Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-x5cpj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-26T11:04:45.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Goddess encounters: Mughals, Monsters and the Goddess in Bengal*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2013

Abstract

This paper makes a case for exploring the cultural facets of Mughal rule as well as for a stronger engagement with sources in vernacular languages for the writing of Mughal history. Bengal's regional tradition of goddess worship is used to explore the cultural dimensions of Mughal rule in that region as well as the idioms in which Bengali regional perceptions of Mughal rule were articulated. Mangalkavya narratives—a quintessentially Bengali literary genre—are studied to highlight shifting perceptions of the Mughals from the late sixteenth century to the eighteenth century. During the period of the Mughal conquest of Bengal, the imperial military machine was represented as a monster whom the goddess Chandi, symbolizing Bengal's regional culture, had to vanquish. By the eighteenth century, when their rule had become much more regularized, the Mughals were depicted as recognizing aspects of Bengal's regional culture by capitulating in the end to the goddess and becoming her devotees. This paper also studies the relationship of the Mughal regime with Bengal's popular cultural celebration—the annual Durga puja—and explores its implications for the public performance of religion and for community formation during the early modern period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the South Asia Seminar series at Yale University in 2009 and at the Annual conference of the Asian Studies Association at Philadelphia in 2010. I am grateful to audiences at both places for suggestions and comments. I would also like to thank Rajarshi Ghosh and Utsa Ray for making available a hard to find copy of Dwija Madhava Rachita Mangalchandir Geet and to Madhuri Desai for patiently listening to preliminary ideas about the paper. Mrinalini Sinha, Muzaffar Alam, Richard Eaton and Sanjay Subrahmanyam offered much-needed support and finally, I owe a sincere vote of thanks to the editor of this journal.

References

1 This literature is large and growing larger. A few representative examples include, Alam, Muzaffar, ‘The Culture and Politics of Persian in Pre-Colonial Hindustan’ in Pollock, Sheldon (ed.), Literary Cultures in History. Reconstructions From South Asia, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2003, pp. 131198Google Scholar; Guha, Sumit, ‘Transitions and Translations: Regional Power and Vernacular Identity in the Dakhan: 1500–1800’, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 24, 2, 2004, pp. 2331CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Asher, Catherine B., The Architecture of Mughal India, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1992CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Francoise ‘Nalini’ Delvoye, ‘The Image of Akbar as a Patron of Music in Indo-Persian and Vernacular Sources’ in Habib, Irfan (ed.), Akbar and His India, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1997, pp. 188214Google Scholar; Brown, Katherine Butler, ‘Did Aurangzeb Ban Music? Questions for the Historiography of his Reign’, Modern Asian Studies, 41, 1, 2007, pp. 77121CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Minkowski, Christopher and O'Hanlon, Rosalind, ‘What Makes People Who They Are? Pandit Networks and the Problem of Livelihoods in Early Modern Western India’, Indian Economic and Social History Review (IESHR), 45, 3, 2008, pp. 381416.Google Scholar

2 See in this connection, Kumkum Chatterjee, ‘Cultural flows and Cosmopolitanism in Mughal India: the Bishnupur Kingdom’, IESHR, 46, 2, 2009, pp. 147–182.

3 This literature is too large to permit comprehensive citation. Selective examples include, Kinsley, David R., Hindu Goddesses: Visions of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religious Tradition, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1986Google Scholar; Bayly, Susan, Saints, Goddesses and Kings: Muslims and Christians in South Indian Society, 1700–1900, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1989Google Scholar; Pinchtman, Tracy, The Rise of the Goddess in the Hindu Tradition, SUNY Press, Albany, 1994Google Scholar; Erndl, Kathleen M., Victory to the Mother: The Hindu Goddess of North-West India in Myth, Ritual and Symbol, Oxford University Press, New York, 1993Google Scholar; Rodrigues, Hillary Peter, Ritual Worship of the Great Goddess: The Liturgy of Durga Puja With Interpretations, SUNY Press, Albany, 2003Google Scholar; Bhattacharjee, Sukumari, Legends of Devi, Orient Longman, Mumbai, 1998Google Scholar; Bannerjee, Sudeshna, Durga Puja: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, Rupa and Company, New Delhi, 2004Google Scholar; Acharya, Haripada, Mahalaya Theke Bijoya, Sri Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama, Narendrapur, 1991Google Scholar; Prajnananda, SwamiMahisasuramardini Durga, Sri Ramakrishna Vedanta Math, Calcutta, 1990Google Scholar; Chakrbarty, Kunal, Religious Process. The Puranas and the Making of a Regional Tradition, Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2001Google Scholar; McDaniel, June, Offering Flowers, Feeding Skulls. Popular Goddess Worship in Bengal, Oxford University Press, New York, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar There are countless internet websites about the history and traditions of goddess worship in different parts of India including Bengal as well as Bengal's Durga puja.

