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Nandalal and Pasupoti Bose's house
The house is located on the North side of Bagbazar Street. Late 19th century Bengal found this house as one of the hub for nationalist politics. Many important meetings were held in this house during the course of anti partition politics in 1904-5. The famous procession to raise protest against partition of Bengal led by Rabindranath and other eminent persons started from Federation hall and ended at this house.
Bagbazar Ghat
Bagbazar Ghat, on the Hooghly River is an old one. It was once called Rogo Meeter’s Ghat after Raghu Mitra, son of Gobindram Mitter, the black zemindar, and once one of the wealthiest and most influential natives of Kolkata, in the early days of the British East India Company.[Cotton, H.R.A., pp. 281,290]
There is steamer jetty next to Baghbazar Ghat, ghat in Bengali is a paved staircase. Steamers carry passengers to the opposite bank of the river, as also the office localities around B.B.D. Bagh, Calcutta and Howrah. The old ghat is used by bathers, people collecting Ganges water for religious ceremonies, for performance of religious ceremonies, and for such mundane tasks as unloading country boats carrying various materials.
Battle with Siraj
Bagbazar has also seen battle - on 16 June 1756, a small force under Ensign Piccard repulsed an advance guard of Siraj ud-Daulah from the north, but two days later Kalikata fell in the Battle of Lal Dighi.[Cotton, H.E.A., p290]
Association with Sri Ramakrishna
Possibly the first visit to a house in north Kolkata by Ramakrishna was in 1877. He visited the ancestral house of Kalinath Bose, then numbered 40 Bosepara Lane (presently 47B, Ma Saradamani Sarani). It was here that he first met Harinath Chaterjee (later Swami Turiyananda), Gangadhar Ghatak (Gangopadhyay) (later Swami Akhandananda) and Girish Chandra Ghosh, the noted playwright.[The stone tablet outside the house records this in detail. The visit has been described by Swami Turiyananda and Girish Chandra Ghosh, and quoted by Christopher Isherwood in his Ramakrishna and His Disciples, Advaita Ashram, pp 228-229, 249. However, Christopher Isherwood does not mention any name. These are given in the stone tablet.] The Ramakrishna Sarada Math is housed at 10, Ramakrishna Lane, Baghbazar.
Sister Nivedita came and lived in 53/1 Bosepara Lane. "Bagbazar in the northern part of Calcutta had its own fascination for Sri Ramakrishna’s devotees. On one side stood Balaram Bose’s house, the ‘Calcutta Citadel’ of Sri Ramakrishna, where his disciples repaired for rest. On its north-east is the huge family mansion of Girish Chandra Ghosh. A little to its north was the Holy Mother’s house. All these houses were encircled by the Ramkanto Bose Street and Bosepara Lane, whose very dust was trod upon by Sri Ramakrishna."[Pravrajika Atmaprana, Sister-Nivedita of Ramakrishna-Vivekananda, pp. 4-5, Sister Nivedita Girls’ School.] She opened her school formally on 13 November 1898 at 16, Bosepara Lane, in the presence of Sarada Devi, Swami Vivekananda, Swami Brahmananda, Swami Saradanandane. The office of Udbodhan, the magazine founded by Swami Vivekananda, is also located in Bagbazar.
Geography
The old Chitpur Road (renamed Rabindra Sarani) was for many years the life line of Bagbazar. It followed the same track as the old pilgrim path built by Sabarna Roy Choudhury from Halisahar to Barisha.[Nair, P.Thankappan, Civic and Public Services in Old Calcutta, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol I, p. 228.] Tram tracks along Rabindra Sarani came to Bagbazar in 1904[Nair, P.Thankappan, Civic and Public Services in Old Calcutta, p.235.] and being renewed in 2007. Finally Tram service closed along Rabindra Sarani in Bagbazar since 2012 due to construction of Green Line. While Rabindra Sarani cuts across Bagabazar from north to south, Bagbazar Street cuts across from Bagbazar Ghat in the west to Bidhan Sarani in the east. Girish Avenue is an extension of Chittaranjan Avenue.[Map no. 5, Detail Maps of 141 Wards of Kolkata, D.R.Publication and Sales Concern, 66 College Street, Kolkata – 700073] When it was built in the 1930s, a portion of the house of Girish Chandra Ghosh was spared and stands in the middle with the two flanges of the road on both sides of the house. There are numerous lanes and bylanes in Bagbazar.
