Islam Khan (1608-1613) was appointed the first Mughal
Viceroy of Bengal in 1608. He shifted his capital from Rajmahal
further eastward to Dhaka in 1610 with a view to subjugate the
disturbing landlords of Bengal. Islam Khan renamed the new capital
as Jahangirnagar after the name of the ruling emperor Jahangir
(Taifoor 1952.p.xxiv).
During the rule of Ibrahim Khan
(1616-1620), Dhaka attained great commercial importance and became
a trading centre of the whole of South East Asia. The European
traders started to come to the city from 1616. In the 1640s the
capital was shifted back to Rajmahal by Shah Shuja and in 1600 the
old robes were returned to Dhaka with Mir Jumla as the
Viceroy.
However the greatest development of
the city took place under Shaista Khan (1662-1677 and 1679-1689).
The city then stretched for 12 miles in length and 8 miles in
breadth and is said to have nearly a million
people.
The European settlers came in the
late 17th century. They were largely Portuguese, Dutch, English and
French traders. In 1717 the capital was again shifted from Dhaka to
Rajmahal (Murshidabad) due to a personal clash between the Emperor
Azim-Us-Shan and the Subadar Murshid Kuli Khan. In a result Dhaka
started to decline and experienced a long sleep of more than a
century.
Functional Pattern. Diverse
activities in the city led to the development of different
functional areas within the city.
Administrative Areas. The old Afghan Fort,
reconstructed by Islam Khan, became the administrative headquarters
of the Mughals. Here was housed the Civil Secretariat and to its
north lay the Military Headquarters.
Business Areas. The Chauk, which was to the immediate
south of the Fort, served as the central business district and was,
called Badshahi Bazar (Royal Market). This was rich in merchandise
and colourful in appearance. The Chauk was well located to serve
both the upper class and the lower class residential areas. It was
also close to the Burhiganga River, which served as the principal
means of communication. Another commercial centre was located at
Bangla Bazar. This was the main shopping centre before the Mughals,
but yielded its supremacy to Chauk in the Mughal period. It
however, continued to cater to the needs of people living around it
and also the European factories situated close by.
Industries. An important aspect of the city’s economic
life was the cottage industries. They were located largely in the
area falling between the two shopping centres, Bangla Bazar and
Chauk. The artisans also lived there. In most cases, the same house
was used for the factory and the residence. Within the industrial
area different localities specialized in different crafts. Some of
the names, which persist until today, speak of the different types
of specialized industries that then flourished. Some of the names
of these localities are Sankhari Bazar (shell cutter’s locality),
Kumartoli (potter’s locality), Patuatuli (jute-silk painters
areas), Sutrapur (carpenter’s area), Tanti Bazar (weaver’s market),
Bania Nagar (trader’s area), Jalua Nagar (fisherman’s locality),
Churi Hatta (bangle market), and Sanchi Pander (betel leaf
market).
Low Class Residential Areas. All
these specialized industrial and trading areas and some other
localities which were surrounded by the Dulai Khal and the
Burhiganga River used to house the major part of the city’s low
class population consisting of artisans, labourers and petty
traders. Those localities were almost segregated from the
high-class residential areas. Besides the industrial and trading
people, the Dulai Khal area also accommodated the ‘Kutties’ who
came from the rural areas as labourers in the city. They were
forced by the frequent occurrences of famines to come to the city
for refuge (Taifoor, 1952, p. 16) Pell Khana (elephant stable) and
Mahut Tuli used to be the other low class areas of the time. Here
lived the keepers of the animals.
High Class Residential Areas. The
upper crust of the society during the Mughal times comprised of the
ministers, high civil and military officials, landlords and wealthy
merchants. They preferred to live in a different area from the low
class people.
Location Pattern. The old Fort formed
the nucleus around which the high officials lived. Thus Bakshi
Bazar housed the residences of provincial ministers and secretaries
(Taifoor 1952, p. 41). The Fort itself housed a palace (Dani 1962,
p. 48). Rich but comparatively ordinary citizens who often could be
identified with the Mughal nobilities and who owned large palatial
buildings, used to live close to the ministers quarters. Such areas
were in close proximity to the low class residences and thus they
formed a barrier between the Mughal nobilities and the poor
artisans and labourers. These areas include Becharam Dewri, Aga
Sadeq Dewri, Ali Naqi Dewri and Amanat Khan Dewri. The term ‘Dewri’
means a gateway to palatial buildings and the localities were known
after the names of the owners of such
buildings.
