's first Senate include:
- Alexander Duff,
- Pandit Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar,
- Prasanna Kumar Thakur,
- Prince Golam Mohammad,
- William Gordon Pratt,
- Frederick John Moat.
The first Chancellor and Vice-chancellor of the Calcutta University were the then Governor General Lord Canning and Sir James William Colvil, the then Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, respectively.
Sir Gooroodas Banerjee was the first Indian vice Chancellor of the University of Calcutta. The first meeting of the Senate was held in the Council room of the Calcutta Medical College. A temporary office of the university was first started in a few rented rooms in Camac Street.
On 30 January 1858, the Syndicate of the Calcutta University was constituted. For several years, afterwards the meetings of the Senate and Syndicate were held in a room of the Writer's Building. 244 candidates appeared for the first Entrance Examination of the university which was held in the month of March 1857 in the Town Hall of Calcutta.
In 1862, a decision was taken by the Senate to construct for the university a building of its own. Accordingly, the historical Senate Hall was constructed at a cost of Rs. 2,52,221/- and inaugurated on 12 March 1873 by holding the convocation of the university.
In 1875 Mohindra College, Patiala in Punjab province of British India became one of the first colleges to be affiliated with University of Calcutta. For a fuller list, see List of academic institutions formerly affiliated to the University of Calcutta
Tradition and continuity
Modelled on the University of London, the University of Calcutta's current courses include:
- agriculture
- arts,
- commerce,
- social welfare,
- business management,
- education,
- journalism,
- library science,
- engineering,
- technology,
- fine arts,
- music,
- home science,
- law,
- science,
- information technology,
- women's studies,
- forensic science,
- sports,
- mass communication,
- counselling.
At a glance
Calcutta University currently has:
- 58 departments,
- 18 research centres,
- 650 teachers,
- 3000 non-teaching staff and
- 12,400 post-graduate students.
A tradition of notable firsts
- The first university located to the east of Suez to teach European Classics, English Literature, European and Indian Philosophy and Occidental and Oriental History.
- The first medical school of Asia, the Calcutta Medical College was set up in 1835. Later it was affiliated to the university.
- The first college for women in India, the Bethune College was set up in 1879.
- The nation's first homeopathy college was established in 1880.
- The Science College was established in 1917, the first in India.
- The first blind school in India came into being in 1925.
- The first university museum in India, The Ashutosh Museum, came into being in 1937.
- The Government Arts College was established in 1951.
- The Indian Institute of Social Welfare and Business Management (IISWBM) was set up in 1953 as the country's first management institute.
Academic milieu
Students from the university have been taking higher studies abroad since its inception. Its alumni are to be found all over the world. During the British era and in the era after Independence to the 1980s, the preferred destinations for pursuing advanced studies were primarily the United Kingdom, United States of America, Eire, France, Soviet Union and Germany. Recent preferences for visiting students of this university include, apart from the above, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the Commonwealth of Independent States, Cyprus, China, Japan, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
Also, in a contrast to the previous era, where the preferred subjects were Humanities, Science, Engineering, Medicine, and Law, the currently preferred subjects are:
- Business Management,
- Finance,
- Commerce,
- Communication,
- Information Technology,
- Fashion Designing,
- Hospitality Management,
- Biotechnology,
- Genetics,
- Robotics, and
- Nanotechnology.
Recent surveys among students also indicate an increasing demand for subjects that relate to natural sciences, humanities and social sciences.
Departments/Sections
- Department of Law Calcutta University
- Department of Applied Physics, University of Calcutta
- A.K.Choudhury School Of Information Technology, University of Calcutta
Recent accreditation and recognition
The university has been awarded the ‘five star university’ status by the National Assessment and Accreditation Council in 2001.
The Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China has recently prepared a list of the world's top 500 institutions of higher learning (universities, research institutes etc.). The complete list is now available on the internet under the heading "Academic Ranking of World Universities, 2004" (see link above). The University of Calcutta is the only university from India to appear on the list. The other institutions from India on the list are the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore and the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur.
On December 8, 2005, the Indian University Grants Commission declared Calcutta University as a ‘‘University with Potential for Excellence’’.
On November 10, 2005, The Times Higher Education Supplement published its list of the world's top arts and humanities universities. CU, ranked 39, is the only Indian university to make it to the top 50 list. The other university from India to be in the top 100 list is the University of Delhi.
Notable alumni/faculty
Three Nobel Laureates
one Academy Honorary Award winner Satyajit Ray, were associated with this University as were two past Presidents of India:
- Dr. Rajendra Prasad and
- Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan.
Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Head of State and Prime Minister of Arzi Hukumate Azad Hind (1942-1945) and co-counder of the Indian National Army was an alumnus.
Other important political leaders of South Asia who were its alumni include:
- Jagjivan Ram, former Deputy Prime Minister of India
- Dr.Anugrah Narayan Sinha,brilliant student and alumni,later first finance minister of Bihar.
- Dr.Ba Maw, who in 1937, became the first Burmese premier under British rule and was head of state in the first sovereign (although pro-Japanese) government during World War II (August 1943-May 1945),
- Muhammad Ali Bogra and
- Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, both of them being former Prime Ministers of Pakistan
- Romanian-American religious scholar and philosopher Mircea Eliade studied at the University in the late 1920s and early 1930s.
- In 1883 Kadambini Ganguly (nee Basu) and Chandramukhi Basu became the first women graduates from the University. In the process, they became the first female graduates of the British Empire.
- Kadambini Ganguly also went on to be the first lady physician to be trained in the European system of medicine in South Asia. In 1886, she received her medical degree from the University.
- Chandramukhi Basu later became the principal of Bethune College, thus becoming the first female administrator of an undergraduate academic institution in South Asia.
- Kamini Roy, first female honours graduate in the British Empire, first feminist author in India
- Upendranath Brahmachari, renowned physician and nominee for the Nobel prize in 1929 in the category of physiology and medicine
- Binay Ranjan Sen, former ambassador of India to the USA, Italy and Yugoslavia, Japan, and Mexico and former Director General, Food and Agriculture Organization, UNO
- Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri, renowned political scientist, emeritus professor, fellow of London University and a former Oxford don of international affairs
- Suniti Kumar Chatterjee - brilliant student and alumni, later National Professor.
- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, a noted deconstructionist, feminist, and translator.
Important writers include:
For a fuller list of the University's famous alumni, see the List of University of Calcutta people.
External links
- Official website
- Good source of information
- From Banglapedia.com
- Calcutta -- Educational institutions
- From Encyclopedia Britannica
- Information on the Department of English, University of Calcutta
- Department of Statistics, University of Calcutta
- University of Calcutta - Calcutta, West Bengal Alumni Registry
- Serampore College 1
- Serampore College 2
- University rating by StudentIndia.com
- Applied Physics Alumni Association