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Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy

Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, 1st Baronet, CMG, FRAS (15 July 1783 – 14 April 1859),[1] also spelt Jeejeebhoy or Jeejebhoy, was an Indian-Parsi merchant and philanthropist, later a British knight and baronet. He made a huge fortune in cotton and the opium trade with China.[2][3][4]

Sir
Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy
Jejeebhoy on a 1959 stamp of India
Born(1783-07-15)15 July 1783
Died14 April 1859(1859-04-14) (aged 75)
Occupation(s)Merchandiser, business magnate

Early life and business career edit

Jejeebhoy was born in Bombay in 1783, the son of Merwanjee Mackjee Jejeebhoy and Jeevibai Cowasjee Jejeebhoy. His father was a textile merchant from Surat, Gujarat, who migrated to Bombay in the 1770s.[5] Both of Jeejeebhoy's parents died in 1799, leaving the 16-year-old under the tutelage of his maternal uncle, Framjee Nasserwanjee Battliwala. At the age of 16, having had little formal education,[6] he made his first visit to Calcutta and then began his first voyage to China to trade in cotton and opium.[7]

Jejeebhoy's second voyage to China was made in a ship of the East India Company's fleet. Under the command of Sir Nathaniel Dance, this ship drove off a French squadron under Rear-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand Linois[6] in the Battle of Pulo Aura.

On Jejeebhoy's fourth voyage to China, the Indiaman in which he sailed was forced to surrender to the French, by whom he was carried as a prisoner to the Cape of Good Hope, then a neutral Dutch possession.[6] After much delay and great difficulty, Jejeebhoy made his way to Calcutta in a Danish ship.[6] Undaunted, Jejeebhoy undertook another voyage to China which was more successful than any of his previous journeys.[6]

By this time Jejeebhoy had established his reputation as an enterprising merchant possessed of considerable wealth.[6] In 1803, he married his maternal uncle's daughter Avabai (d. 1870) and settled in Bombay, where he directed his commercial operations on an extended scale.[6] Around this time, he changed his name from "Jamshed" to "Jamsetjee" to sound similar to names of the Gujarati community. By the age of 40, he had made over two crore rupees, a staggering sum in those days. Further riches came to him from the cotton trade during the Napoleonic Wars. He bought his own fleet of ships. Lord Elphinstone, then Governor of Bombay, said of him, "By strict integrity, by industry and punctuality in all his commercial transactions, he contributed to raise the character of the Bombay merchant in the most distant markets."[8]

In 1814, his co-operation with the British East India company had yielded him sufficient profits to purchase his first ship, the Good Success, and he gradually added another six ships to this, usually carrying primarily opium and a little cotton to China.[9] By 1836, Jejeebhoy's firm was large enough to employ his three sons and other relatives, and he had amassed what at that period of Indian mercantile history was regarded as fabulous wealth.[6]

Jejeebhoy was known by the nickname "Mr. Bottlewalla". "Walla" meant "vendor", and Jejeebhoy's business interests included the manufacture and sale of bottles on the basis of his uncle's business. Jejeebhoy and his family would often sign letters and checks using the name "Battliwala", and were known by that name in business and society, but he did not choose this assumed surname when it came to the baronetcy.

In 1818, he formed the business, trading and shipping firm "Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy & Co." with two other associates Motichund Amichund and Mahomed Ali Rogay as Jejeebhoy's business associates. He was later joined by a Goan, Rogério de Faria. His voyages to China resulted in a long trading partnership with the Canton based company Jardine Matheson & Co. The connection with Jeejeebhoy was instrumental as Jardine and Matheson built up their great firm, continuing the profitable and amiable association with the Parsi entrepreneur. Jeejeebhoy long continued as one of the close associates who served as underwriters to Jardine, Matheson and Company. A tribute to their connection exists even today in a portrait of Jeejeebhoy which hangs in Jardine's Hong Kong office.[10] He was seen as the chief representative of the Indian community in Bombay by the British Imperial authorities.[11]

Philanthropy edit

 
Sketch of Jejeebhoy, 1857
 
The Illustrated London News print of Jejeebhoy's residence, 1858
 
Engraving of the Bombay Native Hospital, constructed at the joint expense of Jejeebhoy and the East India Company; it was later renamed "Sir J. J. Hospital".
 
Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy statue, Mumbai

An essentially self-made man, having experienced the miseries of poverty in early life, Jejeebhoy developed great sympathy for his poorer countrymen.[6] In his later life he was occupied with alleviating human distress in all its forms. Parsi and Christian, Hindu and Muslim, were alike the objects of his beneficence. Hospitals, schools, homes of charity and pension funds throughout India (particularly in Bombay, Navsari, Surat, and Poona) were created or endowed by Jejeebhoy, and he financed the construction of many public works such as wells, reservoirs, bridges, and causeways.[6] By the time of his death in 1859, he was estimated to have donated over £230,000 to charity.[6] His philanthropic endeavours began in earnest in 1822, when he personally remitted the debts of all the poor in Bombay's civil jail.[12] Some of Jejeebhoy's notable charitable works include:

  • Mahim Causeway: The British Government had refused to build a causeway to connect the island of Mahim to Bandra. Jejeebhoy's wife, Avabai Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy, spent Rs.155,800 to finance its construction, after whom it was named. The work began in 1841 and is believed to have been completed four years later.
  • He donated Rs. 1,00,000 to build Sir J. J. Hospital
  • Jejeebhoy donated to at least 126 notable public charities, including the Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy School of Art, the Sir J. J. College of Architecture,[13] the Sir J.J. Institute of Applied Art and the Seth R.J.J. High School. He also endowed charities dedicated to helping his fellow Parsis and created the "Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy Parsi Benevolent Fund" in 1849.
  • He paid two-thirds of the entire cost of the Poona (now Pune) waterworks, with the remainder coming from the government.[14]
  • He gave a substantial donation to Bombay Samachar founded by Fardunjee Marzban in July 1822. The Bombay Times was launched in 1838 by a syndicate of persons, which included Sir Jamsetjee. In 1861, it was renamed The Times of India. Jamsetjee also donated handsomely to the Jam-e-Jamshed Press when it was founded in 1859.[15]
  • The Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum, formerly The Victoria and Albert Museum, which was designed by a London architect was built with the patronage of many wealthy Indian businessmen and philanthropists like Jejeebhoy, David Sassoon and Jaganath Shunkerseth.
  • Construction of Charni Road and relief to cattle. Between 1822 and 1838, cattle from the congested fort area used to graze freely at the Esplanade Maidan (now called Azad Maidan), an open ground opposite the Victoria Terminus. In 1838, the British rulers introduced a 'grazing fee' which several cattle-owners could not afford. Therefore, Sir Jamshedji Jeejeebhoy spent Rs. 20,000 from his own purse for purchasing some grasslands near the seafront at Thakurdwar and saw that the starving cattle grazed without a fee in that area. In time the area became known as "Charni" meaning grazing. When a railway station on the BB&CI railway was constructed there it was called Charni Road.
  • He spent Rs. 1,45,403 to set up the Sir J. J. Dharamshala at Bellasis Road, and until today, innumerable old and destitute people receive free food, clothing, shelter and medicines. All their needs for the past 150 years, irrespective of caste, creed or religion, have been looked after by the Dharamshala, the first free home for the elderly in Asia.[8]
  • Whether it was the famine of Ireland (1822), the floods in France (1856) or the fire, which ravaged both Bombay (1803) and Surat (1837), this beacon of altruism gave graciously to one and all without discriminating on the basis of caste or creed.

Baronetcy edit

Jejeebhoy's services were first recognised by the British Empire in 1842 by the bestowal of a knighthood and in 1857 by the award of a baronetcy.[16] These were the very first distinctions of their kind conferred by Queen Victoria upon a British subject in India.[6]

On Jejeebhoy's death in 1859, his Baronetcy was inherited by his eldest son Cursetjee Jejeebhoy, who, by a special Act of the Viceroy's Council in pursuance of a provision in the letters-patent, took the name of Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy as second baronet.[6]

When he died in 1859, Jeejeebhoy was remembered in an obituary by a Bombay-based newspaper as, "Simple in his tastes and manners, and dignified in his address, the personal appearance of Sir Jamsetjee, in later years, was a picture of greatness in repose. He had done his work, and entered upon the sabbath of his life.…"[17]

