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Chitpur

Chitpur (or Chitpore) is a neighbourhood in North Kolkata in Kolkata district in the Indian state of West Bengal. Sometimes, the entire area along Chitpur Road is referred to as Chitpur, although the various localities have distinctive names.

Chitpur
Neighbourhood in Kolkata (Calcutta)
Nabaratna Temple in 1798
Chitpur
Location in Kolkata
Coordinates: 22°34′32.58″N 88°21′04.03″E / 22.5757167°N 88.3511194°E / 22.5757167; 88.3511194Coordinates: 22°34′32.58″N 88°21′04.03″E / 22.5757167°N 88.3511194°E / 22.5757167; 88.3511194
Country India
StateWest Bengal
CityKolkata
DistrictKolkata
Metro StationShyambazar
Municipal CorporationKolkata Municipal Corporation
KMC ward6
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
700002
Area code+91 33
Lok Sabha constituencyKolkata Uttar
Vidhan Sabha constituencyKashipur-Belgachhia

History

Chitpur has existed for at least 400 years. It received its name from the goddess Chitteswari, who had a splendid temple here erected by Gobindram Mitter, where human sacrifices used to be offered. The lofty dome of the temple, which was known as Nabarutna or the shrine of nine jewels, fell during the earthquake of 1737, and it is now in ruins.[1]

 

According to another source, the area was earlier named Chitrapur. It is referred to in Bipradas Pipilai's poem Manasamangal in 1495, but it could be a later interpolation. According to it, Chitpur was home to Chakrapani, Commander-in-Chief of the Nawab of Bengal's army, and had a flourishing colony of artists. It refers to one Gobinda Ghosh as founder of the Chitteswari temple in 1610. The most notorious bandit of the region was Chitey Dakat, who offered human sacrifices at the temple. The area could also have acquired its name from him.[2]

The East India Company obtained from the Mughal emperor Farrukhsiyar, in 1717, the right to rent from 38 villages surrounding their settlement. Of these 5 lay across the Hooghly in what is now Howrah district. The remaining 33 villages were on the Calcutta side. After the fall of Siraj-ud-daulah, the last independent Nawab of Bengal, it purchased these villages in 1758 from Mir Jafar and reorganised them. These villages were known en-bloc as Dihi Panchannagram and Chitpur was one of them. It was considered to be a suburb beyond the limits of the Maratha Ditch.[3][4][5]

There was a house and garden of Mahmed Reza Khan, the Chitpur Nawab, to whom the administration of Bengal was assigned for several years after the British East India Company acquired the dewani of Bengal from the Mughal emperors in Delhi.[6] The Chitpur Nawab lived on terms of intimacy with the 'powers' of the day and was accounted by them as a personage of first rank. The foreign governors—Danish, French and Dutch—on their visits to Kolkata from Serampore, Chandannagar and Chinsurah, made it a practice to halt at Chitpur on their way to the Government House.[7]

The Circular Canal joins the Hooghly River at Chitpur. Early in the 20th century a large lock and tidal basin had been constructed, at the mouth of the canal.[6]

Entally, Manicktala, Beliaghata, Ultadanga, Chitpur, Cossipore, parts of Beniapukur, Ballygunge, Watgunge, Ekbalpur, Garden Reach and Tollygunj were added to Kolkata Municipal Corporation in 1888. Garden Reach was later taken out.[8]

Chitpur Road

The great thoroughfare, which commencing in the extreme south, assumes the various names of Russa Road, Chowringhee Road, Bentick Street, Chitpore Road, and Barrackpore Trunk Road, forms a continuation of the Dum Dum Road and was the old line of communication between Morshedabad and Kalighat. It is said to occupy the site of the old road made by the Sabarna Roy Choudhurys, the old zemindars of Calcutta, from Barisha, where the junior branch resided, to Halisahar, beyond Barrackpore, which was the seat of the senior branch.[9]

