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Sovabazar

Shobhabazar
Neighbourhood in Kolkata (Calcutta)
Map Kolkata Shobhabazar.jpg
Shobhabazar is located in Kolkata
Shobhabazar
Shobhabazar
Location in Kolkata
Coordinates: 22°35′46″N 88°21′55″E / 22.59611°N 88.36528°E / 22.59611; 88.36528Coordinates: 22°35′46″N 88°21′55″E / 22.59611°N 88.36528°E / 22.59611; 88.36528
Country  India
State West Bengal
City Kolkata
KMC Wards 9, 17, 18
Metro Station Shobhabazar-Sutanuti
Elevation 36 ft (11 m)
Population (2001)
 • Total 19,937
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
Area code(s) +91 33

Shobhabazar (also spelt Sovabazar) (Bengali: শোভাবাজার) is a neighbourhood in north Kolkata, earlier known as Calcutta, in the Indian state of West Bengal.

Sheths and Basaks, well-to-do traders at Saptagram, were among the first to settle in Sutanuti and are said to have cleared much of the jungles in the area. Neighbouring Shyambazar was named after the family deity of the Basaks, Shyam Roy (or Gobinda), the attendant of goddess Kali by Shobharam Basak, one of the richest native inhabitants of 18th century Kolkata.

No historian touches upon the origin of the name of the neighbourhood but all link its fame and growth to the Deb family, who settled there.

When Ramcharan Deb was murdered by Maratha marauders in the jungles of Midnapore, his widow came back to their house at Gobindapur with her three sons and five daughters. The house was washed away by the Hooghly River and they moved to Arpooly, and from there to Shobhabazar. Ramcharan’s youngest son Maharaja Nabakrishna Deb rose to fame and power.

The glorious days of Shobhabazar starts with the decision of the British to build, after their decisive win in Battle of Plassey, the new Fort William in the heart of Gobindapur. The inhabitants of the village were compensated and provided with land in Taltala, Kumortuli and Shobhabazar.

Maharaja Nabakrishna Deb built his Rajbari (palace) at Shobhabazar. Some say that he acquired it from Shobharam Basak and made major extensions, matching his taste for pomp and grandeur. At least money was not in short supply. After the death of Siraj ud-Daulah, Nabakrishna Deb along with Mir Jafar, Amir Beg and Ramchand Roy earned eight crore rupees worth of treasures from the secret treasury.


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