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Landscaping India: from Colony to Postcolony
Syracuse University SURFACE English - Dissertations College of Arts and Sciences 8-2013 Landscaping India: From Colony to Postcolony Sandeep Banerjee Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/eng_etd Part of the English Language and Literature Commons, Geography Commons, and the South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies Commons Recommended Citation Banerjee, Sandeep, "Landscaping India: From Colony to Postcolony" (2013). English - Dissertations. 65. https://surface.syr.edu/eng_etd/65 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Arts and Sciences at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in English - Dissertations by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ABSTRACT Landscaping India investigates the use of landscapes in colonial and anti-colonial representations of India from the mid-nineteenth to the early-twentieth centuries. It examines literary and cultural texts in addition to, and along with, “non-literary” documents such as departmental and census reports published by the British Indian government, popular geography texts and text-books, travel guides, private journals, and newspaper reportage to develop a wider interpretative context for literary and cultural analysis of colonialism in South Asia. Drawing of materialist theorizations of “landscape” developed in the disciplines of geography, literary and cultural studies, and art history, Landscaping India examines the colonial landscape as a product of colonial hegemony, as well as a process of constructing, maintaining and challenging it. In so doing, it illuminates the conditions of possibility for, and the historico-geographical processes that structure, the production of the Indian nation. -
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"We do not to aspire be historians, we simply profess to our readers lay before some curious reminiscences illustrating the manners and customs of the people (both Britons and Indians) during the rule of the East India Company." @h£ iooi #ld Jap €f Being Curious Reminiscences During the Rule of the East India Company From 1600 to 1858 Compiled from newspapers and other publications By W. H. CAREY QUINS BOOK COMPANY 62A, Ahiritola Street, Calcutta-5 First Published : 1882 : 1964 New Quins abridged edition Copyright Reserved Edited by AmARENDRA NaTH MOOKERJI 113^tvS4 Price - Rs. 15.00 . 25=^. DISTRIBUTORS DAS GUPTA & CO. PRIVATE LTD. 54-3, College Street, Calcutta-12. Published by Sri A. K. Dey for Quins Book Co., 62A, Ahiritola at Express Street, Calcutta-5 and Printed by Sri J. N. Dey the Printers Private Ltd., 20-A, Gour Laha Street, Calcutta-6. /n Memory of The Departed Jawans PREFACE The contents of the following pages are the result of files of old researches of sexeral years, through newspapers and hundreds of volumes of scarce works on India. Some of the authorities we have acknowledged in the progress of to we have been indebted for in- the work ; others, which to such as formation we shall here enumerate ; apologizing : — we may have unintentionally omitted Selections from the Calcutta Gazettes ; Calcutta Review ; Travels Selec- Orlich's Jacquemont's ; Mackintosh's ; Long's other Calcutta ; tions ; Calcutta Gazettes and papers Kaye's Malleson's Civil Administration ; Wheeler's Early Records ; Recreations; East India United Service Journal; Asiatic Lewis's Researches and Asiatic Journal ; Knight's Calcutta; India. -
Bengal Peerless Anupama Housing Complex - … 2BHK Residential Cum Commercial Complex in VIP Road, Mondalganthi, Kolkata Bengal Peerless Housing Development Co
