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Bengal Presidency

The Bengal Presidency, officially the Presidency of Fort William in Bengal and later Bengal Province, was a province of British India and the largest of all the three Presidencies.[5] At the height of its territorial jurisdiction, it covered large parts of what is now South Asia and Southeast Asia. Bengal proper covered the ethno-linguistic region of Bengal (present-day Bangladesh and the Indian state of West Bengal). Calcutta, the city which grew around Fort William, was the capital of the Bengal Presidency. For many years, the Governor of Bengal was concurrently the Governor-General of India and Calcutta was the capital of India until 1911.

Presidency of Fort William in Bengal
(1699–1935)[1]
Province of Bengal
(1935–1947)[2]

 

Legislature of Bengal

 

1612

1947

30,000,000[4]

The Bengal Presidency emerged from trading posts established in the Bengal province during the reign of Emperor Jahangir in 1612. The East India Company (HEIC), a British monopoly with a Royal Charter, competed with other European companies to gain influence in Bengal. In 1757 and 1764, the Company defeated the Nawab of Bengal, who acted on Mughal sovereignty, at the Battle of Plassey and the Battle of Buxar, and Bengal came under British influence. In 1765, Emperor Shah Alam II granted revenue rights over Bengal to the Company and the judicial rights in 1793. In 1803, the Emperor ceased to be the suzerain of the Company and the Bengal Subah of the Mughal Empire was thus formally annexed into the Presidency of Fort William of the East India Company.[6] In 1813, the East India Company Act 1813 transferred sovereignty of the Company's territories to the Crown.


In 1836, the upper territories of the Bengal Presidency were organised into the Agra Division or North-Western Provinces and administered by a lieutenant-governor within the Presidency. The lower territories were organised into the Bengal Division and put in charge of lieutenant-governor as well in 1853. The office of the governor of the Presidency was abolished and the Presidency existed as only a nominal entity under the dual government of the two lieutenant-governors at Agra and Calcutta. The 1887, the Agra Division was separated from the Presidency and merged with the Oudh province, ending the dual government. In 1912, the Governor was restored. In the early 20th century, Bengal emerged as a hotbed of the Indian independence movement and the Bengali Renaissance.[7] as well as education, politics, law, science and the arts. It was home to the largest city in India and the second-largest city in the British Empire.[8]


At its territorial height in the mid nineteenth century, the Bengal Presidency extended from the Khyber Pass to Singapore.[9][10][11] In 1853, the Punjab was separated from the Presidency into province. In 1861, the Saugor and Nerbudda Territories of the North-Western Provinces (which was then a division of the Bengal Presidency) were separated from the Presidency and merged with the Nagpur Province to created the Central Provinces. In 1871, the Ajmer and Merwara which were also administered as a part of the North-Western Provinces were separated from the Presidency to form the Ajmer-Merwara Province. In 1874, Assam was separated from Bengal.[11] In 1862, Burma became a separate province. The Straits Settlements became a Crown Colony in 1867.[12] In 1877, the North Western Provinces were finally separated from Bengal and merged with Oudh. Thus, by 1877, the Bengal Presidency included only modern-day Bihar, Jharkhand, Orissa and Bengal. In 1905, the first partition of Bengal resulted in the short-lived province of Eastern Bengal and Assam which existed alongside the Bengal Presidency. In 1912, the province was merged back with the Bengal Presidency while Bihar and Orissa became a separate province.


In 1862, the Bengal Legislative Council became the first legislature in British India with native representation, after a petition from the British Indian Association of Calcutta.[13][14] As part of efforts towards home rule, the Government of India Act 1935 created a bicameral legislature, with the Bengal Legislative Assembly becoming the largest provincial assembly in India in 1937. The office of the Prime Minister of Bengal was established as part of growing provincial autonomy. After the 1946 election, rising Hindu-Muslim divisions across India forced the Bengal Assembly to decide on partition, despite calls for a United Bengal. The Partition of British India in 1947 resulted in the second partition of Bengal on religious grounds into East Bengal (present-day Bangladesh) and West Bengal.

Architecture in British Bengal

Howrah Bridge in 1945

Dacca Madrasa, 1904

Dacca Madrasa, 1904

Nawab's Shahbagh Garden, 1904

Nawab's Shahbagh Garden, 1904

List of governors of Bengal Presidency

Advocate-General of Bengal

Bombay Presidency

Madras Presidency

Mandal, Mahitosh (2022). . Caste: A Global Journal on Social Exclusion. 3 (1): 11–30. doi:10.26812/caste.v3i1.367. S2CID 249027627.

"Dalit Resistance during the Bengal Renaissance: Five Anti-Caste Thinkers from Colonial Bengal, India"

Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire (Cambridge) 1988

C. A. Bayly

C. E. Buckland Bengal under the Lieutenant-Governors (London) 1901

The Partition of Bengal (London: Society of Arts) 1905

Sir James Bourdillon

Susil Chaudhury From Prosperity to Decline. Eighteenth Century Bengal (Delhi) 1995

Annals of Rural Bengal (London) 1868, and Odisha (London) 1872

Sir William Wilson Hunter

. Vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1909.

Imperial Gazetteer of India

Ray, Indrajit (Routledge) 2011

Bengal Industries and the British Industrial Revolution (1757–1857)

John R. McLane Land and Local Kingship in eighteenth-century Bengal (Cambridge) 1993

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bengal". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Coins of the Bengal Presidency