seventeenth century. While the archaeologists believe that the area has been inhabited for over two thousand years, the documented history of Kolkata, however, starts from the arrival of the British East India Company in 1690. The company, headed by Job Charnock, decided in view of spreading its business in Bengal, to establish a city.
The British constructed Fort William in 1702 so as to station its troops
and use it as a regional base. Kolkata was declared as a Presidency
city and later became the headquarters of Bengal presidency. The British
faced frequent skirmishes with the French forces and spread their
military base. The Nawab of Bengal Siraj-Ud-Daula protested against this
militarization. When his pleas went unheeded he attacked and captured
Fort William. In the following year, Robert Clive recaptured the city
defeating and killing Siraj-Ud-Daula.
In 1772, the city was declared the
capital of British India. Richard Wellesley, the Governor General took
special interest in the development of city and its architecture which
won the city the description "City of Palaces." In early nineteenth
century, the city was split into two areas—British (known as White Town)
and Indian (known as Black Town). Kolkata went under rapid industrial
growth from the 1850s. The coalescence of British and Indian culture
gave rise to a new Babu class of urbane Indians belonging to upper caste
Hindu communities, well-qualified, professionals, bureaucrats and
Anglophiles.
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