Ancestry

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All people are necessarily descended from antiquity, but for most, records of their ancestry do not exist that far back. The British royal family is one of the few families for whom ancestry can be traced to many notable lineages of antiquity. They can be traced from Saxon, Scottish (Stuart dynasty), Welsh (Tudor dynasty), Irish, German (Hanover and Windsor), French (Norman and Angevin), Russian, Frank and perhaps even Byzantine lineages.

Saxon and Scottish descent

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Descent from the Franks

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Irish connection

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Viking-Norman descent

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George I of Great Britain had descended, through both of his parents, from Rollo, the Viking founder of the ducal lineage of Normandy. Prince Albert, consort of Queen Victoria, had a descent from King Henry II of England through his daughter Matilda.

 

Consort of English and British Queens Family Tree

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Henry II of England
John, King of EnglandMatilda of England, Duchess of Saxony
Henry III of EnglandHenry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine
Edward I of EnglandAgnes of the Palatinate
Joan of AcreEdward II of EnglandLouis II, Duke of Bavaria
Margaret de ClareEdward III of EnglandAgnes of Bavaria, Margravine of Brandenburg-StendalLouis IV, Holy Roman Emperor
Margaret de Audley, 2nd Baroness AudleyJohn of GauntSophia of Brandenburg-StendalMatilda of Bavaria, Margravine of Meissen
Katherine de StaffordCatherine of LancasterJohn Beaufort, 1st Earl of SomersetMagnus II, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgFrederick III, Landgrave of Thuringia
John Sutton IVJohn II of CastileJohn Beaufort, 1st Duke of SomersetBernard I, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgFrederick I, Elector of Saxony
John Sutton VIsabella I of CastileLady Margaret BeaufortFrederick II, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgFrederick II, Elector of Saxony
John Sutton, 1st Baron DudleyJoanna of CastileHenry VII of EnglandOtto V, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgErnest, Elector of Saxony
Sir John Dudley of AtheringtonCharles V, Holy Roman EmperorMargaret TudorHenry the Middle, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgErnest, Elector of Saxony
Edmund DudleyPhilip II of Spain
married Mary I of England
James V of ScotlandErnest I, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgJohn Frederick I, Elector of Saxony
John Dudley, 1st Duke of NorthumberlandMary, Queen of ScotsWilliam, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgJohn William, Duke of Saxe-Weimar
Lord Guildford Dudley
married Lady Jane Grey
James VI and IGeorge, Duke of Brunswick-LüneburgJohann II, Duke of Saxe-Weimar
Charles I of EnglandSophie Amalie of Brunswick-LüneburgErnest I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha
Mary, Princess Royal and Princess of OrangePrince George of Denmark
married Anne, Queen of Great Britain
John Ernest IV, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
William III of England
married Mary II of England
Francis Josias, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
Ernest Frederick, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
Francis, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
Ernest I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
married Queen Victoria
Princess Alice of the United Kingdom
Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine
Princess Alice of Battenberg
Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark
married Elizabeth II

Diana Spencer and Catherine Middleton

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Byzantine connection

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One established connection is given below, starting with Byzantine emperor Isaac II Angelos (for his descent, see Descent from antiquity#Caucasian route).

                           
 Isaac II Angelos, Byzantine Emperor (1156–1204)  Herina (d. c. 1185)
 
 Irene Angelina (c. 1181-1208)  Philip of Swabia, King of the Germans (1177–1208)
 
           
 Marie of Swabia (1201–1235)  Henry II, Duke of Brabant (1207–1248)    Elisabeth of Swabia (1203–1235)  Ferdinand III of Castile (1199–1252)
       
       
 Henry III, Duke of Brabant (c. 1230-1261)  Adelaide of Burgundy (c. 1233-1273)    Alfonso X of Castile (1221–1284)  Violant of Aragon (1236–1301)
       
       
 Marie of Brabant (1254–1321)  Philip III of France (1245–1285)    Sancho IV of Castile (1258–1295)  María de Molina (c. 1265-1321)
       