H.E.A.Cotton

Along that old road, popular as pilgrim's path, dharamshalas and shops came up. Habitations grew around them and localities developed. They were self-descriptive. The chicken (murgi) market (hat) was Murgihata, twin (jora) bridges (sanko) over a creek distinguished Jorasanko, butchers (kasais) slaughtered animals at Kasitola, and the potters (kumors) spun the river clay on wheels at Kumortuli. Later, they took to making clay idols in demand in the mansions that grew up all around. When the new Fort William was built in the 1750s at Gobindapur, the inhabitants of the disbanded village migrated northwards.[2]

Chitpur Road was Kolkata's oldest road. Apart from the aristocracy, there have been common folks engaged in various trades.[10] The distinctive Bengali panjika almanac was printed here. It was a centre for Battala books. So many things on Chitpore Road have been an integral part of Bengal's life and culture – the paan (betel leaf mouth refresher), the adda (stray gossiping), jatra shows and the brass band playing "He is a jolly good fellow" to enliven wedding receptions.[11]

A part of Lower Chitpur Road rivalled the Chandni Chowk of Delhi before construction of Nakhoda Mosque in 1926. The last vestiges of Nawabi style were found along Chitpur Road.[12] It was on this road that Raja Rammohun Roy built his Brahmo Sabha, which later became Adi Brahmo Samaj. The road was renamed Rabindra Sarani, after its most famous resident, Rabindranath Tagore. It is Kolkata's museum with communities and social groups from various parts of country and beyond finding a place in nooks along the road.[2]

Jorasanko Thakur Bari, the home of the Tagore family now houses Rabindra Bharati University.

Corporation ward

In 1876, the peripheral areas of Kolkata were brought under the umbrella of a single Suburban Municipality. In 1889, the suburban area was split into five units of which one was the Suburban Municipality of Kashipur and Chitpur. In 1931, it was merged with Kolkata.[13] Chitpur now forms ward no. 6 of Kolkata Municipal Corporation. With the Hooghly River on the west, it is surrounded by Cossipore, Bagbazar, Paikpara, Tala, Belgachia and Shyambazar on the other three sides.[14] Across the Hooghly River is Salkia in Howrah.

Police district

Chitpur police station is part of the North and North Suburban division of Kolkata Police. Located at 19, Cossipore Road, Kolkata-700002, it has jurisdiction over Chitpur neighbourhood/ Ward no. 6, of Kolkata Municipal Corporation.[15][16]

Amherst Street Women police station covers all police districts under the jurisdiction of the North and North Suburban division i.e. Amherst Street, Jorabagan, Shyampukur, Cossipore, Chitpur, Sinthi, Burtolla and Tala.[15]

Railway passenger terminal

Chitpur is home to Kolkata railway station, the fourth and latest railway passenger terminal for the city. The first two stations, Howrah and Sealdah, were built more than a century ago and now both of them have reached the saturation point in capacity.[17] The third one, Shalimar, which is under jurisdiction of South Eastern Railway, is located in Howrah, far away from the city centre. The new terminal has been named "Kolkata".[18][17]

Transport

Cossipore Road (Sri Sri Ramakrishna Paramahansa Dev Sarani) is the artery of Chitpur. Buses ply along the road. The road is connected to B.T. Road (at Chunni Babu Bazar) with Lock Gate Road Overbridge. It is also connected to Bagbazar (Khirode Vidyavinode Avenue) with Chitpur Bridge over a canal.[19] Chitpur Bridge was firstly inaugurated in 1937.[20]

Bus

Private Bus

CSTC Bus

Train

Besides Kolkata Station, Tala railway station and Bagbazar railway station (both are on Kolkata Circular Railway line) are also located nearby.

