- Home
- post

- May 10, 2021, 10:07 a.m.
- blog.Category.None
- admin
Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit
Museum
in Bangladesh
In
1796 donations were invited to erect a building. warren hastings, the patron of
the Society, provided a plot of land at Park Street, Calcutta, and the building
was completed in 1808, and the first Museum in the subcontinent, the Asiatick
Society Museum, was founded in 1814 with nathaniel wallich, a Danish Botanist,
as its Curator. This museum continued to grow with a strong bias for natural
history and ethnography; archaeology enjoying a low priority.
Founded
in 1818, the Carey Museum at Serampore in West Bengal was the first college
museum in the subcontinent. Charles Stuart's Museum in Calcutta was the first
museum under private initiative. The Great Exhibition of 1851 in London
provided an incentive to the British officers in the subcontinent to
participate in museum activity. The School of Industrial Art was founded in
Calcutta in 1854 as an outcome of the impetus provided by the Great Exhibition.
While
Sir william jones initiated the museum culture in Bengal, to james prinsep
belongs the credit of having first conceived the idea of a National Museum in
the subcontinent. The imperialist British government was, however, really not
interested in museum development in India. They were interested in enriching
the Company's Museum in London, established in 1801, with specimens carried
away from the Indian Empire. Whatever support they provided here for museum
development was aimed at acquisition of knowledge about the country's wealth
and hence the British officers had a strong bias for geology, zoology,
industrial arts, agricultural products, forestry and mineralogy. They made no
efforts to protect the cultural property of the subcontinent in the
subcontinent. Charles Stuart's collection was shipped from Calcutta to London
and it was auctioned at Christies in June 1830.
The
change of power from the east india company to the British Crown in 1858 proved
exceedingly helpful to the growth of museums. The birth of the archaeological
survey of india in 1861 ushered in a new era in this field. In 1866 the British
government turned the Asiatick Society Museum into the Imperial Museum by an
Act of Parliament (No XVII of 1866) and soon it was named the indian museum and
it moved to its present building in 1875. The task of reorganising it as a
multipurpose museum was entrusted to Dr John Anderson, who was assisted by
James Wood-Mason. The Treasure-Trove Act, enacted on 13 February 1878 during the
viceroyalty of Lord Lytton, enabled the government to acquire hoards of coins,
inscriptions, sculptures and terracotta remains, which in turn found their way
into the museums.
The
arrival of Lord curzon in 1899 served as an impetus for the growth of museums,
both under imperial support and the patronage of local bodies and institutions
as well as local elite. After thepartition of bengal (1905), Dhaka came to the
limelight. As the Shillong Cabinet of Coins was going to be transferred to the
new capital HE Stapleton, the Honorary Numismatist to the Government, proposed
to set up a museum at Dhaka, which was ultimately established in 1913.
The
enactment of the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act of 1904 gave the necessary
impetus for the growth of local museums in sites of archaeological interest.
Malda in West Bengal witnessed the first museum of this nature. Malda, after
the partition of 1905, formed a part of the new province of East Bengal and
Assam, and the Museum there developed as a repository of Pala-Sena sculptural
art as well as the remains of the cities of gaur and pandua.
Victoria
Memorial Hall, which was destined to be an important museum, owes its beginning
to Lord Curzon. On the demise of Queen Victoria in January 1901, Curzon ordered
the construction of the magnificent marble edifice as a memorial to her
glorious reign, which would serve as a historical museum, a national gallery
'for the commemoration of that which is honourable and glorious in the past'.
The
Bengal Academy of Literature, founded in Calcutta in 1893, which took the name
of vangiya sahitya parisat from 1894, set up Vangiya Sahitya Parisat
Chitrashala in its own building in Calcutta in 1906. The Parisat established as
many as 30 branches in different parts of Bengal and its Rangpur and Dhaka
branches set up Sangrahashalas in 1921, and the Shrihatta branch set up its
Sangrahashala later. Vidyasagar Smrti Sangrahashala of Vangiya Sahitya Parisat
was also established round about the same time.