       
 Margaret of France (c. 1279-1318)  Edward I of England (1239–1307)    Ferdinand IV of Castile (1285–1312)  Constance of Portugal (1290–1313)
       
       
 Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent (1301–1330)  Margaret Wake, 3rd Baroness Wake of Liddell (c. 1297-1349)    Alfonso XI of Castile (1311–1350)  Maria of Portugal (1313–1357)
       
       
 Joan, 4th Countess of Kent (1328–1385)  Thomas Holland, 1st Earl of Kent (c. 1314-1360)    Peter of Castile (1334–1369)  María de Padilla (1334–1361)
             
     
 Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent (1350–1397)  Alice FitzAlan (1350–1416)    Isabella of Castile (c. 1355-1392)  Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York (1341–1402)    Constance of Castile (1354–1394)  John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster (1340–1399)
                     
       
 Margaret Holland (1385–1439)  John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset (1373–1410)    Alianore Holland (1373–1405)  Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March (1374–1398)      Catherine of Lancaster (1373–1418)  Henry III of Castile (1379–1406)
         
           
 John Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset (1403–1444)  Margaret Beauchamp of Bletso (1405–1482)    Anne de Mortimer (1390–1411)  Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge (c. 1375-1415)    John II of Castile (1405–1454)  Isabella of Portugal (1428–1496)
             
             
 Margaret Beaufort (1441/43-1509)  Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond (1430–1456)    Richard Plantagenêt, 3rd Duke of York (1411–1460)  Cecily Neville (c. 1415-1495)    Isabella I of Castile (1451–1504)  Ferdinand II of Aragon (1452–1516)
             
             
       Edward IV (1442–1483)  Elizabeth Woodville (1437–1492)    Joanna of Castile (1479–1555)  Philip I of Castile (1478–1506)
             
     
 Henry VII (1457–1509)  Elizabeth of York (1466–1503)      Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor (1503–1564)  Anne of Bohemia and Hungary (1503–1547)
   
   
 Margaret Tudor (1489–1541)  James IV of Scotland (1473–1513)      Joanna of Austria (1547–1578)  Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany (1541–1587)
   
   
 James V of Scotland (1512–1542)  Mary of Guise (1515–1560)      Marie de' Medici (1575–1642)  Henry IV of France (1553–1610)
   
   
 Mary, Queen of Scots (1542–1587)  Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, 1st Duke of Albany (1545–1567)      
   
   
 James I of England (1566–1625)  Anne of Denmark (1574–1619)      
             
     
 Elizabeth of Bohemia (1596–1662)  Frederick V, Elector Palatine (1596–1632)    Charles I of England (1600–1649)  Henrietta Maria of France (1609–1669)
   
   
       Charles II of England (1630–1685)  Louise de Kérouaille, Duchess of Portsmouth (1649–1734)
   
   
       Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond (1672–1723)  Anne Brudenell (1671–1722)[1]
   
   
       Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond (1701–1750)  Sarah Cadogan (1705–1751)
   
   
       Lord George Lennox (1737–1805)  Louisa Kerr (1738–1830)[2]
   
   
 11 generations      Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond (1764–1819)  Charlotte Gordon (1768–1842)[3]
   
   
       Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond (1791–1860)  Caroline Paget (1796–1874)[4]
   
   
       Cecilia Gordon-Lennox (1838–1910)[5]  Charles Bingham, 4th Earl of Lucan (1830–1914)
   
   
       Rosalind Bingham (1869–1958)  James Hamilton, 3rd Duke of Abercorn (1869–1953)
   
   
       Cynthia Hamilton (1897–1972)  Albert Spencer, 7th Earl Spencer (1892–1975)
   
   
       John Spencer, 8th Earl Spencer (1924–1992)  Frances Ruth Roche (1936–2004)
       
   
 Charles, Prince of Wales (born 1948)  Diana Spencer (1961–1997)

Other possible connections are as under:

Eastern Connections

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 Thocomerius
 
 
 Basarab I, Voivode of Wallachia  Anna
 
 
 Nicholas Alexander  Maria Lackfi
 
           
 Elisaveta  Władysław II Opolczyk, Duke of Opole    Radu I  Kalinikia
       
       
 Katharina  Henry VIII the Sparrow, Duke of Żagań–Głogów    Mircea I the Elder  Maria Tolmay
       
       
 Jan I, Duke of Żagań  Scholastica of Saxony    Vlad II Dracul  Princess (Cneajna) Vasilissa
       
       
 Anna of Żagań  Albrecht VIII, Count of Lindau-Ruppin    Vlad III (Dracula)
 
 
 Anna of Lindau-Ruppin  George I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
 
 
 Ernest I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau  Margarete of Münsterberg-Oels
 
 
 John V, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst  Margaret of Brandenburg
 
 
 Joachim Ernest, Prince of Anhalt  Agnes of Barby-Mühlingen
 
 
 Elisabeth of Anhalt-Zerbst  John George, Elector of Brandenburg
 
 
 Magdalene of Brandenburg  Louis V, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt
 
 
 Anne Eleonore of Hesse-Darmstadt  George, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
 
           
 Ernest Augustus, Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg  Sophia of Hanover    George William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg  Éléonore Desmier d'Olbreuse
       
         
 George I of Great Britain  Sophia Dorothea of Celle

Notes and references

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  1. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Anne Brudenell". The Peerage.[unreliable source]
  2. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Louisa Kerr". The Peerage.[unreliable source]
  3. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Charlotte Gordon". The Peerage.[unreliable source]
  4. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Caroline Paget". The Peerage.[unreliable source]
  5. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Cecilia Gordon-Lennox". The Peerage.[unreliable source]
  6. ^ "Tihomir (Tugomir) Khan of the Blue Horde Toq-Timur (Tartars) (c.1250 - 1310) - Genealogy". Geni.com. 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
  7. ^ Paget, Gerald. "The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales".
  8. ^ "Mircea III 'the Shepherd' , Voivoide of Valachia". Genealogics.org. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
  9. ^ "RootsWeb: GEN-MEDIEVAL-L Claimed descent from Genghis Khan to modern European royals". Archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. 1997-12-11. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
  10. ^ NickMGombash (2010-06-25). "Queen Elizabeth II related to Vlad Dracula? | Nick Gombash's Genealogy Blog". Nickmgombash.blogspot.in. Retrieved 2012-08-08.

Wikisource

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            কলিকাতা            দাস শ্রী মাইকেল মধুসূদন দত্তঃ
২২সে পৌষ, সন ১২৬৭ সাল
                           
 কলিকাতা
২২সে পৌষ, সন ১২৬৭ সাল
 }    দাস শ্রী মাইকেল মধুসূদন দত্তঃ

  \[ Yours faithfully\\ Madhusudan \left\} \begin{array}{l l} & \quad \text{Kolkata 1861} \end{array} \right.\]

{{{#!amsmath \begin{document} \[ f(x)= \begin{cases} \frac{x^2-x}{x},& \text{if } x\geq 1\\ 0, & \text{otherwise} \end{cases} \] \end{document} }}}

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Descent from English royalty Part 1 (Basic frame: Alfred the Great to Edward III)
 
Descent from English royalty Part 2 (Descent from Henry I)
 
Descent from English royalty Part 3 (Descent from Kings Stephen and Edward I)
 
Descent from English royalty Part 4 (Descent from Henry II, John and Henry III)
 
Descent from English royalty Part 5 (Descent from Edward III)

According to a chart published by twelve-year-old student BridgeAnne d'Avignon, all U.S. presidents except Martin Van Buren (due to his Dutch ancestry) can trace descent from King John of England.[11] However, Van Buren's ancestry can be traced from King Stephen of England through w/o Gerard I van Horne, Count of Horne (see chart 3 alongside).

As a result, all presidents are direct descendants of Alfred the Great and William the Conqueror.