References

  1. ^ Cotton, H.E.A., Calcutta Old and New, [1909] (1980), rev. ed., pp. 221, 283, General Printers and Publishers Pvt Ltd.
  2. ^ a b c Gupta, Bunny and Chaliha, Jaya, Chitpur, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol I, edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri, pp. 27-30, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-563696-3.
  3. ^ "District Census Handbook Kolkata, Census of India 2011, Series 20, Part XII A" (PDF). Pages 6-10: The History. Directorate of Census Operations, West Bengal. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
  4. ^ Cotton, H.E.A., Calcutta Old and New, first published 1909/reprint 1980, pages 103-4 and 221, General Printers and Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
  5. ^ Nair, P.Thankappan, The Growth and Development of Old Calcutta, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, pp. 14-15, Edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri, Oxford University Press, 1995 edition.
  6. ^ a b Cotton, H.E.A., p. 221,
  7. ^ Cotton, H.E.A., p. 109.
  8. ^ Bagchi, Amiya Kumar, Wealth and Work in Calcutta, 1860-1921, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol. I, p. 213.
  9. ^ Cotton, H.E.A., p. 283
  10. ^ Bandyopadhyay, Ritajyoti. streets in motion: the making of infrastructure, property, and political culture in twentieth-century Calcutta. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  11. ^ Jatra 2 BBC News, 2005.
  12. ^ Chakraborty, Manish and Hanig, Florian. Bialobrzeski, Peter.(Ed.) (2008) Calcutta - Chitpur Road Neighborhoods. Hatje Cantz. ISBN 978-3-7757-2106-6
  13. ^ Chakraborty, Satyesh C., The Growth of Calcutta in the Twentieth Century, in Calcutta, the Living City, Vol II, edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri, p. 2, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-563697-0.
  14. ^ Detailed Maps of Kolkata, D.P.Publication & Sales Concern.
  15. ^ a b . North and North Suburban Division. KP. Archived from the original on 30 March 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  16. ^ Kolkata: Detail Maps of 141 Wards with Street Directory, Fourth Impression 2003, Map No. 4, D.P.publication and Sales Concern, 66 College Street, Kolkata - 700 073.
  17. ^ a b Online version of Frontline magazine dated 3-16 Dec 2005 12 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 February 2006. Retrieved 23 November 2006.
  19. ^ Google maps
  20. ^ "Chitpur Bridge".

