Bankim Chandra Chatterjee
- Poli en
- Nov 8, 2019
- 2 min read

Bankim Chandra Chatterjee ( বঙ্কিমচন্দ্র চট্টোপাধ্যায় ) was conceived in Kanthalpara in 1838, the most youthful of three children, and was taught at the Mohsin College in Hooghly and later at the Presidency College from which he graduated in 1857. Chatterjee was hitched at eleven years old; his significant other was five years of age and was to pass on when he was twenty-two. His subsequent spouse, Rajalakshmi Devi, bore him three girls.
He was named Deputy Collector of Jessore and afterward became Deputy Magistrate, during which time he additionally finished a law degree. He was made a Companion, Order of the Indian Empire, in 1894.
Generally popular as the writer of Bande Mataram, presently the National Song of India, Chatterjee is a key figure in Bengali writing, composing books and articles. Having started his scholarly profession by composing stanza, Chatterjee quickly changed to fiction. Rajmohan's Wife, written in English, was Chatterjee's first novel to show up in print. His first sentiment in Quite a while, was distributed in 1865. Later sentiments were set in a bigger chronicled setting, some portion of Chatterjee's move towards composing takes a shot at scholarly matters for Bengali speakers, a factor which had an impact in realizing a veritable Bengali social renaissance. He composed fourteen books in all and an enormous number of artistic articles and treatises.
In April 1872, the creator started distributing a month to month scholarly magazine named Bangodarshan, the main release of which he filled for the most part with his own work. The magazine was to incorporate books, papers, scholarly analysis and strict exchange.
Chatterjee passed on in 1894, in Calcutta, and is presently recollected not just as the dad of current Bengali writing yet additionally as a key figure in the Indian patriot battle.
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