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| {{Infobox person | | {{Infobox person |
| | name = Maharaja Nabakrishna Deb | | | name = Maharaja Nabakrishna Deb |
| | image = | | | image = File:Kolkata Dance.jpg |
| | image_size = | | | image_size = |
| | caption = | | | caption = Durga Puja at Shovabazar Rajbari in the presence of [[Robert Clive]] |
| | birth_date = 10 October 1733 | | | birth_date = 10 October 1733 |
| | birth_place = | | | birth_place = |
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| | spouse = | | | spouse = |
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| | | '''Maharaja Nabakrishna Deb''' (also known as [[Raja]] Nabakrishna Deb, archaic spelling Nubkissen; 10 October 1733 – 22 December 1797), founder of the [[Shovabazar Raj]] family, was a prominent [[zamindar]] and close confidante and ally of [[Robert Clive]]. He was the key figure in the plot against Nawab Siraj-ud-Daula although some believed him to be a traitor of India, who sold his motherland to the British and enabling them to rule India.<ref name = "Bose242">Sengupta, Subodh Chandra and Bose, Anjali, ''Sansad Bangali Charitabhidhan'' (Biographical dictionary) {{in lang|bn}}, Vol I, 1998 edition, p 242. {{ISBN|81-85626-65-0}}</ref> <ref name=Shobhabazar>{{cite news| url =http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2047696.cms | title = Shobhabazar Raj Bari| access-date = 18 February 2007 | last = Mukherjee Pandey | first = Jhimli | work =Family tradition alive in the City of Joy | publisher =Times of India | date=30 September 2006}}</ref><ref name = "Cotton288-289">Cotton, H.E.A., ''Calcutta Old and New'', 1909/1980, p288-289, General Printers and Publishers Pvt. Ltd.</ref><ref name="Menin2004">{{cite book|author=Sarah Menin|title=Constructing Place: Mind and the Matter of Place-Making|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7kksWHDk5L4C&pg=PA156|access-date=4 April 2017|date=24 February 2004|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-37909-5|pages=156–}}</ref><ref name="dnaindia.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.dnaindia.com/lifestyle/report-durga-puja-s-colonial-roots-1754517|title=Durga puja's colonial roots - Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis|date=21 October 2012|access-date=30 April 2018}}</ref> |
| '''Maharaja Nabakrishna Deb''' (also known as [[Raja]] Nabakrishna Deb, archaic spelling Nubkissen) (1733–1797), founder of the [[Shovabazar Raj]] family, was a prominent Raja and close confidante and ally of [[Robert Clive]]. He was the key figure in the plot against Nawab Siraj-ud-Daula although some believed him to be a traitor of India, who sold his motherland to the British and enabling them to rule India.<ref name="dnaindia.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.dnaindia.com/lifestyle/report-durga-puja-s-colonial-roots-1754517|title=Durga puja's colonial roots - Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis|date=21 October 2012|access-date=30 April 2018}}</ref> | |
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| ==Early life==
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| Raja Nabakrishna Deb lost his father, Ramcharan Deb, early in life but his mother took care to ensure that he learnt [[Urdu]] and [[Persian language|Persian]] initially and later [[Arabic language|Arabic]] and English. Deb was appointed Persian teacher of [[Warren Hastings]] in 1750. At one point of time he was ''munshi'' (clerk-cum-interpreter) of Governor Drake, advised the British on foreign relations and was a great supporter for the establishment of British power in India. He started his life as a Munshi for Lakshmikanta Dhar or Noku Dhar, the banker and businessman of Kolkata, from where he was recommended to Robert Clive when the latter was looking for an able clerk-cum-interpreter. He had carried out confidential work for the [[British East India Company]], prior to and during the [[Battle of Plassey|Battle of Palashi]]. After the death of [[Siraj ud-Daulah]], Deb along with [[Mir Jafar]], [[Amir Beg]] and [[Ramchand Roy]] earned eight crore rupees (approximately 600 million US dollars in present-day value) worth of treasures from the secret treasury.<ref name = "Bose242"/>
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| ==Achievements==
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| ===Durga Puja===
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| He is also known for the [[Durga Puja]] he organised in his newly constructed grand [[Shobhabazar Rajbari]] (King's Palace) in [[Kolkata]] (then Calcutta) in 1757, as a patron of numerous performing artistes, and his philanthropy.<ref name = "Bose242">Sengupta, Subodh Chandra and Bose, Anjali, ''Sansad Bangali Charitabhidhan'' (Biographical dictionary) {{in lang|bn}}, Vol I, 1998 edition, p 242. {{ISBN|81-85626-65-0}}</ref> The puja in the magnificent palace continues even today.