External links

  Kolkata/North Kolkata travel guide from Wikivoyage

chitpur, chitpore, neighbourhood, north, kolkata, kolkata, district, indian, state, west, bengal, sometimes, entire, area, along, road, referred, although, various, localities, have, distinctive, names, neighbourhood, kolkata, calcutta, nabaratna, temple, 1798. Chitpur or Chitpore is a neighbourhood in North Kolkata in Kolkata district in the Indian state of West Bengal Sometimes the entire area along Chitpur Road is referred to as Chitpur although the various localities have distinctive names ChitpurNeighbourhood in Kolkata Calcutta Nabaratna Temple in 1798ChitpurLocation in KolkataCoordinates 22 34 32 58 N 88 21 04 03 E 22 5757167 N 88 3511194 E 22 5757167 88 3511194 Coordinates 22 34 32 58 N 88 21 04 03 E 22 5757167 N 88 3511194 E 22 5757167 88 3511194Country IndiaStateWest BengalCityKolkataDistrictKolkataMetro StationShyambazarMunicipal CorporationKolkata Municipal CorporationKMC ward6Time zoneUTC 5 30 IST PIN700002Area code 91 33Lok Sabha constituencyKolkata UttarVidhan Sabha constituencyKashipur Belgachhia Contents 1 History 2 Chitpur Road 3 Corporation ward 4 Police district 5 Railway passenger terminal 6 Transport 6 1 Bus 6 1 1 Private Bus 6 1 2 CSTC Bus 6 2 Train 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditChitpur has existed for at least 400 years It received its name from the goddess Chitteswari who had a splendid temple here erected by Gobindram Mitter where human sacrifices used to be offered The lofty dome of the temple which was known as Nabarutna or the shrine of nine jewels fell during the earthquake of 1737 and it is now in ruins 1 According to another source the area was earlier named Chitrapur It is referred to in Bipradas Pipilai s poem Manasamangal in 1495 but it could be a later interpolation According to it Chitpur was home to Chakrapani Commander in Chief of the Nawab of Bengal s army and had a flourishing colony of artists It refers to one Gobinda Ghosh as founder of the Chitteswari temple in 1610 The most notorious bandit of the region was Chitey Dakat who offered human sacrifices at the temple The area could also have acquired its name from him 2 The East India Company obtained from the Mughal emperor Farrukhsiyar in 1717 the right to rent from 38 villages surrounding their settlement Of these 5 lay across the Hooghly in what is now Howrah district The remaining 33 villages were on the Calcutta side After the fall of Siraj ud daulah the last independent Nawab of Bengal it purchased these villages in 1758 from Mir Jafar and reorganised them These villages were known en bloc as Dihi Panchannagram and Chitpur was one of them It was considered to be a suburb beyond the limits of the Maratha Ditch 3 4 5 There was a house and garden of Mahmed Reza Khan the Chitpur Nawab to whom the administration of Bengal was assigned for several years after the British East India Company acquired the dewani of Bengal from the Mughal emperors in Delhi 6 The Chitpur Nawab lived on terms of intimacy with the powers of the day and was accounted by them as a personage of first rank The foreign governors Danish French and Dutch on their visits to Kolkata from Serampore Chandannagar and Chinsurah made it a practice to halt at Chitpur on their way to the Government House 7 The Circular Canal joins the Hooghly River at Chitpur Early in the 20th century a large lock and tidal basin had been constructed at the mouth of the canal 6 Entally Manicktala Beliaghata Ultadanga Chitpur Cossipore parts of Beniapukur Ballygunge Watgunge Ekbalpur Garden Reach and Tollygunj were added to Kolkata Municipal Corporation in 1888 Garden Reach was later taken out 8 Chitpur Road EditThe great thoroughfare which commencing in the extreme south assumes the various names of Russa Road Chowringhee Road Bentick Street Chitpore Road and Barrackpore Trunk Road forms a continuation of the Dum Dum Road and was the old line of communication between Morshedabad and Kalighat It is said to occupy the site of the old road made by the Sabarna Roy Choudhurys the old zemindars of Calcutta from Barisha where the junior branch resided to Halisahar beyond Barrackpore which was the seat of the senior branch 9 H E A Cotton Along that old road popular as pilgrim s path dharamshalas and shops came up Habitations grew around them and localities developed They were self descriptive The chicken murgi market hat was Murgihata twin jora bridges sanko over a creek distinguished Jorasanko butchers kasais slaughtered animals at Kasitola and the potters kumors spun the river clay on wheels at Kumortuli Later they took to making clay idols in demand in the mansions that grew up all around When the new Fort William was built in the 1750s at Gobindapur the inhabitants of the disbanded village migrated northwards 2 Chitpur Road was Kolkata s oldest road Apart from the aristocracy there have been common folks engaged in various trades 10 The distinctive Bengali panjika almanac was printed here It was a centre for Battala books So many things on Chitpore Road have been an integral part of Bengal s life and culture the paan betel leaf mouth refresher the adda stray gossiping jatra shows