Advocate of non-violence edit

In 1855, under royal patronage, the Patriotic Fund was launched to aid the wounded soldiers and widows of those who had died in the Russo-Turkish war. Jamsetjee donated Rs. 5,000/- for this cause. But some remarks from his speech on this occasion are most significant:

Of none of the great evils which afflict our race do we form such inadequate conceptions as of the evils of war. War is exhibited to us in the dazzling dress of poetry, fiction, and history, where its horrors are carefully concealed beneath its gaudy trappings; or we see, perhaps, its plumes and epaulettes, and harlequin finery, we hear of the magnificence of the apparatus, the bravery of the troops, the glory of the victors, but the story of the wholesale miseries and wretchedness and wrongs which follow in its train is untold … What nation is not groaning under war-debts, the greatest of national burdens! Had the inconceivable sum wasted in the work of human butchery been applied to promote individual comfort and national prosperity, the world would not now be so far behind as it is in its career of progress … Our duty to relieve the sufferers in this great war would have remained the same whether the war had been a just one or not; but, considering the nature and objects of this war, we extend this relief now more as a privilege than as a duty … To the call of our gracious Sovereign, and to the call of humanity, the Parsis, my lord, will cordially respond.

His non-violent attitude extended also to the animal kingdom. He would not allow any form of cruelty towards animals. The East India Company introduced a rule "for the annual destruction of dogs in Bombay island, and a considerable number were from time to time destroyed, in spite of frequent petitions from the public". This mass dog killing led to a serious riot. To alleviate this suffering, Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy, Jagannath Shankarsheth and Motichand Amichand founded Bombay Panjrapole on 18 October 1834.[18]

General and cited references edit

  • B. K. Karanjia (1998). Give Me a Bombay Merchant Anytime!: The Life of Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, Bt., 1783–1859. University of Mumbai.

References edit

  1. ^ [usurped]. leighrayment.com
  2. ^ Palsetia, Jesse S (2001), The Parsis of India the Parsis of India: Preservation of Identity in Bombay City Preservation of Identity in Bombay City By., Leiden, Netherlands: Brill Academic Publishers, p. 55, ISBN 9004121145
  3. ^ Prakash, Gyan (2001), Mumbai Fables, New Delhi: Harpercollins, p. 00, ISBN 9350291665
  4. ^ Farooqui, Amar (2001), Smuggling as Subversion: Colonialism, Indian Merchants, and the Politics of Opium, 1790-1843, New Delhi: Lexington Books, p. 210, ISBN 0739108867
  5. ^ Jansetjee Jejeebhoy. Retrieved 16 August 2015. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBhownagree, Mancherjee Merwanjee (1911). "Jeejeebhoy, Sir Jamsetjee". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 300.
  7. ^ Rungta, Shyam (1970), The Rise of Business Corporations in India, 1851–1900, New Delhi: Cambridge University Press, p. 57, ISBN 0-521-07354-5
  8. ^ a b "Yatha Ahu Vairyo Mohalla". 30 January 2012.
  9. ^ Bulley, Anne (16 December 2013). The Bombay Country Ships 1790–1833. Routledge. ISBN 978-1136833137.
  10. ^ "Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy: China, William Jardine, the Celestial, and Other HK Connections".
  11. ^ Karaka, D. F. (1884). History of the Parsis. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ . www.robinsonlibrary.com. Archived from the original on 22 April 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ "Sir JJ College Of Architecture, Bombay– Home". Sir JJ College of Architecture. Accessed 23 May 2010.
  14. ^ Manuel, Thomas (4 May 2019). "The opium trader who became one of India's richest men". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  15. ^ (PDF). 12 July 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 July 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  16. ^ "No. 22003". The London Gazette. 19 May 1857. p. 1770.
  17. ^ "What it takes for Sir J J Agiary in Pune's Camp to keep the flame alive". The Indian Express. 29 April 2023. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  18. ^ "History | Bombay Panjrapole". www.bombaypanjrapole.org.in. Retrieved 4 May 2018.