https://www.propertywala.com/bengal-peerless-anupama-housing-complex-kolkata Bengal Peerless Anupama Housing Complex - … 2BHK Residential cum Commercial Complex in VIP Road, Mondalganthi, Kolkata Bengal Peerless Housing Development Co. Ltd. offers 2BHK residential cum commercial apartments in Bengal Peerless Anupama Housing Complex at VIP Road, Mondalganthi, Kolkata. Project ID : J791190583 Builder: Bengal Peerless Housing Development Co. Ltd. Properties: Apartments / Flats Location: Bengal Peerless Anupama Housing Complex, Mondalganthi, Vip Road area, Kolkata (West Bengal) Completion Date: Dec, 2014 Status: Started Description Bengal Peerless Housing Development Co. Ltd. which is a well-known real estate group in all over the India has proudly presented its brand new luxurious residential cum commercial project named as Bengal Peerless Anupama Housing Complex. This commercial project is located in one of the most prime and in-demanded location of Kolkata city that is VIP Road, Mondalganthi. You will find Anupama Commercial Complex within Anupama Housing Complex was conceived and also implemented to cater to the day to day requirements of the residents of Anupama Housing Complex. This project has total 4 different phases which are ANUPAMA PHASE-I, ANUPAMA PHASE-II, ANUPAMA PHASE-III, ANUPAMA PHASE-IV and ANUPAMA COMMERCIAL COMPLEX. In this project you will find building are four stored, having four flats in each floor. There are 3 types of floor plans available here; each has been designed to present maximum living space and best possible -
Iabse Uk News
IABSE UK NEWS Newsletter of the British Group of the International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering No. 35 April 2014 Standing Tall: Inspiration and Passion in Structural Engineering The Shard and other tall buildings designed by Kamran Moazami - 2013 Milne Medal Lecture Contents British Group News & Events 2 Structural Engineering International 3 Journey to Success 2013 3 IABSE Henderson Colloquium 4 IABSE Symposium, Kolkata 2013 5 IABSE Future of Design 2013 – Organiser’s Report 9 IABSE Future of Design 2013 – Attendee’s Report 9 IABSE Milne Medal Lecture - Kamran Moazami 10 Journey to Success 2014 11 IABSE Future of Design 2013 – First Prize 13 IABSE Future of Design 2013 – Second Prize 14 IABSE Future of Design 2013 – Third Prize 15 IABSE British Group Directory 16 www.iabse.org.uk IABSE British Group News Editorial These are exciting times for the IABSE British Group, as I hope this latest newsletter makes very clear. However, this will be my last newsletter as editor, as other work commitments are having to take precedence. I owe considerable thanks to Ana Ruiz-Teran, who has helped considerably to complete this issue, and who will take over as newsletter editor from the next edition. Please give Ana your every support and consider whether there is anything you could contribute. We are not only looking for reports on IABSE events, but also on projects, individuals, or topics which you think may be of interest to our membership. I’ll remain involved in IABSE and look forward to seeing the current levels of interest and enthusiasm expanding over the next few years. -
Kolkata Train
Here is the complete history of Kolkata tram routes, from 1873 to 2020. HORSE TRAM ERA 1873 – Opening of horse tram as meter gauge, closure in the same year. 1880 – Final opening of horse tram as a permanent system. Calcutta Tramways Company was established. 1881 – Dalhousie Square – Lalbazar - Bowbazar – Lebutala - Sealdah Station. (Later route 14) Esplanade – Lalbazar – Pagyapatti – Companybagan - Shobhabazar - Kumortuli. (Later route 7 after extension) Dalhousie Square – Esplanade. (Later route 22, 24, 25 & 29) Esplanade – Planetarium - Hazra Park - Kalighat. (Later route 30) 1882 - Esplanade – Wellington Square – Bowbazar – Boipara - Hatibagan - Shyambazar Junction. (Later route 5) Wellington Square – Moula Ali - Sealdah Station. (Later route 12 after extension) Dalhousie Square – Metcalfe Hall - High Court. (Later route 14 extension) Metcalfe Hall – Howrah Bridge - Nimtala. (Later route 19). Steam tram service was thought. STEAM TRAM ERA 1883 - Esplanade – Racecourse - Wattganj - Khidirpur. (Later route 36) 1884 - Wellington Square – Park Street. (Later route 21 & 22 after extension) 1900 - Nimtala – Companybagan (non-revenue service only). Electrification & conversion to standard gauge was started. ELECTRIC TRAM ERA 1902 - Khidirpur & Kalighat routes were electrified. Shobhabazar – Hatibagan. (Later route 9 & 10) Nonapukur Workshop opened with Royd Street – Nonapukur (Later route 21 & 22 after re-extension). Royd Street – Park Street closed. 1903 – Shyambazar terminus opened with Shyambazar – Belgachhia. (Later route 1, 2, 3, 4 & 11) Kalighat – Tollyganj. (Later route 29 & 32) 1904 - Kumortuli – Bagbazar. Kumortuli terminus closed. (Later route 7 & 8) 1905 - Howrah Bridge – Pagyapatti – Boipara – Purabi Cinema - Sealdah Station (Later route 15). All remaining then-opened routes were electrified. 1907 - Moula Ali – Nonapukur. (Later route 20 & 26 after extension) Wattganj – Mominpur (via direct access through Ofphanganjbazar). -
