Janbazar Raj


The 'Janbazar Raj or the Marh family', has been one of the leading families of Kolkata, West Bengal, India, and is regarded as one of the key influencers during the Bengali Renaissance. Their meteoric rise from humble beginnings to Royal glory stands as a testament to merchantile brilliance and a fight against orthodoxy. The most prominent figures of this family include Babu Preetoram Marh, one of the leading merchants of 18th-century Calcutta, his son Rajchandra Das, one of the most influential Zamindars of Bengal, their son-in-law Mathurmohan Biswas and finally Rani Rashmoni, herself.
The family contributed largely to the development in education, infrastructure and culture of Calcutta and Bengal. They were especially famous for their generosity and public spirit. They also offered considerable charity to the Imperial Library, and the Hindu College.

Family History

The family rose from a very ordinary economic circumstances to the level of landlordism. The family were Mahishyas by caste. The earliest known ancestor of the family was Bijoyram Koley, Kantoram Marh's father, Krishnaram's grandfather, Preetoram's great-grand father, and Rajchandra's great-great-grandfather. He is said to be a resident of Sonatikhali village, under the Raja of Burdwan. His descendants are said to have migrated further south to Howrah. Rajchandra's great-grandfather Kantoram was a bamboo trader by profession and therefore, he received the title Marh. His son was Krishnaram and in turn, Krishnaram's son was Preetoram Marh. Preetoram worked in the customs house. He also brought many Zamindaris and started an export business, becoming one of the premier merchants and one of the foremost Zamindars of Calcutta.They originally lived in Khosalpur village in Howrah. Krishnaram's sister Bindubala Dasi was married to Akrur Manna of the landlord Manna family, Janbazar, Kolkata. They were one of the first Mahishya families to have settled in Kolkata. After his aunt's marriage and his mother's untimely demise, Preetoram along with his father Krishna Ram Marh and his two brothers, Rantanu and Kalicharan, came to live in his aunt's house to learn trade and to receive a formal education. Seeing his merit and keen acumen in business, he was inducted as the Dewan of the Natore Raj. He eventually, brought large tracts of land in that province, eventually surpassing the Zamindars themselves. In Natore, during his working days, he made a large amount of wealth and later returned to Kolkata again. Preetoram married Jogmaya Debi, the daughter of the Jugal Kishore Manna, the younger brother of Akrur Manna. In that marriage in 1777, he received a dowry of several houses in Janbazar and 16 bighas of land. They also had matrimonial relations with the Bawali Raj family in Chetla and Bawali.

Zamindaris

After marriage, Preetoram began doing business with the British alongside his small and large enterprises, and within a short period, his financial prosperity started to grow rapidly. As a result of his remarkable business success, he and his descendants established small and large zamindari estates in various regions of Bengal such as Kolkata, Nadia, 24 Parganas, Dhaka, and Pabna.
  • Navadwip Zamindari
In 1841, because of issues to pay taxes to the British, Raja Girish Chandra of Nadia Raj had a vast area of Nabadwip in the Nadia district put up for auction. It was purchased by Madhusudan Sanyal, a small zamindar from Kolkata. However, as he too failed to manage the estate for long, it eventually came under the ownership of the Marh family of Janbazar. Later, the property became known as Rani Rashmoni's 'Kachari Bari'.
In 1800, Babu Preetoram Marh purchased the Makimpur Zamindari from the Natore estate for 19,000 rupees and became the landlord of the Pargana. Mahendranath, eldest son of Padmamoni, Rani Rashmoni's eldest daughter and Ramchandra died at a premature age and Ganeshchandra became landlord of the estate. To show respect to Rani Rasmoni, the tenants of Khatra estate changed the name of Rajganj Bajar to Gopalganj following the name of Nabo Gopal, son of Ganeshchandra and great grandson of Rani Rasmoni.
  • 24 Parganas Zamindari
Prince Dwarkanath Tagore had mortgaged a part of his Zamindari in now South 24 Parganas to Rashmoni for his passage to England. This part of land which was then a part of the Sunderbans was marshy and almost uninhabitable except for some families of thugs who found the area convenient to stay and venture out for plunders in far away places mounted on stilts. Rashmoni persuaded these families and helped them to build up fisheries in the surrounding water bodies that later turned into large, rich bheris. They gradually gave up their profession of plundering and transformed into a community of fishermen.

Janbazar Palace

What is now known as Rani Rashmoni's house at the crossing of Rani Rashmoni Road and Surendranath Banerjee Road, was initially 70 & 71 Free School Street. Rani Rashmoni's father-in-law, Preetaram Marh, started constructing this house in 1805. It took some 7–8 years to complete construction of the big house.
In 1813, Rajchandra completed the construction of the palace started by Pritiram in 1780 on six bighas of land. This palace of three hundred rooms has six courtyards, a lake. Seven mahals, Thakurdalan, Natmandir, Dewankhana, Kachari Ghar, Guest house, Goyal Ghar, armory, and rooms for the guards and dewans. This palace, adjacent to the Janbazar palace, was built at a cost of twenty-five lakh Mohurs.
Rani Rashmoni had four daughters – Padmamani, Kumari, Karunamoyee and Jagadamba. Mathuramohan Biswas, the husband of Rani Rashmoni's youngest daughter Jagadamba, had always been like a son to Rashmoni which she did not have biologically. The house is now divided into three parts. Jagadamba's descendants live in 13 Rani Rashmoni Road, Kumari's descendants live in 18/3 Surendranath Banerjee Road, and Padmamani's descendants live in 20 Surendranath Banerjee Road.