HM Queen Elizabeth II is among the closest living relatives of George Washington, through their descent from Augustine Warner, Jr., Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses. His daughter Mildred was the grandmother of Washington, while his daughter Mary is an ancestor of the Queen's mother, Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon.[12] (See here for common descent chart.)

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Roosevelt ancestry

 

Bibliography

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Books

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Some of the important secondary sources for tracing ancestry of U.S. presidents to British and other royalties are as under:

Webpages

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Gives descent of Washington's paternal grandfather from Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent, son of Edward I (chart 3 above);
descent of John Quincy Adams from Cardinal Henry Beaufort, grandson of Edward III (chart 5 above);
erroneous descent of Mary Isham (ancestress of Thomas Jefferson) from William Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury, illegitimate son of Henry II
(erroneous because, his granddaughter Emmeline, w/o Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly, died childless)
(However, Mary Isham did have valid royal descent: her ancestors were Sir William Hopton and his wife Margaret Wentworth (d/o Margery le Despencer); husband descendant of King William the Lion of Scotland through his illegitimate daughter Isabella, w/o Robert de Ros, one of the Magna Carta sureties [this union also led to Franklin Roosevelt through Sir John Temple (shown in Chart 5)], and wife descendant of Brian Boru, High King of Ireland, through Eva of Leinster and Isabella de Beauchamp)
although her husband, William Randolph, did descend from Longespée, through the Mowbray line (shown in chart 4);
and descent of Franklin Roosevelt and the Bush duo from Henry I through the Galloway line (chart 2 above).
Isabella de Beauchamp, descendant of Brian Boru, was an important ancestress of American presidents. The above line to Thomas Jefferson was through her son by second marriage, Philip Despencer [also ancestor of Calvin Coolidge through Philip Wentworth (shown in Chart 5)]. Another son by her second marriage, Hugh Despenser the Younger, was ancestor of Presidents Washington, Bush and Franklin Roosevelt (chart 3). Her daughter by first marriage, Maud Chaworth, had six daughters, out of which, Joan of Lancaster was ancestress of Thomas Jefferson through the Mowbray line mentioned above (chart 4); Eleanor of Lancaster was ancestress of George Washington's paternal grandfather through the Sutton line (chart 3) as well as his mother through Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester (chart 5) and a possible ancestress of John Quincy Adams through Alice FitzAlan, Lady Cherleton (chart 4) and also ancestress of Theodore Roosevelt and James Monroe through John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl (chart 5); Mary of Lancaster was ancestress of Washington through the Percy-Gascoigne line (chart 4). Isabella's brother's descendant, Philippa de Beauchamp, was ancestress of George Washington and William Taft (see chart 2).

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "George Washington 1st US President Family's 12 Generation Line of Descent from (Sir) William 'Of Gawthorpe' GASCOIGNE Knight, High Sheriff of Yo". Washington.ancestryregister.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  2. ^ "John Tyler, 10th Pres. of the USA is related to George Washington, 1st President of the USA!". Geni.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  3. ^ "Descent of Thomas Jefferson from Henry I Beauclerc through Robert Howard". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  4. ^ "Descent of James Madison from Edward I (Longshanks)". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  5. ^ "and linked pages". Freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com. 1906-01-02. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  6. ^ "Descent of John Quincy Adams from Edward III". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  7. ^ "Daniel T. Rogers(b. 1943) - all my relatives - pafg1893 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File". Freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  8. ^ "RootsWeb: GEN-MEDIEVAL-L JACKSON, Anthony (1599-1666)". Archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. 2000-10-27. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  9. ^ "Descent of William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison from Edward I (Longshanks)". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  10. ^ "Descent of Grover (Stephen) Cleveland from Edward I (Longshanks)". Homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  11. ^ Megha Satyanarayana (Feb 16, 2010). "Local student finds all U.S. presidents related except one". Santa Cruz Sentinel. Retrieved March 3, 2012.
  12. ^ Albert H. Spencer, Genealogy of the Spencer family (1956), p. v (snippet)
  13. ^ "Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families - Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham - Google Books". Books.google.co.in. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  14. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Sir Edward Stradling (1474-1535)". The Peerage. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)[unreliable source]
  15. ^ "RootsWeb: GEN-MEDIEVAL-L Re: STRADLING of Dauntsey and/or St. Donat's". Archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. 2003-04-11. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
  16. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Elizabeth Ferrers, 6th Baroness Ferrers of Groby". The Peerage. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)[unreliable source]
  17. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Elizabeth of England". The Peerage. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)[unreliable source]

