Jugdia

Jugdia is a village under the Magrahat Police station of South 24 Parganas of West Bengal. Jugdia village is under the Diamond Harbour subdivision. The village is enrolled as a Gram panchayat of Magrahat Block-II, only 40 km distance from Kolkata, and 14 km from Baruipur town.

History

Kasimbazar and Jugdia in the eighteenth century offer a fascinating glimpse into the world of the South Asian merchants as well as the organization of the textile trade in Bengal. The East India Company determined on a course of sustained expansion of its import of raw silk from Bengal, particularly from the region of Kasimbazar. A new dimension was added to this conflict when the Mughal made Bengal a Mughal province. After Kasimbazar and Jugdia conflicts destroyed the both textile based by the East India Company. Ananta Manik of Bhalwa frequently enlisted Arakanese help to retain his zamindari in the face of the Mughal threat emanating from Bengal. This fight was complicated by the Portuguese presence in the area. The latter frequently acted as mercenaries in the countries of the Bay and were utilized as such by local rulers in their wars against each other.

In the eighteenth century Jugdia became an important market town for cotton textiles (chiefly baftas) that were produced in the surrounding areas. Then shifts that rendered the south-east delta an active area. Means basins of Ganages river in South 24 parganas. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, an ancestor of Munshi Hazi Desarat Molla and Munshi Chamcham Molla fled from Jugdia of Kasimbazar area in undivided Bengal under the Murshidabad region and settled in the basin of the Ganges river in South 24 parganas. They named the village Jugdia. They gradually spread education and Islamic culture in their own tradition. Earlier they were engaged in Munshibdar in the various parts of lower Bengal, especially the Bay of Bengal and Island of Sunderban. Chamcham Molla was given land as Khaznader from Jaminder and Hazi Desarat as a Khaznader from Pathatnkhali island under the Gosaba police station in Sunderban area. But native village established at Jugdia under the Magrahat police station.[1][2]

References

  1. "The French East India Company's Trade in Eastern Bengal from 1750-53: A Look at the Chandernagore Letters to Jugdia". Indian Historical Review.
  2. Merchants and Companies in Bengal: Kasimbazar and Jugdia in the Eighteenth Century by Rilla Mukherjee
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