Colonial Cities
Colonial Cities
Colonial Cities
Madras
➔ Company agents settled in Madras in 1639
Calcutta
➔ Company agents settled in Calcutta in 1690.
Bombay
➔ Bombay was given to the Company in 1661 by the English king, who had
got it as part of his wife’s dowry from the king of Portugal.
➔ By the middle of the 19th century these settlements had become big
cities from where the new rulers controlled the country.
➔ The layouts of Madras, Bombay and Calcutta were quite different from
older Indian towns
Agra
Delhi
Lahore
Surat
Masulipatnam
Dhaka
Madurai
Kanchipuram
Madras (British)
Bombay (British)
Calcutta (British)
Panaji (Portuguese)
Masulipatnam (Dutch)
Pondicherry (French)
➔ There was a reverse flow of humans and goods from towns to villages.
➔ Traders and pedlars took goods from the towns to sell in the
villages
➔ Mughal towns 16th and 17th centuries were famous for their
a)concentration of populations
b)their monumental buildings
c)their imperial grandeur and wealth.
➔ The emperor lived in a fortified palace and the town was enclosed by
a wall, with entry and exit being regulated by different gates.
➔ The focus of the town was oriented towards the palace and the
principal mosque.
➔ Famous poet Mirza Ghalib described what the people of Delhi did when
the British forces occupied the city in 1857(see text)
Medieval South Indian Towns
kotwal
➔ The Mughal capitals, Delhi and Agra, lost their political authority.
➔ Some local notables and officials associated with Mughal rule create
new urban settlements such as the qasbah and ganj
qasbah=is a small town in the countryside, often the seat of a local notable
ganj =a small fixed market
➔ By the end of the 18th century the land-based empires in Asia were
replaced by the powerful sea-based European empires.
➔ Censuses reports
➔ Town mapping
➔ The Survey of India (established in 1878)
Importance of Mapping
➔ There were people in towns who were hawkers often told the
census enumerators that they were traders, not labourers, for
they regarded trade as a more respectable activity.
➔ In the forty years between 1900 and 1940 the urban population
increased from about 10 per cent of the total population to
about 13 per cent.
➔ Calcutta, Bombay and Madras on the other hand grew rapidly and
soon became sprawling cities.
Ports
➔ By the eighteenth century Madras, Calcutta and Bombay had become
important ports.
Forts
Centres of services
➔ These areas were separate from but attached to the Indian towns.
➔ For the British, the “Black” areas came to symbolise not only
chaos and anarchy, but also filth and disease.
The founding and settling of hill stations was initially connected with
the needs of the British army
➔ The temperate and cool climate of the Indian hills was seen as
an advantage, particularly since the British associated hot
weather with epidemics like Cholera and malaria
➔ new social groups: Within the cities new social groups were
formed and the old identities of people were no longer
important.
➔ Another new class within the cities was the labouring poor or
the working class.
➔ Life in the city was a struggle: jobs were uncertain, food was
expensive, and places to stay were difficult to afford.
➔ Yet the poor often created a lively urban culture of their own.
➔ She was one of the prime movers behind the setting up of the
Star Theatre (1883) in Calcutta which became a centre for famous
productions.
Why Madras?
➔ The Company had first set up its trading activities in the port
of Surat on the west coast.
➔ The Company had purchased the right of settlement from the local
Telugu lords, the Nayaks of Kalahasti
➔ Rivalry (1746-63) with the French East India Company led the
British to fortify Madras(Fort St George)
➔ With the defeat of the French in 1761, Madras became more secure
➔ Fort St George became the nucleus of the White Town where most
of the Europeans lived.
➔ The Dutch and Portuguese were allowed to stay here because they
were European and Christian.
Dubashes in Madras
➔ The dubashes were Indians who could speak two languages – the
local language and English.
Vanniyars
➔ San Thome with its cathedral was the centre for Roman Catholics.
➔ The East India Company decided to build a new fort, one that
could not be easily attacked. (Fort William)
Three villages to make town Calcutta
➔ Calcutta had grown from three villages called Sutanati, Kolkata
and Govindapur.
➔ The traders and weavers living there were asked to move out.
➔ Around the new Fort William they left a vast open space known
as the Maidan or garer-math.
Palace,Government House
Lotttery Committee
➔ Cholera started spreading from 1817 and in 1896 plague made its
appearance.
➔ The cause of these diseases had not yet been established firmly
by medical science.
➔ That was why working people’s huts or “bustis” became the target
of demolition.
➔ The existing racial divide of the “White Town” and “Black Town”
was reinforced by the new divide of “healthy”and “unhealthy”.
3 Architecture in Bombay
➔ By the end of the 19th century, half the imports and exports of
India passed through Bombay.
➔ One important item of this trade was opium that the East India
Company exported to China.
➔ When the American Civil War started in 1861 cotton from the
American South stopped coming into the international market.
➔ In 1869 the Suez Canal was opened and this strengthened Bombay’s
links with the world economy.
What is a Bungalow?
2 Neo-Gothic style
➔ This was the time when the government in Bombay was building its
infrastructure and this style was adapted for Bombay.
➔ Example for neo-Gothic style buildings in Bombay
➔ The University Hall was made with money donated by Sir Cowasjee
Jehangir Readymoney, a rich Parsi merchant.
3 Indo-Saracenic style