A dak bungalow, dak-house or dâk-bungalow was a government building in British India under Company Rule and the British Raj. It may also refer to some similarly built or -used structures in modern India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan.
The India Office possesses a diary with the entry for 25 November 1676 noting "It was thought fitt... to sett up bungalow or ... for all such English in the Company's Service as belong to their Sloopes & Vessells".. The dak bungalows proper were first erected in the 1840s,. serving as staging posts for the dak, the British Empire mail service. Rudyard Kipling's father J. Lockwood Kipling described them as "about as handsome as a stack of hay" and forming a kind of "'irreducible minimum' of accommodation". Each was about from the next along the major roads of the subcontinent.
In remote areas, most government work—including hearing legal cases—occurred at the dak bungalows when the district officials visited. At district headquarters, the circuit house provided a larger courtroom and better accommodations for visiting sessions judges. Larger cities might have still more specialized buildings.
During the Indian Rebellion of 1857 the network of bungalows was used by escaping British civilians and soldiers but saw several massacres outside Delhi.. Following the suppression of the rebellion and the assumption of rule by the British government, thatch was prohibited for use in official buildings.. They feature in the fiction of Rudyard Kipling: "a fair proportion of the tragedy of our lives out here acted itself in dâk-bungalows... and many men have died mad in them...". "...nothing is too wild, grotesque, or horrible to happen in a dâk-bungalow.", " My Own True Ghost Story", p. 37.
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