4 Narayana Rao, V. and Richards, J. F., ‘Banditry in Mughal India: Historical and Folk Perceptions’, IESHR, 17, 1980, pp. 95120Google Scholar; Busch, Allison, ‘Brajbhasha Poets at the Mughal Court’, Hidden in Plain view: Brajbhasha Poets at the Mughal Court’, Modern Asian Studies, 44, 2, 2010, p. 267309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 See footnote 3.

6 Pinchtman, Rise of the Goddess, pp. 1–5.

7 Pinchtman, Rise of the Goddess; Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses, Bhattacharya, Sudhibhushan (ed.), Dwija Madhava Rachita Mangalchandir Geet, Calcutta University Press, Calcutta, 1957Google Scholar: Preface; Bhattacharya, Ashutosh, Bangla Mangalkabyer Itihasa, A. Mukherjee and Company, Calcutta, 2002 (reprint)Google Scholar.

8 Pinchtman, Rise of the Goddess, p. 5.

9 S. Bhattacharya (ed.), Mangalchandir Geet: Preface.

10 K. Chakrabarty, Religious Process.

11 Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses, pp. 95–97.

12 See Coburn, Thomas B., Devi Mahatmya. The Crystallization of the Goddess Tradition, South Asia Books, Columbia, Missouri, 1985, pp. 89208Google Scholar, for a thorough analysis of all the epithets used in the Devi-Mahatmya to describe the goddess.

13 Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses, p. 95.

14 Coburn, Thomas B., Encountering the Goddess. A Translation of the Devi Mahatmya and a Study of its Interpretation, SUNY Press, Albany, 1991, p. 40.Google Scholar

15 Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 5–7.

16 Ibid. p. 7.

17 Coburn, Encountering the Goddess, pp. 20, 78; Banerjee, Durga Puja, p. 5.

18 Coburn, Encountering the Goddess, p. 78: 11.45.

19 Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses, pp. 126, 147.

20 Ibid., pp. 16–118.

21 McDermott, Rachel Fell, ‘The Vaishnavized Uma of Bengali Devotionalism’, Journal of Vaisnava Studies, 8, 2, 2000, pp. 131146.Google ScholarMother of My Heart, Daughter of My Dreams. Kali and Uma in the Devotional Poetry of Bengal, Oxford University Press, New York, 2001.

22 Sen, Sukumar (ed.), Kabikankan Birachita Chandi, Ananda Publishers, Calcutta, 1993, p. 64.Google Scholar Interestingly, Dwija Madhav's Mangalchandir Geet (ed. S. Bhattacharya) composed slightly before Mukunda Chakrabarti's Chandimangal describes the goddess as ‘dasabhuja’ (p. 65) i.e. ten-armed, but contains no explicit reference to being surrounded by her offspring gods and goddesses.

23 Bhattacharya, Tithi, ‘Tracking the Goddess: Religion, Community and Identity in the Durga Puja Ceremonies of Nineteenth Century Calcutta’, Journal of Asian Studies, 66, 4, 2007, pp. 919962.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 McDermott, Mother of My Heart, p. 3.

26 Datta, Bimala Chandra, Durga Puja. Sekaal Theke Ekaal, Ramakrishna Vivekananda Institute of Research and Culture, Calcutta, 1986Google Scholar; Haripada Acharya, Mahalaya theke Vijaya, p. 12; Swami Prajnananda, Mahisasuramardini Durga, p. 246; Banerjee, Durga Puja, p. 89, endnote 1.

27 Bidyanidhi, Jogesh Chandra Roy, Puja Parban, Viswabharati Press, Calcutta, 1951.Google Scholar

28 K. Chakravarty, Religious Process, p. 201.

29 Simha, Maniklal, Pashchim Rarh Tatha Bankura Samskriti, Chittaranjan Dasgupta, Bishnupur, 1384 B.S., pp. 8289.Google Scholar

30 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, p. 173.

31 Simha, Bankura Samskriti, pp. 82, 92.

32 Ibid., p. 89. According to Maniklal Simha, many village goddesses who were worshipped particularly in the Northern parts of the Bankura district were originally Buddhist deities (pp. 86–87).

33 K. Chakrabarty, Religious Process, p. 177.

34 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, p. 198.

35 Basu, Jogeshchandra, Medinipurer Itihasa, Sen Brothers and Company, Calcutta, 1940, p. 314Google Scholar. See also Simha, Bankura Samskriti, pp. 82–87.

36 Oman, John Campbell, The Brahmans, Theists and Muslims of India, George W. Jacobs and Company, Philadelphia, 1907, p. 20Google Scholar.

