It is interesting to explore the origin & history of kolkata, the capital of British India. Calcutta history is not that old as that of Delhi. Calcutta, the city of joy was established in the year 1686, as a result of the expansion plans of the British Raj. It was during those times that European powers were heading their way towards capturing the small villages of Sutanati, Govindpur, and Kalikata. Calcutta derived its name from the last of the village settlements of kalikata. Read on to know the brief history of Calcutta India
Kolkata grew steadily until 1756, when Siraj-ud-daula, the nawab of Murshidabad, attacked the town. Most of the British inhabitants escaped, but those captured were packed into an underground cellar where, during the night, most of them suffocated in what became known as 'the black hole of Calcutta'. In 1757 the British, under Clive of India, re-took the city and made peace with the nawab.
A stronger fort (Fort William) was built in Kolkata and the town became British India's capital. Over the following centuries, the British created a facsimile of London on the banks of the Hooghly, with parks, gardens, parade grounds and wide boulevards lined with colonial mansions, many of which still stand today. Kolkata's Indian population was relegated to the bustees - sprawling slums extending for miles around the British enclave. This unfair segregation sowed the seeds for rebellion. In the 19th century, Bengal became an important centre in the struggle for Indian independence, leading the British to transfer the capital to Delhi in 1911.
Modern History
Loss of political power did not alter Kolkata's economic control, and the British continued to pump money out of India through Kolkata trading companies and banks until well after WWII. The partition of India in 1947 devastated Kolkata. Bengal was one of the main areas with a mixed Hindu and Muslim population, so the dividing line was drawn through the middle of the state. Kolkata became an industrial city and port without a hinterland, while across the border, East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) became a hinterland with nowhere to process or export its produce.
Although partition was less brutal here than in the Punjab, Kolkata was inundated with tens of thousands of refugees fleeing from East Bengal. The massive influx of refugees and the departure of the British, combined with India's postwar population explosion, took its toll on Kolkata, both economically and socially. The city became a 20th-century horror story, at least in the eyes of the Western media, who focused obsessively on the poverty and the work of Mother Teresa and her missionary nuns in the slums. In 1971 the India-Pakistan conflict and the creation of Bangladesh led to another flood of refugees into Kolkata, putting yet more strain on the city and its resources.
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