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| After his victory in the Battle of Palashi, in 1757, which laid the foundation for British rule in India, [[Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive|Lord Clive]] wanted a grand [[harvest festival|thanksgiving]] ceremony but the only church in Kolkata had been razed to the ground by Siraj ud-Daulah, during his attack a year earlier. When Deb came to know of Clive's desire, he advised, "Offer your thanks at the goddesses' feet at my [[Durga Puja]]."
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| <!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Sovabazar Durga Puja 2006.jpg|thumb|250 px|right|250th year Durga Puja at [[Shobhabazar Rajbari|Shovabazar Rajbari]] in 2006]] -->
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| "But I am a Christian," protested Clive.
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| "That can be managed," smiled the wily Deb.
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| Lord Clive drove in his carriage all the way from his residence in what was then known as New Town (part of the city where the British people used to live) of Kolkata to Shovabazar in the Old Town (where the natives used to live), for the Durga Puja. Thereafter, it came to be known as the "Company Puja".<ref name = "Oxford">Jaya Chaliha and Bunny Gupta, ''Durga Puja in Calcutta'' in ''Calcutta The Living City'' Vol II, edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri, Oxford University Press, first published 1990, paperback edition 2005, pp 332–333. {{ISBN|0-19-563697-X}}</ref>
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| Raja Nabakrisna Deb set a pattern for the puja which became a fashion and a status symbol among the upcoming merchant class of Kolkata. The number of Englishmen attending the family Durga Puja became an index of prestige. Religious scruples fell by the wayside. The Englishmen attending the dance-parties, dined on beef and ham from Wilson's Hotel, and drank to their heart's contentment.<ref name = "Oxford"/>
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| While [[barowari]] (community) pujas subsequently took over in a big way, the Durga Pujas of the old zemindar and Royal families in and around Kolkata still attract crowds. Shovabazar Rajbari organised the 250th Durga Puja in 2006.<ref name=Shobhabazar>{{cite news
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| | url =http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2047696.cms | title = Shobhabazar Raj Bari | |
| | access-date = 18 February 2007 | last = Mukherjee Pandey | first = Jhimli | work =Family tradition alive in the City of Joy | publisher =Times of India | date=30 September 2006 | |
| }}</ref> | |
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| ===Later life===
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| With Lord Clive backing him, Deb earned the title of ''[[Maharaja]] [[Baghatur|Bahadur]]'' in 1766. The position offered him some administrative powers also. Later he became a political ''banyan'' (a powerful middleman) of the British East India Company. When [[Warren Hastings]] took over as [[Governor General of India|governor]] (Governor General of [[Fort William, India|Fort William]] in [[Bengal]]) in 1772, he became even more powerful. In 1776, he earned the ''[[Taluqdar|talukdari]]'' (landholder with peculiar tenure) of [[Sutanuti|Sutanati]].<ref name = "Bose242"/>
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| {{quote box|width=300px|quote= It is one of the inevitable results of a foreign occupation that the history of modern India as written by Englishmen – and no one else has cared to write it – takes little account of the Indian helper whose aid has been essential, and whose advice and knowledge has been invaluable, to the men who built up the fabric of English rule. Nowhere, perhaps is this reticence or history more marked than in the case of Maharaja Nubkissen, the friend and counsellor of Clive and Hastings who beginning life as the Persian tutor of the latter, rose to be the Company's interpreter and crowned career as their political banyan. [[James Mill|Mill]] makes no reference to him: [[Robert Orme|Orme]] does not mention him, and his name is absent from the pages of [[John Malcolm|Sir John Malcolm]]. Yet he was no ordinary man, and the influence and power wielded by him during the thirty years which precede his death in 1797 was extraordinarily large.<ref name = "Cotton288-289">Cotton, H.E.A., ''Calcutta Old and New'', 1909/1980, p288-289, General Printers and Publishers Pvt. Ltd.</ref>|source= [[H. E. A. Cotton|Cotton, H.E.A.]]}}