References

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Bhabani Bhattacharya

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Bhabani Bhattacharya (Bengali: ভবানী ভট্টাচার্য) (1906-1988) was one of India's major writers of fiction in English and is being increasingly recognised in the West.

Life

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He was born in Bhagalpur, Bihar, on November 10, 1906 to a Bengali Brahmin couple, Pramatha and Kiranbala Bhattacharya.[1] After schooling at Puri and Patna, he sailed to England for further studies. While in London, Bhattacharya leaned towards Marxism and participated in a famous meeting of Indian and British writers in November, 1935, that led to Progressive Writers' Movement and formation of the Indian Progressive Writers' Association.[2][3][4][5] From 1929, he contributed to various British periodicals. In 1930, his English translation of Tagore's book of poems, Sonar Tari, was published to wide acclaim as The Golden Boat (the translation also contained stories and sketches from Tagore's other works). He graduated from the University of London with a degree in history in 1931, and got his PhD in historical research in 1934. His PhD dissertation was later published as Socio-political currents in Bengal: a nineteenth century perspective. He returned to India in 1934, settled in Calcutta and turned to journalism. He married Salila Mukherjee, short story writer, in 1935. In 1949, he moved to Washington as Press Attaché for the Indian Embassy. On return, he lived in ‘Godhuli’, Nagpur. In 1969 he left India to become Visiting Professor at the University of Hawai’i. In 1972, he moved permanently to the US. He died of a heart attack on October 9, 1988.

Works

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  • The Golden Boat (translation) (London: Allen & Unwin, 1930)
  • Indian Cavalcade, a collection of historical sketches
  • So Many Hungers! (London: Victor Gollancz, 1947)
The devastating Bengal famine of 1943, which became famous to the Bengalis as Panchasher Manwantar (Famine of '50, i.e., 1350 B.E.), was the background to his first novel So Many Hungers. Other famous novels on this sublect were Aakaaler Sandhane by Amalendu Chakraborty, cinematised by Mrinal Sen, and Ashani Sanket by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay, cinematised by Satyajit Ray.
  • Music for Mohini (New York: Crown Publishers, 1952)
His second novel, this deals with caste distinctions and poverty.
  • He Who Rides a Tiger (New York: Crown Publishers, 1954)
  • A Goddess Named Gold (New York: Crown Publishers, 1960)
  • Towards Universal Man. Essays by Rabindranath Tagore, selected and edited by Bhabani Bhattacharya, under the auspices of the Tagore Commemorative Volume Society (Bombay: Asia Publishing House, 1961)
  • Shadow from Ladakh (New York: Crown Publishers, 1966): Received the Sahitya Akademi Award in English.
  • Steel-Hawk and Other Stories (1968), a collection of fifteen short stories
  • Gandhi, the writer: the image as it grew (National Book Trust, 1969), a highly stimulating and provocative study released on the occasion of the birth centenary of Mahatma Gandhi
  • A Dream in Hawaii (Macmillan, 1978), a novel that shows the conflicting values of the East and the West.[6]
  • Glimpses of Indian History: Historical Sketches

Further reading

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References

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Bhabani Bhattacharya

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Bhabani Bhattacharya (Bengali: ভবানী ভট্টাচার্য) (1906-1988) was one of India's major writers of fiction in English and is being increasingly recognised in the West.