37 Kinsley, Hindu Goddesses, pp. 83–84.

38 Eaton, Richard M., The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204–1760, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1994, pp. 5859.Google Scholar

39 Ibid., p. 109.

40 Basu, Medinipurer Itihasa, pp. 350, 531–533.

41 Ibid. pp. 128–129.

42 Dasgupta, Chittaranjan, Bharater Shilpa Samskritir Patabhumikaye Bishnupurer Mandir Terracotta, Sushama Dasgupta, Bishnupur, 2000, pp. 289290.Google Scholar

43 Chowdhury, Saifuddin, Fazl, Mohammed Abulet al. (eds), Varendra Anchaler Itihasa, Office of the Divisional Commissioner, Rajshahi, 1998, p. 792.Google Scholar

44 Pollock, Sheldon, The Language of the Gods in the World of Men. Sanskrit, Culture and Power in Premodern India, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2006.Google Scholar

45 S. Sen (ed.) Chandimangal, p. 63.

46 C. Dasgupta, Bishnupurer Mandir Terracotta, pp. 286–287.

47 Sen, Sukumar, History of Bengali Literature, Delhi, Sahitya Akademy, 1979Google Scholar.

48 Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 35–41; Datta, Ekaal theke Sekaal, pp. 175–177, 200–203.

49 S. Bhattacharya, Mangalchandir Geet.

50 A. Bhattacharya, Bangla Mangalkavyer Itihasa, p. 448.

51 Ibid., pp. 488–490.

52 S. Bhattacharya, Mangalchandir Geet, pp. 7–8.

53 Ibid. pp. 15–16.

54 Ibid., p. 19.

55 A. Bhattacharya, Bangla Mangalkabyer Itihasa, p. 448.

56 S. Bhattacharya, Mangalchandir Geet, p. 19.

57 See Chattopadhyaya, B. D., Representing the Other? Sanskrit Sources and the Muslims, Delhi, Manohar, 1998.Google Scholar

58 See also, Karim, Abdul, Social History of the Muslims in Bengal (Down to 1538 AD), The Asiatic Society of Pakistan, Dacca, 1959, p. 147.Google Scholar

59 Biswas, Achintya (ed.), Bipradas Pipilaier Manasamangal, Ratnabali, Calcutta, 2002, p. 135.Google Scholar

60 Chaudhuri, Sushil, ‘The Rise and Decline of Hugli’, Bengal Past and Present, 86, 161, 1967, pp. 3367Google Scholar, Trade and Commercial Organization in Bengal 1650–1720, Firma K. L. Mukhopadhyaya, Calcutta, 1975.

61 Mukhia, Harbans, The Mughals of India, Blackwell, Bodmin, Cornwall, 2004, pp. 23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

62 Karim, Social History of the Muslims of Bengal, pp. 154–155; Tarafdar, M. R., Husain Shahi Bengal, 1449–1538: A Socio-Political Study, Asiatic Society of Pakistan, Dacca, 1965, pp. 311312Google Scholar. For Tarafdar's more detailed explanation as to why the term ‘Mongol’ or ‘Mangal’ could have been used in the late fifteenth century to denote the Mughals, see p. 312.

63 Well-known Bengali narratives of the sixteenth century and beyond attest to use of the term ‘Mughal’ rather than ‘Mongol’. See for example, Kabikankan Mukundaram Chakrabarty's ‘Chandimangala’, probably of the late sixteenth century, and Bharatchandra Roy's ‘Annadamangala’ of the mid eighteenth century.

64 The well-known ‘Ramacharita’ of Sandhyakara Nandy, composed in Bengal during the Pala period was, for instance, entirely in slesha. See Shastri, Haraprasada (ed.), revised with English translation and notes by Basak, Radhagovinda, Ramacharita of Sandhyakaranandin, Asiatic Society, Calcutta, 1969Google Scholar. For the legacy of Sanksrit literary conventions on Mangalkavyas, see, A. Bhattacharya, Bangla Mangalkavyer Itihasa; also see Chatterjee, Kumkum, The Cultures of History in Early Modern India, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 2009, pp. 9192CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for the exchange via double entendre between the goddess and the boatman, see, ‘Annadamangala’, pp. 156–160 in Brojendranath Bandyopadhyaya and Sajanikanta Das (eds), Bharatchandra Granthabali, Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, Calcutta, 1369 B.S. For the importance and use of slesha in Indic literature see, Bronner, Yigal, Extreme Poetry: The South Asian Movement of Simultaneous Narration, Columbia University Press, New York, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

65 S. Sen (ed.), Chandimangala, p. 28. It should be noted that Sen refers to two eighteenth century copies of Dwija Madhava's composition, but was of the opinion that it was not possible to ascertain a more precise date for the actual composition of this work. I find the careful and much more detailed scholarship of S. Bhattacharya about this work to be more convincing in this regard and have therefore accepted Bhattacharya's assignation of the date of this work to be 1579 AD See S. Bhattacharya, Mangalchandir Geet: Preface. A. Bhattacharya, Bangla Mangalkavyer Itihasa, p. 490, attributes this Mangalkabya to the late sixteenth century also, and is thus in agreement on this point with S. Bhattacharya.