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| It is beyond reasonable doubt that along with [[Mir Jafar]], [[Jagat Sheth]], [[Omichund]] and [[Krishna Chandra Roy]], Ram Chandra Roy, Ali Beg; Nabakrishna Deb also played a crucial role in turning India to a British colony, instrumental in the plot against Nawab [[Siraj-ud-Daula]].<ref name="Menin2004">{{cite book|author=Sarah Menin|title=Constructing Place: Mind and the Matter of Place-Making|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7kksWHDk5L4C&pg=PA156|access-date=4 April 2017|date=24 February 2004|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-37909-5|pages=156–}}</ref>
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| <ref name="dnaindia.com"/> | |
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| He created a sensation in those days by spending [[Rupee|Rs.]] 1 million (1 million) for the ''sraddha'' (the last rites ceremony by [[Hinduism|Hindu]] tradition) of his mother, feeding the poor, honouring the learned, and doing everything on a grand scale. He constructed the 50 km (31 mi) road from [[Behala]] to [[Kulpi]] (presently in [[South 24 Parganas district]]) in what was then jungle territory.<ref name = "Bose242"/>
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| He organised a conference of learned men in his Rajbari and patronised many musicians. Harekrishna Dirghangi, Nitai Baisnab and other {{transl|hi|kabials}} enjoyed his hospitality. He donated to different causes irrespective of religious denominations. He gave money to start the Calcutta Madrasa, donated land for St.John's Church and earned a reputation as a philanthropist.<ref name = "Bose242"/>
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| ==Family==
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| He left behind two sons, one adopted and the other his own begetting. His adopted son, [[Gopi Mohun Deb]] (Raja) was known for his musical taste. His natural born son was Rajkrishna Deb (Raja). He had one grandson on the adopted side – [[Radhakanta Deb|Radhakanta Deb (Raja, Sir)]]. His natural born son was father of eight distinguished sons, prominent among whom were [[Kali Krishna Deb]] (Raja Bahadur), Kamal Krishna Deb (Maharaja) and Narendra Krishna Deb (Maharaja Bahadur, Sir). All of them, and some others belonging to subsequent generations in the family, have roads named after them in Kolkata. His most recent descendant, Agnish Krishna Deb is currently living in Kolkata.
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| ==Historical Palace Shobhabazar Rajbari== | |
| {{Main|Shobhabazar Rajbari}}
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| Raja Nabakrishna Deb (1737–97) founder of the [[Shobhabazar Rajbari]], started life modestly but soon amassed considerable wealth in his service to the British, in particular by his role in assisting to topple [[Siraj ud-Daulah]]. During his lifetime Raja Nabakrishna Deb built two palaces. The palace at 33 Raja Nabakrishna Street, on the northern side of the road, was the one first constructed by him, subsequently given over by him to his adopted son Gopimohan. He built the palace at 36 Raja Nabakrishna Street when a son was born to him later in life and left it to his natural son, Raja Rajkrishna and his descendants.
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| ==Gallery== | | ==Gallery== |
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| {{reflist}}6. Samsad Bengali Charitabhidhan (Vol.1) ( Biographical Dictionary) ed. Anjali Bose. {{ISBN|978-81-7955-135-6}} | | {{reflist}} |
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| | ==Sources== |
| | Samsad Bengali Charitabhidhan (Vol.1) ( Biographical Dictionary) ed. Anjali Bose. {{ISBN|978-81-7955-135-6}} |
| <br />{{Kolkata topics}} | | <br />{{Kolkata topics}} |
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| {{DEFAULTSORT:Deb, Nabakrishna}} | | {{DEFAULTSORT:Deb, Nabakrishna}} |
| [[Category:People from Kolkata]] | | [[Category:People from Kolkata]] |
| [[Category:History of Kolkata]]
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| [[Category:Hindu revivalists]] | | [[Category:Hindu revivalists]] |
| [[Category:1733 births]] | | [[Category:1733 births]] |