Culture
Alaler Gharer Dulal (The Rich Man’s Spoilt Child) (1857) by Peary Chand Mitra has an interesting piece of women's conversation centred on Bagbazar, possibly when they went for a bath in the Hooghly River:
- : "Some are speaking of their oppressive sisters-in-law, some are cursing their tyrannical mothers-in-law, some are tired of life because of the kicks they receive from their daughters-in-law, particularly when their sons are too timid to intervene; some complain of the intolerable behaviour of the wives of their husband’s brothers and some say how keen they are to get their ten-year-old sons married."
[Dasgupta, Rabindra Kumar, Old Calcutta as Presented in Literature, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, p. 130]
Bagbazar has been home to many a creative person.
Nagendranath Basu (1866 – 1938) took twenty years to edit the 22 volume Biswakosh, Bengali encyclopaedia. He lived and worked at 8 Biswakosh Lane in Bagbazar. Kolkata Municipal Corporation renamed it Biswakosh Lane. This is possibly the only road in the world named after a book.[Majumdar, Swapan, Literature and Literary Life in Old Calcutta, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, p. 111]
Mohanchand Basu, who lived in Bagbazar in the 19th century and was a disciple of Nidhu Babu, introduced kheur in Bengali akhrai songs.[Mitra, Rajyeshwar, Music in Old Calcutta, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, p. 182]
Bhola Maira (18th-19th century), the renowned Kavigan (verse-contestant) had a sweet-meat shop on Bagbazar Street.[Banerjee, Sumanta, The World of Ramjan Ostagar, the Common Man of Old Calcutta, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, p. 82]
Two auditoriums, side by side on Bagbazar Street, still testifies to active cultural life of Bagbazar. Girish Mancha, opened in 1986 has over 900 seats. The auditorium of Paschim Banga Jatra Akademi is next door.
However, the 125 year-old Bagbazar Reading Library is not in good shape because of paucity of funds.
Bagbazar Durga Puja continues to a major crowd puller with its deity of traditional design and innovative decoration.
Transport
Buses ply along Rabindra Sarani, Girish Avenue (Khirode Vidyavinode Avenue) and Bagbazar Street in Bagbazar. Shyambazar crossing is also located nearby.
Bagbazar (Khirode Vidyavinode Avenue) is connected to Chitpur and Cossipore (Cossipore Road/Sri Sri Ramakrishna Paramahansa Dev Sarani) with Chitpur Bridge over a canal.[Google maps] The bridge was firstly inaugurated in 1937.
Bagbazar railway station on Kolkata Circular Railway line serves the locality. Kolkata Station, one of the major railway hub stations of the city, is also located nearby.
Gallery
image:Kolkata Girish Mancha.jpg|Girish Mancha
image:Kolkata WB Jatra Akademi.jpg|Auditorium of Paschim Banga Jatra Akademi
image:Kolkata House of Sister Nivedita.jpg|House where Sister Nivedita started her school in 1898
image:Kolkata Girish Avenue.jpg|Girish Avenue. At the time of the construction of the road, a portion of the house of Girish Chandra Ghosh was left in the middle.
image:Ramakrishna Math, at Bagbazar, Kolkata.jpg|House of Balaram Bose, now Ramakrishna Math
image:Kolkata Bosepara Lane2.jpg|Bosepara Lane in Bagbazar
image:Kolkata Bagbazar Ghat2.jpg|The Steamer Jetty as seen from Bagbazar Ghat
Image:Mayer Ghat Entrance - Baghbazar - Kolkata 2017-04-29 1921.JPG|Mayer Ghat Entrance on Rabindra Sarani, Bagbazar
image:Bom Kali Mandir - Rabindra Sarani - Baghbazar - Kolkata 2017-04-29 1832.JPG|Bom Kali Mandir on Rabindra Sarani, Baghbazar
image:Gaudiya Maath.jpg|Gaudiya Math, Bagbazar
File:Galiff Street Bird Market.jpg|Galiff Street Bird Market, Bagbazar
image:Bagbazar sarbojonin Durgapuja.jpg|Durga Puja at Bagbazar which was started in the year 1918
image:Kolkata Bagbazar Pandal 2006.jpg|Exterior decoration and lighting for Durga Puja 2006 - one of the earliest Barowari Pujas in Kolkata
image:Bagbazar railway station.jpg|Bagbazar railway station
External links