Gurusaday
Dutt, a Bengal civilian, thought in terms of a museum devoted exclusively to
the arts and crafts of rural Bengal and set up the Bratachari Museum (now
Gurusaday Museum of Bengal Folk Art) in 1940 in his ideal village
Bratacharigram. In 1941 the collection was shifted to his Calcutta house at
Store Street (now Gurusaday Dutt Road). The present building at Thakurpara,
Joka, the south-western suburb of Calcutta in the 24 Parganas (West Bengal) was
occupied by the museum in 1959. The Academy of Fine Arts, Calcutta, founded in
1933, sponsored the creation of an important museum, which contains, besides
attractive exhibits of medieval paintings and textiles, biographical materials
and paintings of Rabindranath Tagore.
The
Calcutta University established an Anthropology Museum in 1920 and in 1937 in
the Western Hall of its Senate House it set up the asutosh museum of india art
to facilitate the study of Ancient Indian History and Culture. The Asutosh
Museum played more or less the role of a provincial museum by exploring and
surveying the different regions of Bengal, by collecting and preserving ancient
relics and significant examples of folk art from different parts of Bengal.
Museums
in Bangladesh' There are several museums in the country, which are depositories
of the country's rich cultural heritage. The varendra research museum at
Rajshahi, established in April 1910 under the patronage of Kumar saratkumar ray
of the Dighapatiya Raj family, was the first museum in the country. Narendra
Narayan Ray Chaudhury of Baldha established the baldah museum at Dhaka in 1925
along with a Botanical Garden. Situated at Wari overlooking the Christian
Cemetery in Dhaka, it started as a home museum and it grew into a repository of
varied items. In between the creation of these two museums the Dhaka (Dacca)
Museum was founded in 1913.
Varendra
Research Museum, Rajshahi
Initially
housed in a single room in the old Secretariat (now Dhaka Medical College
Hospital) it was formally inaugurated by Lord Carmichael on 7 August 1913 and
HE Stapleton, officiating Director of Public Instruction of Bengal was its
first Honourary Secretary. nalini kanta bhattasali joined the museum as its
Curator on 1 July 1914. Years before the Dhaka University came into being,
Bhattasali's efforts made it a centre of historical research. It moved to the
Baraduari of the nimtali palace (now inside the Anwar Pasha Bhavan of Dhaka
University) and continued its existence there till it was moved to a site at
Shahbagh and turned into the bangladesh national museum. The names of Satyendranath
Bhadra, Sayid Aulad Hasan, BK Das, Khwaja Muhammad Yusuf, hakim habibur rahman,
syed muhammad taifoor and Abul Hasnat should always be remembered in connection
with the establishment and nourishment of the Dhaka Museum.
Rammala
Museum of Comilla, established in 1935, owes its origin to Mahesh Bhattacharya,
a homeopath and philanthropist who set it up in memory of his mother Rammala.
Now a mere shadow of its former self, the museum was indicative of the abiding
interest of Mahesh Bhattacharya in the archaeological potentialities of the
Mainamati-Lalmai area, which were then yet to be unveiled.
Zainul
Abedin Sangrahashala, Mymensingh
In
1905 vangiya sahitya parishad decided to set up its branches outside Calcutta
and its first branch at Rangpur set up a Sangrahashala (museum) and following
its example Dhaka Sahitya Parisat (founded in 1921) founded Dhaka Sahitya
Parisad Sangrahashala chiefly with the collections of Birendranath Basu and NK
Bhattasali. Shrihatta (Sylhet) Sahityn Parisat Sangrahashala was added to the
list of museums in Bangladesh before 1947.
From
this humble beginning in the colonial period, Bangladesh witnessed considerable
growth in museums in the period between 1947-1971, though the three Shahitya
Parisat Museums at Rangpur, Dhaka and Sylhet became defunct. The first
archaeological site museum was built in a single-room at paharpur in present
Naogaon district in 1957. Now a new modern building has replaced the old one
and the antiquities have been arranged there systematically. In order to
preserve the antiquities recovered from archaeological excavations and
explorations site museums were added at mainamati (1966) of Comilla, mahasthan
(1967) of Bogra and at lalbagh fort (ready in 1971 but formally inaugurated in
1974) of Dhaka city.
Archaeological
Site Museum, Mahasthan
Poet
Rabindranath Tagore's house called Kuthibari at Shilaidaha in Kushtia district
was declared to be a protected monument in 1957 and later developed into a
Personalia Museum. With a view to collecting, exhibiting and studying materials
pertaining to the tribal folks, an ethnological museum was established in
Chittagong in 1967; though it was formally opened in 1974.
