Madras turns 370
It was on this day (22nd August) in 1639, that British East India
Company Administrator Francis Day bought a small strip of land on the
Coromandel Coast from the Vijayanagara King, Peda Venkata Raya.
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Chennai |
This region was then ruled by Damerla Venkatpathy, the Nayak of
Vandavasi, who granted the British earlier permission to build a factory
and warehouse for their trading enterprises. A year later, the British
built Fort St. George, which became the nucleus of the growing colonial
city.
Chennai, as Madras recently came to be called, turns 370 years today.
The founding of the city is being celebrated only for the past six years
as ‘Madras Week’. The seventh edition of the Madras Day celebration
commenced on August 16 and it will go on upto September 1. The
organizers have crowded all important functions today, which is flanked
by one week before and one week after celebrations in a fitting manner.
As the old history is ‘flash-backed’, the fortnight-long celebrations
are marked with cultural and literary activities, intertwined with
heritage walks, debates and contests, poetry, patti mandram, music,
quiz, food festivals, rallies, photo exhibition and a wide range of
events.
Sure it brings back the glimpse of old Madras, the present
Chennaiites never knew, otherwise would never come to know.It was this
day, the deal was struck by Francis Day, his ‘dubash’ Beri Thimmappa and
their superior Andrew Cogan, with local Nayak rulers.The original
document relating to the purchase of the piece of land on the border of
Bay of Bengal is said to have been signed at Chandragiri fort, near
Tirupati in neighbouring Andhara Pradesh. And it was on this land the
building of Fort St. George, a historic fort which was for a while the
seat of power of the East India Company, came up.
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British East India Company |
Robert Clive, founder of British empire in India, got married in a
church inside the fort. His marriage certificate is still the prized
possession of the museum in the fort.Once the fort was established,
settlements grew around it-the black township and the whites colony and
all that. As the settlements grew with expanding trade and industry, the
villages around it were absorbed into the newly formed city. One of them
was ‘Madrasapattinam’, another was ‘Chennaipattinam’.
The English name of the city seems to have been coined by the
Britishers by shortening the former, while the Tamil name for the city
was shortening the latter, the city got recently by the present rulers.
The idea of celebrating the founding day of the city (August 22,
1639), shaped six years ago. ‘Madras Day’ was an idea that three people
put together - the city’s famed historian, S. Muthiah, journalist Sashi
Nair and editor-publisher Vincent D’ Souza. Later, they have been joined
by three others - senior journalist and editor Sushila Ravindranath,
entrepreneur and writer-historian V. Sriram and journalist and web site
entrepreneur, Revathi.
There had been a controversy regarding the exact day the land where
Madraspatnam came up later was handed over to the British East India
Company’s Francis Day and Andrew Cogan.
The actual date confusion is between 22 August and 22 July. The
controversy arose since the agreement documents dates the records to 22
July 1639 rather than 22 August of that year.
It is often stated that since Francis Day and Andrew Cogan did not
arrive to the coast which is now Chennai until 27 July 1639.
The evidence comes from writings of Henry Davison Love, whose
monumental three-volume history of Madras from 1640-1800 is the Bible of
all searchers after Madras’s early history, which states that “The
Naik’s grant, erroneously styled a farman, which was probably drafted by
Day, was delivered (to Andrew Cogan at Masulipatam on September 3,
1639... Three copies are extant ... all of which are endorsed by Cogan.
Only the last bears a date, 22 July, 1639, where July is probably a slip
for August, since Day did not reach Madras until 27 July.”
Courtesy: Asian Tribune
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