Life

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He was born in Bhagalpur, Bihar, on November 10, 1906 to Bengali parents. He started his writing career with the Bengali magazine, Mouchak[1] at the age of fourteen. In 1927 he did his B.A.[1] in English literature from Patna University and then sailed to England for further studies. He enrolled at King’s College, London, initially to study English literature, but shifted to history after an acrimonious encounter with one of his professors[2]. One of his teachers was the political philosopher and author Harold Laski who would be, along with Tagore and Gandhi, a lasting influence on his writing[2].

While in London, Bhattacharya leaned towards Marxism and became an active member of the League Against Imperialism[2]. From 1929, he contributed to various British periodicals[1], including The Bookman, The Manchester Guardian and The Spectator. Francis Yeats-Brown, assistant editor of the Spectator, urged Bhattacharya to concentrate on English, rather than Bengali[1]. In 1930, his English translation of Tagore's book of poems, Sonar Tari, was published to wide acclaim under name The Golden Boat. He graduated from the University of London with a degree in history in 1931, and got his PhD in historical research[3] in 1934. From 1932 to 1933 he travelled extensively through Europe, including places such as Berlin, Budapest, Warsaw, Paris and Vienna[2].

He returned to India in 1934, settled in Calcutta and turned to journalism. He married Salila Mukherjee, short story writer, in 1935. In 1947, So Many Hungers was published. Music for Mohini, one of his most acclaimed novels, was published in 1952 and in 1966 Shadow from Ladakh, which received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1967. His novels were translated into twenty-eight languages, sixteen of which were European. Bhattacharya’s achievement as a novelist has had a purposeful thrust relevant to the India of today.

In 1949 he moved to Washington as Press Attaché for the Indian Embassy. On return, he lived in ‘Godhuli’, Nagpur[3]. In 1969 he left India to become Visiting Professor at the University of Hawai’i. In 1972 he moved permanently to the US. He died of a heart attack on October 9, 1988.

