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Brojomohun College

Coordinates: 22°42′44″N 90°21′18″E / 22.7121°N 90.3551°E / 22.7121; 90.3551
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Brojomohun College
ব্রজমোহন কলেজ
MottoTruth, Love and Purity
সত্য, প্রেম ও পবিত্রতা
TypeUniversity college
Established1889
PrincipalS M Emanul Hakim
Students23200+
Location,
CampusUrban (60 acres)
NicknameBM College
AffiliationsBangladesh National University
WebsiteOfficial Website
Physics building of BM College

Brojomohan College (Template:Lang-bn), or BM College, is one of the oldest institutions of higher education in Bangladesh. It is located in the city of Barisal in south-western Bangladesh.

History

Though Barisal town was called the "Venice of the East" [and Barisal district, "the Granary of Bengal"], the town's education sector was not strong, as it was located geographically far from Calcutta, the capital city and the principal centre of learning]. Barisal Zilla School was established in 1854, but the school was not big enough to serve the growing number of students. To solve the probed Mahatma Ashwini Kumar Dutta to establish a college. On June 14, 1889, Aswini Kumar Dutta founded Brojo Mohan College, which was named after his father.

The first principal of the college was Babu Gyan Chandra Chowdhury. While Ashwini Kumar Dutta taught English and Logic, Kali Prasanna Ghosh taught History and Kamini Kumar BidyaRatna taught Sanskrit and Bengali. In 1898, BM College was transformed into a "First Grade College" from a "Second Grade College". In 1912, the college went to government management from personal management strategy. From 1889 to 1917 the activities of the college took place on the BM School campus. The college was relocated to its own present complex in 1917.

B M Clollege, affiliated to Calcutta University, started Honours course in [English language/English] and [Philosophy] in 1922, in Sanskrit and Mathematics in 1925, in Chemistry in 1928, and finally in Economics in 1929.

The time from 1922 to 1948 is called the "Golden Period" of the college. The governor of Bengal at that time, Sir Udbarn, once commented on B M College, "The college promises some day to challenge the supremacy of the metropolitan (Presidency) College."

After the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947, the college lacked teachers and the student body fell to one third of its post-war size. This made it difficult to teach the same numbers of courses and as a result the two year Honors curriculum conducted by Calcutta University was replaced with the three Honors curriculum of Dhaka University. As a consequence, Honors courses except Mathematics were abolished in 1950. In 1952, Honors in Mathematics had also been discontinued. In 1964, Honors in Economics restarted. Several other Honors and Masters Courses started between 1972 to 2005.

The time since 1965 has been called the "Age of Enrichment" of the college. Former principal Mohammad Hanif is called the "Architect of Modern Brojo Mohun College". There are 20 degree (pass) courses, 18 Honors courses and 19 Masters courses at BM College. The HSC course was abolished in 1999.

The poet Jibanananda Das taught at BM College.

Academic departments

The university has 22 departments under 4 faculties. The faculties are:

Faculty of Arts

  • Department of Bengali
  • Department of English
  • Department of History
  • Department of Philosophy
  • Department of Islamic Studies
  • Department of Islamic History and Culture
  • Department of Sanskrit

Faculty of Business Studies

  • Department of Finance & banking
  • Department of Accounting and Information System (AIS)
  • Department of Marketing
  • Department of Management Studies

Faculty of Science

  • Department of Botany
  • Department of Chemistry
  • Department of Mathematics
  • Department of Physics
  • Department of Soil Science
  • Department of Statistics
  • Department of Zoology

Faculty of Social Sciences

  • Department of Economics
  • Department of Sociology
  • Department of Political Science
  • Department of Social Welfare

Notable alumni

Notable faculty members

  • Jibananda Das, taught English
  • Mohammad Hanif, architect of modern Brojomohun College

References

22°42′44″N 90°21′18″E / 22.7121°N 90.3551°E / 22.7121; 90.3551