Realising
the added importance of the Dhaka Museum, a scheme for the development of the
museum was drawn up in 1951 and steps were taken to amalgamate Baldha Museum
with Dhaka Museum, which was housed then in the Baraduari of the Nimtali
Palace. The Baldha collection was formally taken over by the Dhaka Museum in
1963 and the Dinajpur collections were added to it in 1961.
Archaeological
Site Museum, Mainamati
The
foundation of a Central Museum building in Dhaka was laid in 1966 at Shahbag
and it was proposed that the existing Dhaka Museum should form the nucleus of
the proposed new museum. Dhaka Museum (Board of Trusties) Ordinance was
promulgated in 1970 making the Dhaka Museum a statutory institution with an
autonomous character. On the completion of the new building in Shahbag
Bangladesh National Museum was established on 20 September 1983 and the objects
held by Dhaka Museum stood transferred to the National Museum. Thus the Dhaka
Museum, which came into being in 1913 and grew in stature and collection during
its life span of 69 years, ceased to exist, giving rise to what is now the
National Museum of Bangladesh.
Bangladesh
Folk Art Museum, Sonargaon
With
the emergence of Bangladesh, museum development got a big momentum and by now
there are more than 80 museums in Bangladesh. Notable among the new museums are
the Bangladesh Folk Art Museum at Songargaon, Memorial Museum at Shahjadpur
Kacharibari, Ahsan Manjil Museum, Zainul Abedin Sangrahashala at Mymensingh,
Museums at Upajatiya Cultural Academy at Birisiri and Tribal Cultural
Institute, Rangamati; Liberation War Museum at Mainamati, Comilla, Zia Smriti
Museum of Chittagong, Osmany Memorial Museum at Sylhet. Recently Dhaka Nagar
Jadughar (City Museum); Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Smriti Jadughar and
the Muktiyuddha Jadughar (Liberation War Museum) have been established in
Dhaka. On the southern side of the Bijoy Sarani Armed Forces Museum has
recently been situated.
Mention
may also be made of special personalia museums like the Lalan Museum, at
Chheuria (Kushtia) and Hasan Raja Museum at Sunamganj focusing on the life and
activities of two great mystic poets of Bangladesh.
Table
1 Museums in urban areas.
Bogra Zila Parishad Museum
Chittagong Ethnological Museum, Forest Research
Institute Museum, Chittagong University Museum, Zia Smriti Museum, Fisheries
Museum
Chandpur Fisheries Museum
Comilla Rammala Museum
Cox's
Bazar Fisheries Museum
Dhaka Bangladesh National Museum, Museum of Science
and Technology, National Art Gallery (Shilpakala Academy), Folk Heritage
Museum (Bangla Academy), Lalbagh Fort
Museum, Postal Museum, Zainul Abedin Shishu Chitrasala, Museum of Geological
Survey of Bangladesh, Bangladesh Small and Cottage Industry Corporation Design
Centre Gallery of Textiles, Ceramics and Handicrafts, Children's Museum (Shishu
Academy), Dhaka Nagar Jadughar, Muktijuddha Jadughar, Bangabandhu Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman Smriti Jadughar, Police Museum, Science Museum.
Dinajpur Dinajpur Museum
Faridpur Faridpur Museum
Kushtia Kushtia Museum
Mymensingh Mymensingh Museum, Zainul Abedin
Sangrahashala
Kishoreganj Kishoreganj Museum
Rajshahi Varendra Research Museum, Varendra
Academy Collectors, Shahid Smriti Sangrahashala, Rajshahi University
Rangpur Rangpur Museum
Rangamati Tribal Cultural Institute
Sunamganj Hasan Raja Museum
Table
2 Museums in non-urban areas.
Sonargaon Bangladesh Folk Art Museum (near Dhaka)
Birisiri Upajatya Cultural Academy Museum (near
Mymensingh)
Chheuria Lalan Museum (near Kushtia)
Shilaidaha Kuthibari Memorial Museum (near Kushtia)
Mahasthana Archaeological Site Museum (near Bogra)
Shahjadpur Kacharibari Memorial Museum (near Pabna)
Paharpur Archaeological Site Museum
Gurudaspur Chalanbil Museum
Mainamati Archaeological Site Museum (near
Comilla), Liberation War Museum
[AM Chowdhury, Source Banglapedia
Bibliography
Firoz Mahmud and Habibur Rahman, The Museums in Bangladesh, Dhaka, 1987.