Works

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  • The Golden Boat (translation) (London: Allen & Unwin, 1930)
  • Indian Cavalcade, a collection of historical sketches
  • So Many Hungers! (London: Victor Gollancz, 1947)
The devastating Bengal famine of 1943, which became famous to the Bengalis as Panchasher Manwantar (Famine of '50, i.e., 1350 B.E.), was the background to his first novel So Many Hungers. Other famous novels on this sublect were Aakaaler Sandhane by Amalendu Chakraborty, cinematised by Mrinal Sen, and Ashani Sanket by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay, cinematised by Satyajit Ray. Bhattacharya was so profoundly moved by the famine that he wrote it piecing the story together from newspaper clippings[3]. It was published in 1947 and became a best-seller in various translations. Literary critic L.N. Gupta states, “It was a terrible indictment of the British Raj for all their crimes which aggregated into the disastrous famine of Bengal in 1943.”[4]
It was a man-made famine that took a toll of two million innocent men, women and children. An authentic record of this famine and the Quit India Movement of 1942, the story's central theme is man's hunger for food and political freedom. There are two intertwined plots: the story of Samarendra Basu's family with young Rahoul as the central figure; and the story of a peasant family with a young girl Kajoli as the principal character. The first plot deals with India's struggle for freedom in the early 'forties; and the second represents, in miniature, as K. K. Sharma puts it, the pathetic fate of millions who suffered immeasurably from a famine, which was the result of the most heinous selfishness of profiteers and the relentless indifference of the British government.[5]
Bhattacharya paints the naked horror of it all with a pitiless precision and cumulative detail. Dr. Srinivasa Iyengar states, “So many Hungers! is no doubt an impeachment of man’s inhumanity to man, but it is also a dramatic study of a set of human beings caught in a unique and tragic predicament.”[6] The story has been effectively told and the tragic pathos of the real mass-starvation described in the guise of fiction moves the reader deeply. The novel describes, as The Times Literary Supplement puts it, “a factual and vivid account of one of the most shocking disasters in history.”
  • Music for Mohini (New York: Crown Publishers, 1952)
His second novel, this deals with caste distinctions and poverty. L. N. Gupta remarks, Music for Mohini blows up the citadel of old traditions and superstitions which menace India’s progress.”[4] Reviewing this novel, The New York Times observed, ‘It blends the story of an attractive girl’s marriage with the eternal problems of that caste-ridden land and its divorcement from various kinds of imperial rule. And the main brick-bats are not hurled at Britain.’ The Chicago Tribune showered its praise on this novel by stating that “India as presented by Rudyard Kipling, Rabindranath Tagore and others has become to us a multiple image. Now these diverse pictures are brought into focus by a native son. In a splendid novel that may rank with Pearl Buck’s The Good Earth, Bhabani Bhattacharya gives us modern India.”[3]
Semi-autobiographical in nature[7], it is, according to Dorothy Blair Shimer[8], Bhattacharya’s most “light-hearted novel”. In this novel, a young girl of seventeen, brought up in the city in the 'modern' way, is married to a quiet rural scholar in the traditional manner after observing the auspicious signs and comparing the horoscopes. Mohini's city-bred manners and ideas encounters her mother-in-law's village based orthodoxy and traditionalism. East vs West, village vs town, tradition vs modernity, astrology vs rationalism, the daughter-in-law vs the mother-in-law, the novel is full of tensions, which are resolved at the end, transforming Mohini's ascetic intellectual husband, through conjugal and moral stimuli, into village reformer, and through the interaction of such opposing values, putting the village on the path of progress and modernisation.
  • He Who Rides a Tiger (New York: Crown Publishers, 1954)
The third novel, this is an attack on both who profited on people’s misery during the famine and those who exploited them as caste tyrants. It is a legend of freedom, a legend to inspire and awaken. Here he discusses a variation on the theme of hunger. It has a fascinating beginning. The story runs rapidly surging with emotion and agitation. Its sharp and vivid characterisation and untainted realism make this novel a very interesting one. It is a grim satire on Hindu orthodoxy. Dr. Iyengar says, “The tempo of life in Calcutta–the complex of urban vices and urban sophistication, the pressure of mass movements and mass hysteria, the reign of superstition and mumbo jumbo–gives the novel an entire and piquant quality all its own.”[6]
This novel is based on an ancient saying “He who rides a tiger cannot dismount.” A humble village blacksmith, named Kalo takes his revenge on a rigid, caste-ridden society and makes a living for himself and his daughter by faking a miracle–a miracle that begins as a fraud and ends as a legend–and passing himself off as a Brahmin priest. The story ends with a note of triumph for the soul over flesh. Eventually when the fraud is detected, other low caste people hail him as their brother and the outraged upholders of caste and custom panic. Reviewing this novel, Orville Prescott of The New York Times says, “He who rides a tiger is a skilful and entertaining and an illuminating fictional glimpse inside the corner of India. Bhattacharya writes of Indians and the social, cultural and religious world in which they live with an authority and understanding that no Western writer can hope to match.”[3]
  • A Goddess Named Gold (New York: Crown Publishers, 1960)
His fourth novel, this is one of the best novels on Indian village life and makes a most illuminating and satisfying reading experience. B. Syamala Rao describes it as "a masterly satire on those who live by the lure of gold. It tells how high spiritual values like spontaneous kindness are sought to be prostituted for purposes of gold. It is a modern fable of rural India and the close textured fabric of its life on the eve of Independence in 1947. The characters are introduced one by one in a leisurely manner and we see among them a pretty girl, a strolling minstrel and a magic talisman."[3] Dr. Iyengar states, “It entertains as a story, but it also disturbs us as a warning and as a prophecy.”[6]
Meera’s grandfather, a wandering minstrel, gives her an amulet and tells her that it will acquire the power to turn the base metals into gold, if she does an act of real kindness. She rescues a child. Seth Samsunderji seeks to profit out of India’s new-found freedom and enters into a business deal with Meera on a fifty-fifty basis. Meera gets disgusted with it finally and throws the amulet into the river. The minstrel returns soon and explains that freedom is the real touchstone.
  • Towards Universal Man. Essays by Rabindranath Tagore, selected and edited by Bhabani Bhattacharya, under the auspices of the Tagore Commemorative Volume Society (Bombay: Asia Publishing House, 1961)
  • Shadow from Ladakh (New York: Crown Publishers, 1966)
This novel tells an extremely gripping story of unsurpassed drama on a broad and revealing canvas. It tells what India needs for survival–a meeting point between Gandhian social ethics and tremendous forces of science and technology. It deals with India’s conflict with China and her response to the challenge. The theme presents a considerable amount of truth of a politically conscious Indian family.
It provides an insight into the contrasting contemporary life of India symbolised by Satyajit who regards Indian village life as the ideal life and by the westernized American trained Bhaskar, the forward-looking Chief Engineer in a steel plant, who feels India’s future lies in industrialisation, ends on a weak note of coexistence of these two ideologies. Bhaskar wants to dispossess Gandhigram, because it is a hindrance to India’s industrialisation. He brings every pressure to bear, but to his surprise, the community of the believers in non-violence stands firm under its great leader Satyajit, and he himself falls in love with Satyajit’s daughter, Sunita, a bare-foot white-saried girl...
On winning the Sahitya Akademi Award for this novel, Bhattacharya had remarked, “It is good to be known abroad. Even so, I must confess that I would like to be known to my countrymen too. The award redresses a balance. So far I have been better known in the U. S. and Europe than in my own country.”
  • Steel-Hawk and Other Stories (1968), a collection of fifteen short stories
  • Gandhi, the writer: the image as it grew (National Book Trust, 1969), a highly stimulating and provocative study released on the occasion of the birth centenary of Mahatma Gandhi
  • A Dream in Hawaii (Macmillan, 1978), a novel that shows the conflicting values of the East and the West[9].
  • Glimpses of Indian History: Historical Sketches

