Jawaharlal Nehru Road (earlier known as Chowringhee Road), in the
Chowringhee neighbourhood, is the arterial road running from the eastern fringes of
Esplanade southwards up to the crossing with
Lower Circular Road (renamed Acharya Jagadish Bose Road), in the city of
Calcutta,
India. It is the single most important road of the metropolis of Kolkata. It was renamed after
Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first Prime Minister.
History
Arguably one of the first roads in the city, prior to the coming of the
British, the road used to link the villages of
Kalighat and Chowringhee. The village of Chowringhee was named after a
Jain religious figure of those days, and the name stuck on in spite of the British rule and was changed only after the
independence of India.
After the British started expanding their settlement outside the Fort area in the mid-18th century, the area around Chowringhee was one of the first expansions. And the same area remained their pride and commercial centre until their departure in 1947. During the early British developments around the Chowringhee area, they built huge bungalows and houses all along the eastern end of the road, thus earning Kolkata the sobriquet - 'City of Palaces'. It was really a wonderful era of Kolkata, which came to be the second city of the British empire. Rows of huge palatial houses flanked by gardens and the area along the western edge of the road was a huge open area called the
Maidan. The Maidan was intentionally kept open and...
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