66 K. Chatterjee, The Cultures of History in Early Modern India, pp. 24–61.

67 Representative examples include, Raychadhuri, Tapan, Bengal Under Akbar and Jahangir. An Introductory Study in Social History, Munshiram Manoharlal, Delhi, 1969Google Scholar; Sen, Dinesh Chandra, Banga Bhasha O Sahitya, vol. 2Google Scholar; Bandyopadhyaya, Asit Kumar (ed.), Pashchim Banga Rajya Pustak Parshat (reprint), Calcutta, 2002, pp. 555707Google Scholar, Ashutosh Bhattacharya, Bangla Mangalkavyer Itihasa, pp. 804–806, Zbavitel, Dushan, History of Bengali Literature, Otto Hassarovitz, Weisbaden, 1976, pp. 165166Google Scholar; Ghosh, Pika, Temple to Love. Architecture and Devotion in Seventeenth Century Bengal, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, 2005.Google Scholar Two more nuanced and balanced views of the Mughal conquest of Bengal are to be found in Sir Sarkar, J. N. (ed.), History of Bengal Muslim Period, 1200–1757 Patna, 1973Google Scholar and Eaton, Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier.

68 Chatterjee, K., The Cultures of History; and ‘Cultural Flows and Cosmopolitanism in Mughal India: The Bishnupur Kingdom’, IESHR, 46, 2, 2009, pp. 147182.Google Scholar

69 Nathan, Mirza, Baharistan-i-Ghaibi (trans.), Borah, M. I., Gauhati, 2 volumes, 1936, book 1, p. 13Google Scholar.

70 Eaton, Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier, pp. 151–153; Eaton, Richard M., ‘Kiss my Foot’ Said the King: Firearms, Diplomacy and the Battle for Raichur, 1520’, Modern Asian Studies, 43, 1, 2009, pp. 289313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

71 Karim, Abdul, Corpus of Arabic and Persian Inscriptions of Bengal, Dhaka, Asiatic Society of Bangladesh, 1992, pp. 383386.Google Scholar

72 Karim, Abdul, Banglar Itihasa: Sultani Amal, Dhaka, Bangla Academy, 1977.Google Scholar

73 C. Dasgupta, Bishnupurer Mandir Terracotta; Simha, Bankura Samskriti.

74 Mirza Nathan, Baharistan-i-Ghaibi, book 1, p. 7.

75 Bharistan-i-Ghaiibi, vol. 1, Book 1, p. 2; See also Raychaudhuri, Bengal Under Akbar and Jahangir, p. 84.

76 Banerji, R. D., History of Orissa. From The Earliest Times to the British Period, Bharatiya Publishing House, Delhi,1980, volume 2, pp. 165.Google Scholar

77 Simha, Bankura Samskriti, p. 201.

78 There are other examples within the Mangalkavya tradition where evil and dangerous entities—whether invading armies or, infectious diseases—were represented as monsters. See for example, Ralph Nicholas, ‘The Fever Demon and the Census Commissioner: Sitala Mythology in eighteenth and nineteenth Century Bengal’, in Nicholas, Ralph, Fruits Of Worship: Practical Religion in Bengal, Chronicle Books, New Delhi, 2003, pp 105163.Google Scholar

79 Banerji, R. D., History of Orissa, volume 2, pp. 3, 19Google Scholar.

80 These refer to the shrine of Joychandi near Mughalmari village in the Keshiari area of Midnapur, and to shrines to Boanichandi and Amraichandi near another village called Mughalmari in the boundary area between Bankura and Burdwan districts of West-Bengal. C. Dasgupta, Bishnupurer Mandir Terracotta, pp. 291–292.

82 For a discussion of the general character of the Mangalkavya genre, see A. Bhattacharya, Bangla Mangalkavyer Itihasa; Curley, David L., Poetry and History. Bengali Mangal-kabya and Social Change in Pre-Colonial Bengal, New Delhi, Chronicle Books, 2008.Google Scholar

83 For a discussion of certain historiographical, political and cultural themes in these two Mangalkavys, see Chatterjee, K., ‘The Persianization of Itihasa: Performance narratives and Mughal Political Culture in Eighteenth Century Bengal’, Journal of Asian Studies, 67, 2, 2008, pp. 513543.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

84 All references to the Annadamangala are based on Brojendranath Bandyopadhyaya and Byomkesh Mustafi (eds), Bharatchandra Granthabali, Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1369 B.S.