External links edit

  • Brief profile of Sir J.J.
  • Parsee settlers in Bombay
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Bombay)
1857–1859
Succeeded by

jamsetjee, jejeebhoy, descendants, same, name, jejeebhoy, baronets, baronet, fras, july, 1783, april, 1859, also, spelt, jeejeebhoy, jeejebhoy, indian, parsi, merchant, philanthropist, later, british, knight, baronet, made, huge, fortune, cotton, opium, trade,. For descendants of the same name see Jejeebhoy baronets Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy 1st Baronet CMG FRAS 15 July 1783 14 April 1859 1 also spelt Jeejeebhoy or Jeejebhoy was an Indian Parsi merchant and philanthropist later a British knight and baronet He made a huge fortune in cotton and the opium trade with China 2 3 4 SirJamsetjee JejeebhoyBt CMG FRASJejeebhoy on a 1959 stamp of IndiaBorn 1783 07 15 15 July 1783Bombay Maratha ConfederacyDied14 April 1859 1859 04 14 aged 75 Bombay Bombay Presidency British IndiaOccupation s Merchandiser business magnate Contents 1 Early life and business career 2 Philanthropy 3 Baronetcy 4 Advocate of non violence 5 General and cited references 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and business career editJejeebhoy was born in Bombay in 1783 the son of Merwanjee Mackjee Jejeebhoy and Jeevibai Cowasjee Jejeebhoy His father was a textile merchant from Surat Gujarat who migrated to Bombay in the 1770s 5 Both of Jeejeebhoy s parents died in 1799 leaving the 16 year old under the tutelage of his maternal uncle Framjee Nasserwanjee Battliwala At the age of 16 having had little formal education 6 he made his first visit to Calcutta and then began his first voyage to China to trade in cotton and opium 7 Jejeebhoy s second voyage to China was made in a ship of the East India Company s fleet Under the command of Sir Nathaniel Dance this ship drove off a French squadron under Rear Admiral Charles Alexandre Leon Durand Linois 6 in the Battle of Pulo Aura On Jejeebhoy s fourth voyage to China the Indiaman in which he sailed was forced to surrender to the French by whom he was carried as a prisoner to the Cape of Good Hope then a neutral Dutch possession 6 After much delay and great difficulty Jejeebhoy made his way to Calcutta in a Danish ship 6 Undaunted Jejeebhoy undertook another voyage to China which was more successful than any of his previous journeys 6 By this time Jejeebhoy had established his reputation as an enterprising merchant possessed of considerable wealth 6 In 1803 he married his maternal uncle s daughter Avabai d 1870 and settled in Bombay where he directed his commercial operations on an extended scale 6 Around this time he changed his name from Jamshed to Jamsetjee to sound similar to names of the Gujarati community By the age of 40 he had made over two crore rupees a staggering sum in those days Further riches came to him from the cotton trade during the Napoleonic Wars He bought his own fleet of ships Lord Elphinstone then Governor of Bombay said of him By strict integrity by industry and punctuality in all his commercial transactions he contributed to raise the character of the Bombay merchant in the most distant markets 8 In 1814 his co operation with the British East India company had yielded him sufficient profits to purchase his first ship the Good Success and he gradually added another six ships to this usually carrying primarily opium and a little cotton to China 9 By 1836 Jejeebhoy s firm was large enough to employ his three sons and other relatives and he had amassed what at that period of Indian mercantile history was regarded as fabulous wealth 6 Jejeebhoy was known by the nickname Mr Bottlewalla Walla meant vendor and Jejeebhoy s business interests included the manufacture and sale of bottles on the basis of his uncle s business Jejeebhoy and his family would often sign letters and checks using the name Battliwala and were known by that name in business and society but he did not choose this assumed surname when it came to the baronetcy In 1818 he formed the business trading and shipping firm Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy amp Co with two other associates Motichund Amichund and Mahomed Ali Rogay as Jejeebhoy s business associates He was later joined by a Goan Rogerio de Faria His voyages to China resulted in a long trading partnership with the Canton based company Jardine Matheson amp Co The connection with Jeejeebhoy was instrumental as Jardine and Matheson built up their great firm continuing the profitable and amiable association with the Parsi entrepreneur Jeejeebhoy long continued as one of the close associates who served as underwriters to Jardine Matheson and Company A tribute to their connection exists even today in a portrait of Jeejeebhoy which hangs in Jardine s Hong Kong office 10 He was seen as the