Sources

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  1. ^ a b c d Desai, Shantinath K., Bhabani Bhattacharya: Makers of Indian Literature Series, New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi, 1995
  2. ^ a b c d Bhabani Bhattacharya, Making Britain: Discover how South Asians shaped the nation, 1870-1950
  3. ^ a b c d e f Rao, B. Syamala, Dr. Bhabani Bhattacharya as a Novelist
  4. ^ a b Gupta, L. N., Bhabani Bhattacharya: A Bridge Between India and the West, Nagpur: The Hitavada, 1969
  5. ^ Sharma, Kaushal Kishore, Bhabani Bhattacharya, His Vision and Themes, Abhinav Publications, 1979
  6. ^ a b c Iyengar, K. R. Srinivasa, Indian writing in English, New Delhi: Sterling Publishers, 1985
  7. ^ Babu, A. Ramesh, Impact of Coalesced Traditionalism & Modernism on the Village & Town Societies in Bhabani Bhattacharya's Music For Mohini
  8. ^ Shimer, Dorothy Blair, Bhabani Bhattacharya, Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1975
  9. ^ Ningombam Oligachanu Devi, Conflict of Values: East and West in Bhabani Bhattacharya's A Dream in Hawaii

Further reading

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Hi tr

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Dim-dam Fly

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Dim-dam fly is a pestilent[1] sandfly[2] with a noxious bite. Says Bikram Grewal about his personal experience[3]:

Sessni literally means stinging nettle, and this pernicious weed surrounds the camp, but the real threat came from a small mite that rejoices under the name of Dam-Dim. Found at lower altitudes (I had first encountered them in the Mishmi Hills of Eastern Arunachal) their bite is so noxious that the afflicted area gets swollen and the bite itself starts suppurating. Needless to say I was the only person to be attacked and both my hands swelled and would not fit my gloves. I was miserable and the wounds remained infected well after I returned home. I did not sleep well that night due to the pain and told my companions that I would not join them for the pre-breakfast jaunt.

References

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