Life of William Carey, Shoemaker and Missionary
Life of William Carey, Shoemaker and Missionary Author(s): George Adam Smith Publisher: Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library Description: William Carey is often considered the ªfather of modern missionsº as his missionary work in India set the standard for Christian evangelism. This biography, written by George Smith within 50 years of Carey's death, tells the missionary's story. Smith's admiration of the author is obvious, but this partiality does not take away from the project as a whole. Along with taking the reader through Carey's life, he also in- cludes many of the missionary's personal letters and ser- mons, allowing readers to engage with Carey as intimately. Kathleen O'Bannon CCEL Staff Subjects: Practical theology Missions Missions in individual countries i Contents Title Page 1 Preface 2 Ch I. Carey’s College 3 Ch II. The Birth of England’s Foreign Missions 18 Ch III. India As Carey Found It 35 Ch IV. Six Years in North Bengal--Missionary and Indigo Planter 50 Ch V. The New Crusade--Serampore and the Brotherhood 68 Ch VI. The First Native Converts and Christian Schools 80 Ch VII. Calcutta and the Mission Centres from Delhi to Amboyna 96 Ch VIII. Carey’s Family and Friends 112 Ch IX. Professor of Sanskrit, Bengali, and Marathi 129 Ch X. The Wyclif of the East--Bible Translation 145 Ch XI. What Carey Did for Literature and for Humanity 166 Ch XII. What Carey Did for Science--Founder of the Agricultural and Horticultural 178 Society of India Ch XIII. Carey’s Immediate Influence in Great Britain and America 199 Ch XIV. -
The National Library of India
THE ~AT I O~AL LIB JCARY tlF INDIA SOUVE:\IR J3 VOLUL\IE 19.5 .'J THE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF INDIA Golden Jubilee .Souvenir Sunday, lst~ebruary,1953 " c!J. do not want m!J houoe to &e waffeJ in on aff oideo and m!J window& to Se otu{{ed. c!J. want cuftureo of aff fando to · te tfown aBout m!J Aouoe a& /reeft; ao poooitle. GJ3ut c!J. re{uoe to 8e tfown o{f ml.J /eet t~J antJ."-MAHATMA GANDHI PRINTED BY THE MANAGER GOVERNMENT OF INDIA PRESS, CALCUTTA, INDIA, 1953 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Foreword 1. History, growth and future of the National Library I 2. Brief history of Belvedere • '. 5 3. Perspective in time • 6 4. List of Chairmen, members and secretaries 8 S. The National Library forty years ago ., • 11 6. The Bibliography of Indology • 16 7. Towards a Basic Bibliography on Indology 21 8. The Section on ancient Indian history and culture 26 9. The Section on Sanskrit, Pali and Prakri\ 30 10. A short account of the Bubar Library 47. 11. List of Librarians 51 12. The Senior Staff of the National Library .· 51 13. Publications of the Library .51 14. In Memoriam . 52 15. Our Thanks 53 16. An ••tract from the "Englishman", Saturday, January 31st 1903 54 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS CoVEll PAGE ! NOilTHERN CoRRIDOR OF THE STACK ROOM FRONTISPIECE :-i _Lo_r~ c'""ur:_on who ln~uguratcd the lmpcrloillbiilrYJ Plate I. Picture of Belvedere Mansion Between pages 10 and 11 .. 2 • Periodical Room .. .. 3. Card Cabinet Room . -
Nineteenth-Century Army Officers'wives in British
