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Hazarduari Palace |
That
it was very rich and prosperous was also found by the Anglophile scholar Nirad
Choudhury. In his heavily researched book “Clive of India” he had occasion to
record that Robert Clive, when he saw Murshidabad, thought that the place was
far more prosperous than his (Clive’s) native London. This can be rejected as a
misjudgment due to
ethnic pride but a similar conclusion arrived at by William
Dalrymple in his book “Anarchy” cannot be discarded for any reason.
The Clock Tower |
The
place was crawling with European traders and their representatives. The East
India Company of England had set their shop there with the French, Dutch and Danish
East India Companies who too had parked themselves there for slices of what
seems to have been the slices of the huge cake. The Armenians were already
there as were the Jagat Seths, the famous money lenders. Murshidabad used to
produce a lot of silk and that along with the famed Bengali muslin were
favourite items of trade. Murshidabadi silk was a very coveted thing. My mother
used to have a Murshidabadi silk sari which was her prized possession.
Murshidabad was the capital of Bengal Subah
that had Bihar and Odisha within its control. It was a very rich province with
Murshidabad having the privilege of providing the seat of provincial treasury,
revenue office and judiciary. The Murshidabadi prosperity attracted several
merchant families from various parts of India and Europe who decided to drop
anchor there. The place became a cultural centre as well with development of a
native gharana of music and Murshidabad style of painting that looked like
Mughal miniatures.
Katra Masjid |
As
was quite evident, the English East India Company gradually acquired enormous
powers and the nawabs succeeding Murshid Quli Khan were unable play the games
that the Company had come to master. Slowly, while power slipped away from the
Nawabs it accreted in the hands of the Company. The nawabs came to survive with
the
grace of the Company which had acquired all the power through crookedness
ad chicanery. The second Plassey war completely changed the equations with the
English coming out victorious. They became more self-willed and deprived the
nawabs of the maintenance from the revenues. Slowly taxes came to be collected
by the Company. Affairs of the state were increasingly being decided by Company
officials in Kolkata. A situation was gradually created in which the capital had
to be shifted to Kolkata. When that happened it sounded the death knell of Murshidabad.
The Imambada |
The
English East India Company had already started nibbling at the Bengali territory. The second Plassey war
made the local hereditary nawabs subservient to the Company. The Crown was also
very indulgent in giving the Company sweeping powers to wage war to acquire
territory. The Company, thus, grabbed by fair means and foul considerable
amount of real estate within a short span of time. But that i
s another long
story.
Hazarduari Palace |
On
our way back from Murshidabad we stopped at Berhampur where my cousin used to
live. He had already organized a lavish meal with Bengal’s favourite fish Hilsa
in mustard sauce. Not many can really tackle a piece of Hilsa as it has too
many bones. We somehow managed it very well, more so because what was awaiting
us was far more delectable. Chhena bara is a kind of jalebi of bigger sizes
made of cottage cheese and as you sink your teeth in them sweet fragrant syrup
oozes out and fills your mouth. They are fried till they are dark brown like kala
jamuns and then immersed in the fragrant syrup. It is just heavenly. We took leave
of our lovable Dada after heaping on him our thanks for the wonderful meal.
That was the last we saw of him as he passed away within a couple of years’
time.Plassey, the place that proved to be the nemesis
We
also visited the village of my father in-law close to the district headquarters
at Malda. It was an affluent village with all the houses built of bricks and
mortar. As I entered the village post office I found wads of currency notes in
the hands of people who had come to deposit them. Obviously the soil was rich
and the farmers were diligent that produced the wads of currency. In times of
the nawabs it was gold and jewellery, these days it is wads of Rs. 100/- notes
1 comment:
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