Over the years, Chitpur Road has acquired a distinct identity of its own, with the name standing in to represent this north Kolkata neighbourhood itself. It is not clear when Chitpur acquired its name, but historical documentation suggests that it is older than the city of Calcutta itself.
It was also the neighbourhood where Calcutta’s aristocracy set up large residential homes, many of which continue to be preserved as heritage sites under government supervision, while others remain in control of the families themselves.
Mitter’s wealth, power and influence only grew and he quickly rose to become one of the wealthiest zamindars in Bengal, with an extravagant mansion in Chitpur to rival that belonging to the Sabarna Roy Choudhurys and other prominent Bengali zamindars of that time.
Colonial records indicate that the road was one of the most important pilgrimage routes in ancient Bengal because of the location of the Chitteshwari temple in this neighbourhood. In the 1885 edition of the Imperial Gazetteer of India, William Wilson Hunter, a Scottish historian writes: “…this line (Chitpur Road) was destined to become the central street through the modern city of Calcutta.”
Till the middle of the 19th century, Chitpur Road served to divide the mercantile part of Calcutta dominated by the British, from the “native villages or bastis which clustered inwards to the east” of the Hooghly river. “Practically speaking, the European commerce of Calcutta is concentrated between the river bank on the west and Chipur Road on the east, with Canning Street on the north and Esplanade on the south,” writes Hunter.
There is another story behind how the neighbourhood got its name. While Kumartuli, within the neighbourhood of Chitpur, is a well-known artisans colony, there was another group of artisans who had set up home here—the chitrakar, traditional scroll painters, also known as the patuas. Like the kumars of Kumartuli whose profession of idol-making was reflected in their last names, the patuas of Chitpur also followed similar naming conventions.
In his book ‘Kalighat Painting Images from a Changing World’ (1999), Jyotindra Jain writes that the chitrakars of Kalighat relocated to Chitpur to escape from an increasing number of robbers in that area, thus giving the neighbourhood the community’s name. After the artisans relocated, the new neighbourhood led to a development in the painting styles, resulting in the unique genre of the Chitpur style that followed the Kalighat school.
The large mansions and iconic colonial structures around Chitpur tend to dominate conversations about the neighbourhood, leading many to gloss over how it was where Calcutta’s publishing industry first started in Battala.
In the locality of Battala where the publishing industry was based, Chitpur prints, the genre of printed books known as Chitpur relief prints or Battala chapapat, meaning printed pictures of Battala, developed in this neighbourhood, writes Amitabh SenGupta in his book ‘Scroll Paintings of Bengal: Art in the Village’ (2012). “The pictures were first printed on cheap paper, from handmade wood blocks (also metal blocks) and then hand-tinted with colours”, writes SenGupta.
It would be remiss to write about Chitpur without mentioning one of the most prominent families who lived there—the Tagores of Jorasanko, whose ancestral home has now been converted into a museum and university. Built in the 18th century, researchers at the Rabindra Bharati University say the house has been preserved to look as it was when Rabindranath Tagore lived there. The interiors of the house have been modified to incorporate a museum archiving the Tagore family’s history and artefacts but it remains one of the most well-preserved examples of tropical colonial Bengali architecture.
For close to two centuries, Chitpur was not officially a part of the Calcutta metropolitan area despite being a residential neighbourhood for some of Bengal’s wealthiest zamindars and foreigners. Chitpur, along with other neighbouring areas, was considered the peripheries of the city till it was incorporated into the suburban municipality in 1876, writes Sukanta Chaudhuri in his book ‘Calcutta – The Living City: Volume II: The Present and Future’ (2000). In 1931, it was merged into the Calcutta metropolitan area.
Written by Neha Banka | Kolkata: Indian Express
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Kolkatta has been the most cultured, educated and prosperous city as far as the British Raj is concerned. With the rich history of the areas, landlords and being the capital of the empire for most of the 200 years it is no surprise to come across such gems of our past heritage. Eshadoot must be thanked for their tireless efforts in bringing uplifting stories
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