IMPERIAL STANDARD-BEARERS: NINETEENTH-CENTURY ARMY OFFICERS’WIVES IN BRITISH INDIA AND THE AMERICAN WEST A Dissertation by VERITY GAY MCINNIS Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May 2012 Major Subject: History IMPERIAL STANDARD-BEARERS: NINETEENTH-CENTURY ARMY OFFICERS’WIVES IN BRITISH INDIA AND THE AMERICAN WEST A Dissertation by VERITY GAY MCINNIS Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Approved by: Co-Chairs of Committee, R.J.Q. Adams J. G. Dawson III Committee Members, Sylvia Hoffert Claudia Nelson David Vaught Head of Department, David Vaught May 2012 Major Subject: History iii ABSTRACT Imperial Standard-Bearers: Nineteenth-Century Army Officers’ Wives in British India and the American West. (May 2012) Verity Gay McInnis, B.A., Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi; M.A., Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi Co-Chairs of Advisory Committee: Dr. R.J.Q. Adams Dr. Joseph G. Dawson III The comparative experiences of the nineteenth-century British and American Army officer’s wives add a central dimension to studies of empire. Sharing their husbands’ sense of duty and mission, these women transferred, adopted, and adapted national values and customs, to fashion a new imperial sociability, influencing the course of empire by cutting across and restructuring gender, class, and racial borders. Stationed at isolated stations in British India and the American West, many officers’ wives experienced homesickness and disorientation. -
City Disaster Management Plan of Kolkata
CITY DISASTER MANAGEMENT PLAN OF KOLKATA 2020 KOLKATA MUNICIPAL CORPORATION 5, S.N. BANERJEE ROAD, KOLKATA - 13 Foreword Cities are important centres of modern societies that will continue to gain in importance in the future. Today, more than half the world’s population lives in urban areas. The high density and interdependence of urban lifestyles and work, and the growing dependence on increasingly complex infrastructure systems and services, are making cities more vulnerable to a variety of hazards — natural and man-made. These can be the result of technological, natural or social causes. The populous City of Kolkata is situated in the multi-hazard prone southern part of the state of West Bengal which has considerable risk of damage/loss of lives and property due to natural hazards like Cyclone, Earthquake and Flood even if we keep aside the threats due to human induced hazards as Fire, Accidents, Industrial & Chemical hazards etc. To minimize the losses due to disasters and to have a disaster resilient society, we must have clear understanding in regard to the type and strength of each of the probable threats which may cause disasters of medium or large scale in the city. The perception about disaster and its management has undergone a change following the enactment of the Disaster Management Act, 2005. The definition of disaster is now all encompassing that includes not only the events emerging from natural and man-made causes, but even those events which are caused by accident or negligence. There was a long felt need to capture information about all such events occurring across the sectors and efforts made to mitigate them in the city and to collate them at one place in a global perspective. -
The Life of William Carey, Shoemaker & Missionary
The Life of William Carey by George Smith PREFACE On the death of William Carey In 1834 Dr. Joshua Marshman promised to write the Life of his great colleague, with whom he had held almost daily converse since the beginning of the century, but he survived too short a time to begin the work. In 1836 the Rev. Eustace Carey anticipated him by issuing what is little better than a selection of mutilated letters and journals made at the request of the Committee of the Baptist Missionary Society. It contains one passage of value, however. Dr. Carey once said to his nephew, whose design he seems to have suspected, “Eustace, if after my removal any one should think it worth his while to write my Life, I will give you a criterion by which you may judge of its correctness. If he give me credit for being a plodder he will describe me justly. Anything beyond this will be too much. I can plod. I can persevere in any definite pursuit. To this I owe everything.” In 1859 Mr. John Marshman, after his final return to England, published The Life and Times of Carey, Marshman, and Ward, a valuable history and defence of the Serampore Mission, but rather a biography of his father than of Carey. When I first went to Serampore the great missionary had not been twenty years dead. During my long residence there as Editor of the Friend of India, I came to know, in most of its details, the nature of the work done by Carey for India and for Christendom in the first third of the century. -