Contributions to society

Construction of Babughat
The then rich people of Calcutta used to build bathing ghats as a mark of wealth. On the other side of the Hooghly River to establish his status Raj Chandra started building a ghat on the other side of the Ganges in competition with them. After obtaining the permission of the company, he first built a ghat on the other side of the river. He built a ghat with thirty-six pillars. A covering over the pillars. Separate arrangements for men and women for bathing. Lord Bentinck's proclamation named it 'Baboo Rajchandra Das's Ghat'. It is still popularly known as 'Babu Ghat'.
Construction of Ahiritala Ghat
Rajchandra focused on doing philanthropic and public welfare work. After Babughat, he built a huge bathing ghat in Aheritola. He built a huge pucca house on his own land for patients with internal bleeding who were on their way to death at Nimtala crematorium. Accommodation, food and medical facilities were arranged for the inmates. Doctors and attendants were appointed to take care of the patients round the clock. All these news of Rajchandra's charitable deeds spread quickly. Rajchandra's fame was published in the newspapers. Rajchandra's public welfare work was recorded in the India Gazette. In 1817, Rajchandra's father Preetoram died. His mother died that same year. With the generosity of money, he performed a grand Shraddha ceremony for his parents. Rajchandra, who was without parents, lived with his wife and daughters in a palace-like residence at 71 Free School Street.
Eden Gardens
The Eden Gardens was also a part of their Zamindari area. Rajchandra Das gifted one of his biggest gardens, Marh Bagan, besides the river Hooghly, to Lord Auckland, the then Governor-General of India, and his sister Emily Eden in gratitude for their help in saving his third daughter from a fatal disease. The garden was then renamed to the Eden Gardens.
Jadu Babur Bazar
Jadu Babur Bazar, located in South Kolkata’s Bhowanipore area, is a historic and bustling neighborhood market named after Jadunath Chowdhury, the son of Pyarimohan Chowdhury and Kumari Debi and the grandson of Rani Rashmoni. The area once contained sprawling garden house in Bhowanipore and Justice Robert Chambers lived in this enormous mansion during his tenure at the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William. Later, Rani Rashmoni purchased the mansion and its adjoining area and gifted the entire property to her beloved grandson, Jadunath Chaudhuri and the market thus came to be known as Jadu Babur Bazar. Around which a lively marketplace gradually developed. Today, the bazar is known for its energetic atmosphere and wide variety of goods available. Fresh vegetables and fruits, groceries, clothes, stationery, and everyday household items. During festivals, it becomes especially crowded as locals rely on it for diverse and affordable shopping. Over time, Jadu Babur Bazar has become an iconic part of Bhawanipur’s cultural identity itself.

Contribution to Religious reforms

The family played an important role in the Bengal Renaissance. Raja Rajchandra Das was associated with Raja Rammohan Roy’s Brahmo Samaj movement and raised his voice against various superstitions and social evils in contemporary Hindu society. Rani Rashmoni also supported her husband’s reformist ideas, and after his death, as a widowed woman, she made her own contributions to social reforms like polygamy, child marriage, and sati, and second, to support trailblazing social reformers like Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, even submitting a draft bill against polygamy to the East India Company.
Temple Establishment
Alongside these efforts, Rani Rashmoni went against the prevailing orthodox Brahminical system of her time and, as one of the first Hindu widowed women of contemporary Calcutta, established the Dakshineswar Kali Temple or Bhabatarini Mandir. In later years, this temple became recognized as a significant center of the Bengal Renaissance.
After Rani Rashmoni’s death, her widowed daughter Jagadamba Devi and her husband Mathurmohan Biswas established the Annapurna Temple in present-day North 24 Parganas on April 12, 1875. Their son Dwarikanath Biswas made all the arrangements for the establishment of this temple. Later, the temple was opened to the general public.
  • Giribala Thakurbari, Panihati
The temple was founded in Bengal in 1911, by Giribala Devi, the granddaughter-in-law of the eldest daughter of Rani Rashmoni, and the widow of Gopal Krishna Das of Janbazar, Kolkata. The temple of Radha Gobinda jiu is located right in the middle of the temple courtyard surrounded by walls. The temple, built on a high foundation altar, has a three-arched entrance, and faces south. There is a portico in front of the sanctum sanctorum. On either side of the stairs leading up to the temple are two stone female idols, holding glass lamps. There is beautiful fan work under the curved cornice all around the temple. The responsibility to design and construct the temple was given to the firm of Gagan Chandra Biswas.