85Annadamangala’, pp. 156–160. The description of this trip in the Annadamangal constitutes one of the best-known passages of Bengali literature.

86 Basu, Ramram, Raja Pratapaditya Charitra, Mission Press, Searampore, 1801Google Scholar.

87Annadamangala’, pp. 316–320.

88 Ibid., p. 320.

89 All references to this text are based on Dimock, Edward C. Jr. and Gupta, Pratul Chandra translated, annotated and with an introduction, The Maharashtapurana. An Eighteenth Century Bengali Historical Text, Orient Longman, Calcutta, 1985Google Scholar. For discussion of background and circumstances of Gangarama, and whether this narrative can be regarded as a Mangalkavya or not, see Chatterjee, ‘The Persianization of Itihasa’.

90 Maharashtapurana, pp. 35–36.

91 On this point see, Chatterjee, Cultures of History and ‘Cultural Flows and Cosmopolitanism in Mughal India’.

92 For example, Dasgupta, Shashi Bhushan, Bharater Shakti Sadhana O Shakta Sahitya, Sahitya Samsad, Calcutta, 1367 B.S., p. 74Google Scholar; Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, pp.109–111; Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 31–32; T. Bhattacharya, ‘Tracking the Goddess’, pp. 933–934; Chakrabarty, Aloke Kumar, Maharaja Krishnachandra O Tatkalin Banga Samaj, Progressive Book Forum, Calcutta, 1989Google Scholar; Chowdhury, Bhabani Roy, Bangiya Sabarna Katha. Kalikshetra Kalikata, Manna Publications, Calcutta, 2006Google Scholar; Saifuddin Chowdhury et al. (eds), Varendra Anchaler Itihasa, pp. 756–757; Pal, Samar, Tahirpur Rajvamsa, Dhaka, Dhaka, 2007Google Scholar. There are multiple contradictory accounts of the history/chronology of the Tahirpur rajas. Samar Pal, who has carried out the most intensive research about this family, in his latest reconstruction of their history, places Raja Kangshanarayan in the early rather than late sixteenth century. Pal however attests to the close relationship of this family with the Mughals and associates them with having performed the so-called ‘first’ Durga puja. There are also many internet websites which associate these three rajas with performing the ‘first’ Durga puja.

93 Roy Chowdhury, Bangiya Sabarna Katha; Saifuddin Chowdhury (et al.), Varendra Anchaler Itihasa; Pal, Tahirpur Rajavamsa; Roy, A. K., Lakshmikanta. A Chapter in the Social History of Bengal, Mahamandal Press, Benaras, 1928Google Scholar; Pertsch, W. (ed.) Kshitishvamsavalicharitam: A Chronicle of the Family of Raja Krishnachandra of Nadia in Roy, Mohit (ed.), Kshitishvamsavalicharit, Manjusha, Calcutta, 1986Google Scholar; Mukhopadhyaya, Rajiblochan, Maharaja Krishnachandra Roysya Charitram, Mission Press, Searampore, 1805.Google Scholar

94 Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 31–32. The sources mentioned in footnotes 92 and 93 are more or less in agreement with the dates given by Sudeshna Banerjee. As noted in footnote 92, Samar Pal, in his latest work on the Tahirpur rajas, is the only one to place Kangshanarayan a few decades earlier, in the early sixteenth century.

95 Ramacharitam of Sandhyakaranandin, Chapter 3, verse 25B.

96 Datta, Sekaal theke Ekaal, pp. 41–46.

98 Ibid. There are plenty of scattered references to this feature.

99 A. Chakrabarty, Maharaja Krishnachandra; Roy Chowdhury, Bangiya Sabarna Katha; Pal, Tahirpur Rajvamsa.

100 Santra, Tarapada, Krishnanagarer Mritshilpa O Mritshilpi Samaj K. P. Bagchi, Calcutta, 1985Google Scholar; Santra, Tarapada, Pashchimbanger Lokashilpa O Shilpisamaj, Pashchim Banga Sarkar Tathya O Samskriti Bibhag, Calcutta, 2000.Google Scholar

101 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, p. 63.

102 Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 33–34.

103 Personal communication from Mr Devarshi Roy Chowdhury of the Sabarna-Chowdhury family of Barisha, 30 July 2009, but to date, I have been unable to discover the significance of the goddess Durga riding a ghora-simha rather than a lion.

104 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, footnote 2, p. 192.

105 Nag, Arun (ed.), Satika Hutom Pyachar Naksha, Subarnarekha, Calcutta, 1991, pp. 60122.Google Scholar

106 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, pp. 159–160.

107 Pal, Tahirpur Rajvamsa, pp. 40–42.

108 Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 37–44; T. Bhattacharya, ‘Tracking the Goddess’.