The most prized residential area was
the riverfront. The Burhiganga River, at that time, had a more
northerly course through Lalbagh and Nawabganj. The Princes, Nawabs
and Ameers (wealthy aristocrats) all coveted to have a house near
the riverside and had built palaces along the river front about six
miles westward from Chotakatra (Tavernier 1905, p. 100). Then there
was the Jinjira Place built on the southern bank of the Burhiganga
River opposite the Bara Katra. There was probably an wooden bridge
across the Burhiganga at this point (Dani, 1962, p. 48). The
location of the palaces to the western part of the city was a
precaution from the attack of the river pirates who always came
from the east.
Other than the palaces, the Mughal
noble’s also maintained garden houses beyond the heavily populated
part of the city. These spacious houses built within large gardens
were primarily meant for recreation, festivity and reception (Mirza
Nathan 1936). Mahalla Shujatpur and Mahalla Chishtian in the
present Ramna area had a number of two or three storeyed mansions
with spacious reception halls. Besides these, there were other
garden areas and some of them still retain their names. Among such
gardens were those of Hazaribagh, Qazirbagh, Lalbagh, Bagh Chand
Khan, Bagh hosainuddin, Bagh Musa Khan, Arambagh, Rajarbagh,
Malibagh and finally the Bagh-i-Badshahi (Dani 1962, p. 76) It is
interesting to note that most of these garden houses have later
become the choice sites for higher class residential areas of the
city.
The European settlement in Dhaka City
started with the Portuguese who established their mission here as
early as 1616. After them Dutch, English, French, Armenians and the
Greeks came. Of them the English, French, and Dutch traders had
factories at the riverside for ease of transport. The low paid
workers lived in the factories or close by and carried their
business. The entrepreneurs however, lived in spacious bungalows in
Tejgoan. Here is still surviving a church built by the Portuguese
in 1668. The Europeans preferred to live in brick-built structures
mainly as a measure of protection than of ease. It is said that the
Armenians had been living in quite large numbers near the present
Victoria Park. Here was located their clubhouse or the ‘Anta Ghar’
(Dani 1962 p. 229). On the ruins of these old buildings the present
Victoria Park was laid out in the first half of the 19th
century.
Road Pattern. During Mughal days,
there was no well-developed system of roads in Dhaka City. The city
was divided into a number of mohallas (neighborhoods) which was a
cluster of houses webbed with intricate narrow lanes. The mohallas
were interconnected with dirt roads, which were paved with bricks
in 1677-79 (Dani 1962, p. 75). There were two principal roads: one
running parallel to the river from Victoria Park to the western
fringe of the city and the other ran from the Park to Tejgaon. The
roads had no name but the mohallas had names. The roads were named
after the establishment of Dhaka Municipality in
1864.
During the Mughal days, there was
very little of vehicular traffic in Dhaka City. This accounts for
the absence of any well-developed road system. The traffic mainly
consisted of pedestrians. Horses formed the chief means of
conveyance. On festive and ceremonial occasions elephant-ride was
preferred by the nobles. Sukhpals (palanquins) were also in vogue.
Larakacha, a palanquin made of green bamboo, and carried by men on
shoulders, was used mainly by the ladies (Mirza Nathan 1936, pp.
271-277).
The Burhiganga River and the Dulai
Khal served as communication lines. Country boats used to ply on
them with goods and passengers.
House Types. During the Mughal times
in Dhaka, the nobles used to live in bungalows built with bamboo
and grass and decorated with elegant designs (Sarkar 1948 p. 388).
Due to heavy rainfall and high temperature, these bungalows
required repair every year and had a maximum life span of about 15
years. Therefore, we have no knowledge of their architectural
design or lay out. Islam Khan, the founder of Mughal Dhaka, lived
in a barge (called Chandni) moored near the Chandni Ghat (Ruddock
1964, p. 76). The permanent buildings of Mughal Times were the
mosques, katras, palaces and the fort, which were built of
bricks.
The Katras were built as the
resting-place (inn) for the caravan (Dani 1962, pp. 198-200). There
are two Katras in Dhaka. Bara Katra was built in 1644 by Abul Qasim
and Chota Katra was built in 1663 by Nawab Shaista Khan. They were
located at the bank of the Burhiganga River near Chauk. The river
since then has shifted further southward. The two Katras are
identical in architectural design and layout but Chota Katra is
smaller in size than Bara Katra. The Katras enclose a quadrangular
courtyard with living rooms all around. Impressive gateways were
built in Mughal style on the northern and southern entrances. The
southern wing of the Katra facing the river was double storeyed
with two projecting octagonal towers at its two ends. The riverside
wing of the building was well decorated and was meant for the
nobles and persons of high rank.
The forts were meant either to house
the soldiers or were used as palaces for the Viceroy or the nobles.
Some remnants of Lalbagh Fort in the form of gateways and southern
boundary walls remain to speak of its Mughal architecture with
minarets, domes and arches. The construction of Lalbagh Fort was
taken up by Prince Muhammad Azam in 1678 and was left incomplete.
Viceroy Shaista Khan used to live in that
fort.