and the brass band playing He is a jolly good fellow to enliven wedding receptions 11 A part of Lower Chitpur Road rivalled the Chandni Chowk of Delhi before construction of Nakhoda Mosque in 1926 The last vestiges of Nawabi style were found along Chitpur Road 12 It was on this road that Raja Rammohun Roy built his Brahmo Sabha which later became Adi Brahmo Samaj The road was renamed Rabindra Sarani after its most famous resident Rabindranath Tagore It is Kolkata s museum with communities and social groups from various parts of country and beyond finding a place in nooks along the road 2 Jorasanko Thakur Bari the home of the Tagore family now houses Rabindra Bharati University Corporation ward EditIn 1876 the peripheral areas of Kolkata were brought under the umbrella of a single Suburban Municipality In 1889 the suburban area was split into five units of which one was the Suburban Municipality of Kashipur and Chitpur In 1931 it was merged with Kolkata 13 Chitpur now forms ward no 6 of Kolkata Municipal Corporation With the Hooghly River on the west it is surrounded by Cossipore Bagbazar Paikpara Tala Belgachia and Shyambazar on the other three sides 14 Across the Hooghly River is Salkia in Howrah Police district EditChitpur police station is part of the North and North Suburban division of Kolkata Police Located at 19 Cossipore Road Kolkata 700002 it has jurisdiction over Chitpur neighbourhood Ward no 6 of Kolkata Municipal Corporation 15 16 Amherst Street Women police station covers all police districts under the jurisdiction of the North and North Suburban division i e Amherst Street Jorabagan Shyampukur Cossipore Chitpur Sinthi Burtolla and Tala 15 Railway passenger terminal EditChitpur is home to Kolkata railway station the fourth and latest railway passenger terminal for the city The first two stations Howrah and Sealdah were built more than a century ago and now both of them have reached the saturation point in capacity 17 The third one Shalimar which is under jurisdiction of South Eastern Railway is located in Howrah far away from the city centre The new terminal has been named Kolkata 18 17 Transport EditCossipore Road Sri Sri Ramakrishna Paramahansa Dev Sarani is the artery of Chitpur Buses ply along the road The road is connected to B T Road at Chunni Babu Bazar with Lock Gate Road Overbridge It is also connected to Bagbazar Khirode Vidyavinode Avenue with Chitpur Bridge over a canal 19 Chitpur Bridge was firstly inaugurated in 1937 20 Bus Edit Private Bus Edit 34B Dunlop Esplanade 43 Dakshineswar Esplanade 242 Cossipore 4B EsplanadeCSTC Bus Edit S17A Ariadaha KudghatTrain Edit Besides Kolkata Station Tala railway station and Bagbazar railway station both are on Kolkata Circular Railway line are also located nearby References Edit Cotton H E A Calcutta Old and New 1909 1980 rev ed pp 221 283 General Printers and Publishers Pvt Ltd a b c Gupta Bunny and Chaliha Jaya Chitpur in Calcutta the Living City Vol I edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri pp 27 30 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 563696 3 District Census Handbook Kolkata Census of India 2011 Series 20 Part XII A PDF Pages 6 10 The History Directorate of Census Operations West Bengal Retrieved 20 February 2018 Cotton H E A Calcutta Old and New first published 1909 reprint 1980 pages 103 4 and 221 General Printers and Publishers Pvt Ltd Nair P Thankappan The Growth and Development of Old Calcutta in Calcutta the Living City Vol I pp 14 15 Edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri Oxford University Press 1995 edition a b Cotton H E A p 221 Cotton H E A p 109 Bagchi Amiya Kumar Wealth and Work in Calcutta 1860 1921 in Calcutta the Living City Vol I p 213 Cotton H E A p 283 Bandyopadhyay Ritajyoti streets in motion the making of infrastructure property and political culture in twentieth century Calcutta Cambridge Cambridge University Press Jatra 2 BBC News 2005 Chakraborty Manish and Hanig Florian Bialobrzeski Peter Ed 2008 Calcutta Chitpur Road Neighborhoods Hatje Cantz ISBN 978 3 7757 2106 6 Chakraborty Satyesh C The Growth of Calcutta in the Twentieth Century in Calcutta the Living City Vol II edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri p 2 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 563697 0 Detailed Maps of Kolkata D P Publication amp Sales Concern a b Kolkata Police North and North Suburban Division KP Archived from the original on 30 March 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2018 Kolkata Detail Maps of 141 Wards with Street Directory Fourth Impression 2003 Map No 4 D P publication and Sales Concern 66 College Street Kolkata 700 073 a b Online version of Frontline magazine dated 3 16 Dec 2005 Archived 12 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine News article dated January 31 2006 from expressindia com Archived from the original on 12 February 2006 Retrieved 23 November 2006 Google maps Chitpur Bridge External links Edit Kolkata North Kolkata travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chitpur amp oldid 1139528806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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