109 Banerjee, Durga Puja, pp. 43–45.

110 Ramacharita of Sandhyakaranandin, chapter 3, verse 25B.

111 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, p. 2.

113 Nazimuddin Ahmed, ‘Barendra Anchaler Mandir Sthapatya’ in Saifuddin Chowdhury et al. (eds), Varendra Anchaler Itihasa, pp. 390–425.

114 Datta, Sekal Theke Ekal, p. 82.

115 http://www.clayimage.co.uk/bengal/Thakur%20dalan.html, [accessed 25 January 2013]; A. Chakrabarty, Maharaja Krishnachandra, p. 157.

116 Bidyanidhi, Puja Parban; Dasgupta, S., Bharater Shakti Sadhana O Shakti Sahitya, Sahitya Samsad, Calcutta, 1367 B.S., pp. 7780.Google Scholar

117 Cited in S. Dasgupta, Bharater Shakti Sadhana, pp. 77–78.

118 Ibid., p. 77.

119 Datta, Sekaal Theke Ekaal, p. 2.

120 Cited in Ibid., p. 83, also p. 84, footnote 8.

121 Datta, Sekal Theke Ekaal, mentions many Durgamelas founded by local zamindars.

122 A. Chakrabarty, Maharaja Krishnachandra.

123 Thakurta, Tapati Guha, The Making of a New ‘Indian’ Art: Artists, Aesthetics and Nationalism in Bengal, c. 1850–1920, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1992Google Scholar; Thakurta, Tapati Guha, ‘Clothing the Goddess: The Modern Contest over Representations of the Devi’ in Dehejia, Vidya (ed.), Devi, the Great Goddess: Female Divinity in South Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington DC, 1999, pp. 157179Google Scholar; Uberoi, Patricia, ‘Feminine Identity and National Ethos in Indian Calendar Art’, (Review of Womens’ Studies), Economic and Political Weekly, 25, 17, 1990, pp. WS4148Google Scholar; Ramaswamy, Sumathy, Passions of the Tongue: Language Devotion in Tamil India, 1891–1970, Berkeley, University of California Press, p. 197Google Scholar; Ramaswamy, Sumathy, ‘Virgin Mother, Beloved Other: the Erotics of Tamil Nationalism in Colonial and Post-Colonial India’, in Sundar Rajan, Rajeshwari (ed.), Signposts: Gender Issues in Post-Independence India, Kali For Women, New Delhi, 1999, pp. 1756Google Scholar; Bose, Sugata, ‘Nation as Mother: Representations and Contestations of “India” in Bengali Literature and Culture’ in Bose, Sugata and Jalal, Ayesha (eds), Nationalism, democracy and Development: State and Politics in India, Permanent Black, New Delhi, 1997Google Scholar; Davis, Richard H. (ed.), Picturing the Nation. Iconographies of Modern India, New Delhi, Orient Longman, 2007.Google Scholar

124 T. Bhattacharya, ‘Tracking the Goddess’.

125 Freitag, Sandria, Collective Action and Community. Public Arenas and the Emergence of Communalism in North India, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1989.Google Scholar

126 Habermas, Jurgen, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere, trans. Burger, Thomas, MIT press, Cambridge, Massachussetts, 1989Google Scholar; Habermas, Jurgen, ‘The Public Sphere: An Encyclopedia Article’ in Bonner, S. E. and Kellner, D. M. (eds), Critical Theory and Society: A Reader, Routledge, New York, 1989.Google Scholar

127 Chatterjee, Partha, ‘A Response to Taylor's “Modes of Civil Society”’, Public Culture, 3, 1, 1990, pp. 119132CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hann, Chris and Dunn, Elisabeth (eds), Civil Society: Challenging Western Models, London, Routledge, 1996Google Scholar; Kaviraj, Sudipta and Khilnani, Sunil (eds), Civil Society. History and Possibilities, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2001Google Scholar; Guneratne, Shelton A., Public Sphere and Communicative Rationality: Interrogating Habermas's Rationality, Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Columbia, South Carolina, 2006Google Scholar; Brophy, James M., Popular Culture and the Public Sphere in the Rhineland, 1800–1850, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007.Google Scholar

128 Freitag, Collective Action and Community, p. 5.

129 Anderson, Benedict, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, Verso, London, 1991Google Scholar; Bayly, C. A., The Origins of Nationality in South Asia: patriotism and Ethical Government in the Making of Modern India, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1998Google Scholar; Ray, Rajat Kanta, The Felt Community. Commonalty and Mentality Before the Emergence of Indian Nationalism, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 2003.Google Scholar

