*** Welcome to piglix ***

Tagore family

style="back
Gobindapur
Panchanan  · Sukdeb
Jairam
Pathuriaghata
Darpanarayan
Gopimohan
Hara Coomar  · Chandra Coomar  · Prasanna Coomar
Gnanendramohan
Jatindramohan  · Shourindramohan
Shoutindramohan
Jorasanko
Nilmani
Ramlochan  · Rammani  · Ramballav
Dwarkanath  · Ramanath
Debendranath  · Girindranath  · Nagendranath
Debendranath’s family
Generation 1
Dwijendranath  · Satyendranath
Hemendranath  · Birendranath
Jyotirindranath  · Somendranath
Rabindranath  · Soudamini
Sukumari  · Saratkumari
Swarnakumari  · Barnakumari
Generation 2
Dwijendranath's children
Dwipendranath  · Arunendranath
Nitindranath  · Sudhindranath
Kritendranath
Satyendranath's children
Surendranath  · Indira
Hemendranath's Children
Hitendranath  · Kshitindranath
Ritendranath  · Pratibha
Pragna ·Abhi  · Manisha
Shovana  · Sushama
Sunrita  · Sudakshina
Purnima  
Birendranath's son
Balendranath
Rabindranath's children
Rathindranath  · Shamindranath
Madhurilata · Renuka
Meera
Girindranath’s family
Generation 1
Ganedranath  · Gunendranath
Generation 2
Gunendranath's children
Gaganendranath
Samarendranath Tagore
Abanindranath  · Sunayani

The Tagore Family, with over three hundred years of history, has been one of the leading families of Calcutta, India, and is regarded as a key influence during the Bengal Renaissance. The family has produced several persons who have contributed substantially in the fields of business, social and religious reformation, literature, art and music.

Tagores are Bengali Brahmins (Kushari) who came from eastern part of Bengal (now in Bangladesh) and settled in the region situated on the right bank of river Hooghly (Rarh) in the 14th century.

Europeans started coming to Bengal in the 16th century, resulting in the founding of Ugulim (Hooghly-Chinsura) by the Portuguese in 1579. The Battle of Plassey in 1757 resulted in the deposition of the last independent Nawab of Bengal. After the battle of Buxar, British East India company was given the right to collect revenues from Bengal and by 1793 the British East India Company abolished Nizamat (local ruler) and took control of the former Mughal province of Bengal.

The Bengal renaissance of the 19th century was a remarkable period of societal transformation in which a whole range of creative activities – literary, cultural, social and economic – flourished. The Bengal Renaissance was the culmination of the process of emergence of the cultural characteristics of the Bengali people that had started in the age of Hussein Shah (1493–1519). This spread over, covering around three centuries, and had a tremendous impact on Bengali society. Incidentally that coincided with the rise of the Tagore family. The Tagore family attained prominence during this period through its unusual social positioning between Indian and European influences.

To quote Chitra Deb, "Though the cultural role of the Thakurs has received the greatest attention by far, their importance on final assessment is a composite one: commercial and political as well as literary and musical. They played a collective role in every patriotic movement of their times: Nabagopal Mitra's Hindu Mela, the Congress and the National Conference, the Rakhi Festival of 1905, and the Nationalist Movement generally. The story of the Thakurs is inseparable from the story of Calcutta, Bengal and India."


...
Wikipedia

...