Malarial Subjects: Empire, Medicine and Nonhumans in British India, 1820
Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. Wellcome Library, on 09 Nov 2017 at 11:46:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/00BEE3F5FAD80653C99B6674E2685D4D Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. Wellcome Library, on 09 Nov 2017 at 11:46:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/00BEE3F5FAD80653C99B6674E2685D4D Malarial Subjects Malaria was considered one of the most widespread disease-causing entities in the nineteenth century. It was associated with a variety of frailties far beyond fevers, ranging from idiocy to impotence. And yet, it was not a self-contained category. The reconsolidation of malaria as a diagnostic category during this period happened within a wider context in which cinchona plants and their most valuable extract, quinine, were reinforced as objects of natural knowledge and social control. In India, the exigencies and apparatuses of British imperial rule occasioned the close interactions between these histories. In the process, British impe- rial rule became entangled with a network of nonhumans that included, apart from cinchona plants and the drug quinine, a range of objects described as malarial, as well as mosquitoes. Malarial Subjects explores this history of the co-constitution of a cure and disease, of British colo- nial rule and nonhumans, and of science, medicine and empire. This title is also available as Open Access. rohan deb roy is Lecturer in South Asian History at the University of Reading. He received his PhD from University College London, and has held postdoctoral fellowships at the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences Calcutta, at the University of Cambridge, and at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin. -
The Travels of a Hindoo to Various Parts of Bengal
THE TRAVELS OF A HINDOO TO VARIOUS PARTS OF BENGAL AND UPPER INDIA. VOL. I I. BY BHOLANAUTH CHUNDER, MEMBER OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL. London 1869. Reproduced by Sani H. Panhwar (California 2014) CONTENTS OF VOL. II. CHAPTER I. Futtehpore Sicri.— Its origin.—Colossal gateway.— Akber’s palace.— His monster dice-board.—Beerbul’s house.—Badshahi coshminars, or milestones.— Secundra.—Akber’s tomb. —His greatness.—Munee Begum’s tomb.—Muttra.— Its antiquity.—Accounts of, by Chinese travellers.—The Kunsatila. —Analogy of incidents in the history of Christ and Krishna. —The sentimental traveller at Muttra.—The Jumna below that city.—Bisram-ghaut and its mela.—Worship of Bacchus and Greek colony at Muttra.—Mahmood’s description of that city. — Jain temple of the Paruckjees.—The Katra, or market-place.—Fort and observatory of Rajah Jeysing.—Massacre of the priests during a festival.—The Chowbays.—A Chowbaynee.—Muttra hospital and the Dhutoreeas.—Activity of trade. —A Hindoo ruth, or carriage.—Pastoral state of the country in former times.—Road from Muttra to Brindabun.—Insecurity of pilgrimages to Brindabun before the British rule. Brindabun Pandas. — Sanctity of the place. — Ancient Vrij.— Its desolation by the Islamite.—Restoration of Brindabun by Choitunya.—Identification of the ancient Penates.—Tour of the temples.— Govinjee.—His temple.—Young Bengal’s address to him. .. 1 CHAPTER II. Other temples.—Statue of Gopinath.—Statue of Radha.—The Jumna at Brindabun.—Kaisee-ghaut.—Bukasoor-ghaut.— Busliter-hurun tree. — Ukoor- ghaut and the origin of the ‘car-festival.’—Kalya-dah ghaut and its legend.— Brahma-koond. Gopeswara.—Hureedoss Gossain and Tansen.—The Pooleen, or Ras-mandala.—Lallah Baboo.—The Jain temple.—Needhoo-bun.—Monkeys at Brindabun.—Muddun Mohnna.—Neekoonj-bun.—Baka-Behary.—Radha- rumun.—Doubtfulneas of the objects at Brindabun.—Vrij-bashees and Vrij- bashinees.—The ex-Rajah of Hatras.—Pundit Rangachari Swami.