130 S. Dasgupta, Bharater Shakti Sadhana, p. 80; see also, McDaniel, Offering Flowers, Feeding Skulls.

131 Standard accounts of Mughal religious policy and political ideology are to be found in Sri Ram Sharma, Religious Policy of the Mughal Emperors, Asia Publishing House, New York, 1962; and J. F. Richards, The Mughal Empire. For a more sophisticated treatment of Mughal political-cultural ideology see Alam, Muzaffar, The Languages of Political Islam in India: 1200–1800, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2004Google Scholar; and Alam, Muzaffar, ‘The Mughals, the Sufi Shaikhs and the Formation of the Akbari Dispensation’, Modern Asian Studies, 43, 1, 2009, pp. 135174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

132 Mukhia, The Mughals of India, p. 41.

133 Richards, J. F., ‘The Formulation of Imperial Authority Under Akbar and Jehangir’ in Alam, Muzaffar and Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (eds), The Mughal State: 1526–1750, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1998, pp. 126167.Google Scholar

134 Alam, Muzaffar, ‘The Culture and Politics of Persian in Pre-Colonial Hindustan’, Pollock, Sheldon (ed.), Literary Cultures in History: Reconstructions from South Asia, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003Google Scholar; Muzaffar Alam, The Languages of Political Islam.

135 Prasad, Pushpa, ‘Akbar and the Jains’ in Habib, Irfan (ed.), Akbar and His India, Oxford University Press, Delhi,1997, pp. 97108.Google Scholar

136 Sharma, Religious Policy of the Mughal Emperors, pp. 1–8.

137 Ibid., pp. 20–24.

138 Beglar, J. D., Report of a Tour Through the Bengal Provinces of Patna, Gaya, Mongir and Bhagalpur, the Santal Parganas Manbhum, Singhbhum, and Birbhum; Bankura, Ranigunje, Burdwan and Hugli, Indological Book House, Varanasi, 1966Google Scholar; Prasad, Rajiva Nain, Raja Man Singh of Amber, Calcutta, 1966, pp. 130170Google Scholar; Asher, Catherine B., ‘The Architecture of Raja Man Singh: A Study of Sub-Regional Patronage’ in Stoler Miller, Barbara (ed.), The Powers of Art. Patronage in Indian Culture, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1992, pp. 183202.Google Scholar

139 W. Pertsch (ed.), Kshitishvamsavalicharitam; Roy, Lakshmikanta; Roy Chowdhury, Bangiya Sabarna Katha, Pal, Tahirpur Rajavamsha.

140 Chatterjee, ‘Cultural Flows and Cosmopolitanism in Mughal India’.

141 Basu, Medinipurer Itihasa, p. 185.

142 A. Chakrabarty, Maharaja Krishnachandra, pp. 184–185.

143 Prasad, Raja Man Singh of Amber, p. 134.

144 Davis, Richard H., Lives of Indian Images, Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1997Google Scholar; Eaton, Richard, ‘Temple Desecration and Indo-Muslim States’ in Gilmartin, David and Lawrence, Bruce (eds), Beyond Turk and Hindu: Rethinking Religious identities in Islamicate South Asia, University of Florida Press, Gainesville, 2000, pp. 246281Google Scholar; Thapar, Romila, Somnatha, The Many Voices of a History, Penguin Books, New Delhi, 2004Google Scholar; Peabody, Norbert, ‘In Whose Turban Does the Lord Reside? The Objectification of Charisma and the Fetishism of Objects in the Hindu Kingdom of Kota’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 33, 4, 1991, pp. 726754.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

145 Davis, Lives of Indian Images, p. 88.

146 Mukhia, The Mughals of India, pp. 63–64.

147 Ibid., p. 62. See also C. M. Naim, ‘Popular Jokes and Political History: the Case of Akbar, Birbal and Mulla Do-Piyaza’, Economic and Political Weekly, 17 June, 1995, pp. 1456–1464; Sangari, Kumkum, ‘Tracing Akbar: Hagiographies, Popular Narrative, Traditions and the Subject of Conversion’ in Chandoke, Neera (ed.), Mapping Histories: Essays Presented to Ravinder Kumar, New Delhi, 2000, pp. 61103.Google Scholar

148 Pramathanatha Bishi, Chalan Beel cited in Saifuddin Chowdhury et al. (eds), Varendra Anchaler Itihasa, pp. 82–84.

149 Mrityunjoy Vidyalankar, Rajavali, Mission Press, Searampore, 1808.

150 Ibid., p. 84.

151 Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam (eds), The Mughal State; Mukhia, The Mughals of India.