chief representative of the Indian community in Bombay by the British Imperial authorities 11 Philanthropy edit nbsp Sketch of Jejeebhoy 1857 nbsp The Illustrated London News print of Jejeebhoy s residence 1858 nbsp Engraving of the Bombay Native Hospital constructed at the joint expense of Jejeebhoy and the East India Company it was later renamed Sir J J Hospital nbsp Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy statue Mumbai An essentially self made man having experienced the miseries of poverty in early life Jejeebhoy developed great sympathy for his poorer countrymen 6 In his later life he was occupied with alleviating human distress in all its forms Parsi and Christian Hindu and Muslim were alike the objects of his beneficence Hospitals schools homes of charity and pension funds throughout India particularly in Bombay Navsari Surat and Poona were created or endowed by Jejeebhoy and he financed the construction of many public works such as wells reservoirs bridges and causeways 6 By the time of his death in 1859 he was estimated to have donated over 230 000 to charity 6 His philanthropic endeavours began in earnest in 1822 when he personally remitted the debts of all the poor in Bombay s civil jail 12 Some of Jejeebhoy s notable charitable works include Mahim Causeway The British Government had refused to build a causeway to connect the island of Mahim to Bandra Jejeebhoy s wife Avabai Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy spent Rs 155 800 to finance its construction after whom it was named The work began in 1841 and is believed to have been completed four years later He donated Rs 1 00 000 to build Sir J J Hospital Jejeebhoy donated to at least 126 notable public charities including the Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy School of Art the Sir J J College of Architecture 13 the Sir J J Institute of Applied Art and the Seth R J J High School He also endowed charities dedicated to helping his fellow Parsis and created the Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy Parsi Benevolent Fund in 1849 He paid two thirds of the entire cost of the Poona now Pune waterworks with the remainder coming from the government 14 He gave a substantial donation to Bombay Samachar founded by Fardunjee Marzban in July 1822 The Bombay Times was launched in 1838 by a syndicate of persons which included Sir Jamsetjee In 1861 it was renamed The Times of India Jamsetjee also donated handsomely to the Jam e Jamshed Press when it was founded in 1859 15 The Dr Bhau Daji Lad Museum formerly The Victoria and Albert Museum which was designed by a London architect was built with the patronage of many wealthy Indian businessmen and philanthropists like Jejeebhoy David Sassoon and Jaganath Shunkerseth Construction of Charni Road and relief to cattle Between 1822 and 1838 cattle from the congested fort area used to graze freely at the Esplanade Maidan now called Azad Maidan an open ground opposite the Victoria Terminus In 1838 the British rulers introduced a grazing fee which several cattle owners could not afford Therefore Sir Jamshedji Jeejeebhoy spent Rs 20 000 from his own purse for purchasing some grasslands near the seafront at Thakurdwar and saw that the starving cattle grazed without a fee in that area In time the area became known as Charni meaning grazing When a railway station on the BB amp CI railway was constructed there it was called Charni Road He spent Rs 1 45 403 to set up the Sir J J Dharamshala at Bellasis Road and until today innumerable old and destitute people receive free food clothing shelter and medicines All their needs for the past 150 years irrespective of caste creed or religion have been looked after by the Dharamshala the first free home for the elderly in Asia 8 Whether it was the famine of Ireland 1822 the floods in France 1856 or the fire which ravaged both Bombay 1803 and Surat 1837 this beacon of altruism gave graciously to one and all without discriminating on the basis of caste or creed Baronetcy editJejeebhoy s services were first recognised by the British Empire in 1842 by the bestowal of a knighthood and in 1857 by the award of a baronetcy 16 These were the very first distinctions of their kind conferred by Queen Victoria upon a British subject in India 6 On Jejeebhoy s death in 1859 his Baronetcy was inherited by his eldest son Cursetjee Jejeebhoy who by a special Act of the Viceroy s Council in pursuance of a provision in the letters patent took the name of Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy as second baronet 6 When he died in 1859 Jeejeebhoy was remembered in an obituary by a Bombay based newspaper as Simple in his tastes and manners and dignified in his address the personal appearance of Sir Jamsetjee in later years was a picture of greatness in repose He had done his work