152 Sanyal, Hiteshranjan, ‘Regional, Religious Architecture in Bengal: A Study in the Sources of Origin and Character’, Marg, 27, 2, 1974, pp. 3143Google Scholar, ‘Social aspect s of Temple Building in Bengal, 1600–1900 AD’, Man in India, 46, 3, 1963, pp. 201–224; Michell, George, Brick Temples of Bengal: From the Archives of David McCutchion, Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1983Google Scholar; Pika Ghosh, Temple to Love; Pika Ghosh, ‘Problems of Reconstructing Bengali Architecture of the 14th-16th Centuries’, in Narain Lambah, Abha and Patel, Alka (eds), The Architecture of the Indian Sultanates, Mumbai, Marg Publications, 2006, pp. 92103.Google Scholar

153 Michell (ed.), Brick Temples of Bengal; Nazimuddin Ahmad, ‘Barendra Anchaler Mandir Sthapatya’.

154 For example, Sir J. N. Sarkar (ed.), History of Bengal); Tarafdar, Husain Shahi Benga; Karim, Social Life of the Muslims of Bengal.

155 Chakrabarty, Ramakanta, ‘Gaudiya Baishnab Dharmer Itihasa’, in Sanyal, Abantikumar and Bhattacharya, Ashoke (eds), Chaitanya Deva. Itihasa O Avadana, Calcutta, Saraswat Library, no date, pp. 192222Google Scholar; Chakrabarty, RamakantaGaudiya Vaishnavism’ in Grewal, J. S. (ed.), Religious Movements and Institutions in Medieval India, Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2006, pp. 159188.Google Scholar

156 Ramranjan Mukerji and Sachindra Kumar Maity (eds), Corpus of Bengal Inscriptions Bearing on the History and Civilization of Bengal; Mukhopadhyaya, Firma K. L., Ramacharita of Sandhyakaranandin, Calcutta, 1967, Chapter 3, verse 41BGoogle Scholar; Anandabhatta, Ballalacharitam, in Haraprasad Shastri and Harishchandra Kaviratna (eds), Kumilla Shankar Press, Kumilla, 1322 B.S., pp. 46–51, 63–66; Asher, Frederick, The Art of Eastern India, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1980Google Scholar; Huntington, Susan L., The ‘Pala-Sena’ Schools of Sculpture, E. J. Brill, Leiden, 1984Google Scholar; Hasan, Perween, Sultans and Mosques. The Early Muslim Architecture of Bangladesh, I. B. Tauris, London, 2007, pp. 2731Google Scholar.

157 Eaton, ‘Temple Desecration and Indo-Muslim States’.

158 Dani, Ahmad Hasan, Muslim Architecture in Bengal, Asiatic Society of Pakistan, Dacca, 1961, pp. 3852Google Scholar; Asher, Catherine B., ‘Inventory of Key Monuments’ in Michell, George (ed.), The Islamic Heritage of Bengal, UNESCO, Paris, p. 136Google Scholar.

159 The best-known references to temple destruction under the late Bengal sultanate are associated with Kalapahar during his military campaigns which were mainly directed towards Western Bengal and Orissa. See Sir J. N. Sarkar, History of Bengal, pp. 183–84. For the Mughal period, the instances of temple destruction I have found refer to the destruction of royal temples in Koch Bihar by Mir Jumla during military operations against the raja of that principality in the seventeenth century. See Richard Eaton, ‘Temple Desecration and Indo-Muslim States’, pp. 246–281.

160 Michell, Brick Temples, p. 10.

161 Michell, Brick Temples, pp. 6–9; also Hitesh Ranjan Sanyal’, Temple Promotion and Social Mobility in Bengal’, in Sanyal, Hitesranjan, Social Mobility in Bengal, Papyrus, Calcutta, 1981, pp. 65112Google Scholar.

162 Bhattacharya, A. K., Corpus of Dedicatory Inscriptions From Temples of West Bengal (c. 1500–1800 AD), Navanna, Calcutta, 1982.Google Scholar

163 Mukherjee, Tarapada and Habib, Irfan, ‘Akbar and the Temples of Mathura and its Environs’, Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 49, 1987, pp. 234250Google Scholar, ‘The Mughal Administration and the Temples of Vrindaban During the Reigns of Jahangir and Shah Jahan’, Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 49, 1988, pp. 289–299.

164 Chakravarty, R., Vaishnavism in Bengal, 1486–1900, Sanskrit Pustak Bhandar, Calcutta, 1985.Google Scholar

165 Hitesranjan Sanyal, ‘Social Mobility in Bengal: Its Sources and Constraints’, in Hitesranjan Sanyal, Social Mobility in Bengal, pp. 33–64.

166 Michell, Brick Temples, pp. 48–50.

167 McDermott, Mother of My Heart; Bhattacharya, Sudhibhushan (ed.), Mangalchandir Geet, Calcutta: Kalikata Biswabidyalaya, 1965, PrefaceGoogle Scholar.

168 Mclane, J. R., Land and Local Kingship in Eighteenth Century Bengal, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 8990CrossRefGoogle Scholar; McDermott, Mother of My Heart pp. 28, 31–33; T. Bhattacharya, Tracking the Goddess, pp. 935–937.