and entered upon the sabbath of his life 17 Advocate of non violence editIn 1855 under royal patronage the Patriotic Fund was launched to aid the wounded soldiers and widows of those who had died in the Russo Turkish war Jamsetjee donated Rs 5 000 for this cause But some remarks from his speech on this occasion are most significant Of none of the great evils which afflict our race do we form such inadequate conceptions as of the evils of war War is exhibited to us in the dazzling dress of poetry fiction and history where its horrors are carefully concealed beneath its gaudy trappings or we see perhaps its plumes and epaulettes and harlequin finery we hear of the magnificence of the apparatus the bravery of the troops the glory of the victors but the story of the wholesale miseries and wretchedness and wrongs which follow in its train is untold What nation is not groaning under war debts the greatest of national burdens Had the inconceivable sum wasted in the work of human butchery been applied to promote individual comfort and national prosperity the world would not now be so far behind as it is in its career of progress Our duty to relieve the sufferers in this great war would have remained the same whether the war had been a just one or not but considering the nature and objects of this war we extend this relief now more as a privilege than as a duty To the call of our gracious Sovereign and to the call of humanity the Parsis my lord will cordially respond His non violent attitude extended also to the animal kingdom He would not allow any form of cruelty towards animals The East India Company introduced a rule for the annual destruction of dogs in Bombay island and a considerable number were from time to time destroyed in spite of frequent petitions from the public This mass dog killing led to a serious riot To alleviate this suffering Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy Jagannath Shankarsheth and Motichand Amichand founded Bombay Panjrapole on 18 October 1834 18 General and cited references editB K Karanjia 1998 Give Me a Bombay Merchant Anytime The Life of Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy Bt 1783 1859 University of Mumbai References edit JEJEEBHOY of Bombay India usurped leighrayment com Palsetia Jesse S 2001 The Parsis of India the Parsis of India Preservation of Identity in Bombay City Preservation of Identity in Bombay City By Leiden Netherlands Brill Academic Publishers p 55 ISBN 9004121145 Prakash Gyan 2001 Mumbai Fables New Delhi Harpercollins p 00 ISBN 9350291665 Farooqui Amar 2001 Smuggling as Subversion Colonialism Indian Merchants and the Politics of Opium 1790 1843 New Delhi Lexington Books p 210 ISBN 0739108867 Jansetjee Jejeebhoy Retrieved 16 August 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c d e f g h i j k l m nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Bhownagree Mancherjee Merwanjee 1911 Jeejeebhoy Sir Jamsetjee In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 300 Rungta Shyam 1970 The Rise of Business Corporations in India 1851 1900 New Delhi Cambridge University Press p 57 ISBN 0 521 07354 5 a b Yatha Ahu Vairyo Mohalla 30 January 2012 Bulley Anne 16 December 2013 The Bombay Country Ships 1790 1833 Routledge ISBN 978 1136833137 Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy China William Jardine the Celestial and Other HK Connections Karaka D F 1884 History of the Parsis London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy www robinsonlibrary com Archived from the original on 22 April 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Sir JJ College Of Architecture Bombay Home Sir JJ College of Architecture Accessed 23 May 2010 Manuel Thomas 4 May 2019 The opium trader who became one of India s richest men The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 9 May 2019 SIR JAMSETJEE JEJEEBHOY LESSER KNOWN FACTS PDF 12 July 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 12 July 2011 Retrieved 9 May 2019 No 22003 The London Gazette 19 May 1857 p 1770 What it takes for Sir J J Agiary in Pune s Camp to keep the flame alive The Indian Express 29 April 2023 Retrieved 4 May 2023 History Bombay Panjrapole www bombaypanjrapole org in Retrieved 4 May 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy 1st Baronet Brief profile of Sir J J Brief biography of Sir J J Homi Dhalla Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy Lesser Known Facts about his Multidimensional Personality homidhalla com Sir J J on David Philpson s site Parsee settlers in Bombay Baronetage of the United Kingdom New creation Baronet of Bombay 1857 1859 Succeeded byCursetjee Jejeebhoy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy amp oldid 1211134412, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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