Tuesday, April 8, 2014

janjira sultanate-near Bombay fort -INDIA-1500-1700



H.H. Nawab Sidi Sir Ahmad Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan, Nawab of Janjira

sidis attack and defeat english in bombay-1689 a.d...

oldphotosbombay.blogspot.com/.../siddis-attack-and-defeat-english-in.ht...
Sep 3, 2011 - ... was Siddi Qasim Khan. Yakut Khan was a Siddi Naval Admiral and administrator of Janjira Fort ... During a Muhgal-English conflict he laid siege to the British-held Bombay in 1689. The Siddis are a ... SURAT FORT 1700

Sidi Goma - The African Indian Sidis of Gujarat - YouTube

www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyJh2rE7WOY
Feb 21, 2013 - Uploaded by WildFilmsIndia
Sidi Goma is a group of African Indian Sidis from the Bharuch district of Gujarat. This tribal Sufi community of ...






  • Murud-Janjira
    Fort







  • . Murud-Janjira is the local name for a fort situated on an island just off the coastal village of Murud, in the Raigad district of Maharashtra, India. Wikipedia















  • Address: Raigad, Murud, Maharashtra 413510







  • Opened: 1490
  • Phone: 022 2284 5678

    Indian Siddis: African descendants with Indian admixture.

    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21741027
    by AM Shah - ‎2011 - ‎Cited by 16 - ‎Related articles
    Jul 7, 2011 - The Siddis (Afro-Indians) are a tribal population whose members live in coastal Karnataka, Gujarat, and in some parts of Andhra Pradesh.
    [PDF]

    Indian Siddis: African Descendants with Indian Admixture

    genetics.med.harvard.edu/reich/Reich.../2011_Shah_AmHumGen.pdf
    by C Tyler-Smith - ‎2011 - ‎Cited by 16 - ‎Related articles
    Jul 15, 2011 - The Siddis (Afro-Indians) are a tribal population whose members live in coastal Karnataka, Gujarat, and in some parts of Andhra Pradesh.
    The Invincible Fort of Murud Janjira | India Currents

    Nawabs of Janjira and Sachin were African Slaves ...

    www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/.../nawabs-janjira-sachin-african-slaves.htm
    Feb 1, 2013 - Till this day, the descendants of the Nawabs of Janjira, and the people of ... as Sidis and Habshis vigorously asserted themselves in the country of their enslavement. ... World War I. He was promoted to Major, received the British title "His ... In 1600, he married his daughter to a 20-year old prince, installed ..








    1. Siddi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siddi
      Some Siddis escaped slavery to establish communities in forested areas, and some even established small Siddi principalities on Janjira Island and at Jaffrabad ...
    2. Murud-Janjira-History - Webs

      www.freewebs.com/murud-janjira/history.htm
      Going into history of Murud: Murud was the 15th-16th century capital of the Siddis of Janjira. This indomitable fortress inspired the Maratha chieftain Shivaji to ...
    3. Murud-Janjira Fort - Maharashtra Tourism

      www.maharashtratourism.gov.in/MTDC/.../Forts.aspx?...JanjiraForts.html
      Despite their repeated attempts, the Portuguese, the British and the Marathas failed to subdue the Siddi power. Shivaji's all attempts to capture Janjira fort failed ...
    4. मुरुड जंजिरा || War with Siddis of Murud Janjira ...

      www.sambhajimaharaj.com/war-with-siddis-of-murud...Translate this page
      May 10, 2012 - Siddi brothers were having control of Janjira fort. Sambhaji Maharaj decided to capture Janjira. Marathas under guidance of Shambhuraje ...
    5. India - Past and Present: Janjira

      rahugho.blogspot.com/2008/07/janjira.html
      In the fifteenth century, Kolis' most important fortification was Janjira. Late in fifteenth century, the Siddis (as agents of the Sultan) wrested control of Janjira from ...
    6. Murud janjira fort in maharashtra by sailing boat - Siddhi ...

      www.youtube.com/watch?v=5j7-dUn2ajU
      May 15, 2012 - Uploaded by dhanesh mane
      http://www.dhaneshmane.com Went to Murud janjira ( siddi johar janjira ) fort in maharashtra ( near alibag ...
    7. Janjira Fort - Indian Holiday Pvt. Ltd.

      www.indianholiday.com › Best of IndiaMonuments in India
      This portrays the valor of the Siddis. You can find 19 burj inside the Janjira Fort. Kalal Bangadi, Chavari and Landa Kasam are the well known guns that are ...
    8. Janjira - English Information of Forts - Trekshitiz

      trekshitiz.com/EI/EI_DefaultAlpha.asp?SearchValue=J...Janjira
      ... see any Marathi page on this site properly, then please download this font & save it in fonts folder of Windows of your system. Download Font. Jivdhan. Janjira
    Janjira - The Unconquered Fort by Madhur Mohini Mathur

    Undiscovered Indian Treasures: Janjira Fort: Unconquered Emerald ...

    Sambhaji - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sambhaji
    1 Early life; 2 Accession; 3 Attack on Burhanpur; 4 War against the Mughal empire; 5 War with Siddis of Janjira; 6 Portuguese and the English; 7 War with Mysore ...

    Shivaji - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shivaji
    Shivaji british meusium.jpg ... 4.1 Dealings with the English; 4.2 Battle of Nesari ..... In November the Maratha navy skirmished with the Siddis of Janjira, and in ...

    Tourist Guide about Undefeated Siddis of Murud Janjira Fort ...

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=3hXbQ1Qf9Fg
    Feb 22, 2012 - Uploaded by TheKeralaprince
    Murud-Janjira is the local name for a fort situated on an island just off the ... despite Dutch, Maratha and ...

    Murud janjira fort in maharashtra by sailing boat - Siddhi ...

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=5j7-dUn2ajU
    May 15, 2012 - Uploaded by dhanesh mane
    http://www.dhaneshmane.com Went to Murud janjira ( siddi johar janjira ) ... Attacked by the ...
    JANJIRA
    The Sidi Dynasty
    GENEALOGY
    1848 - 1879 H.E. Nawab Sidi Ibrahim Khan III Sidi Muhammad Yakut Khan, Nawab of Janjira. b. before 20th December 1825, eldest son of H.E. Nawab Sidi Muhammad Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan, Nawab of Janjira, by his first wife, educ. privately. Succeeded on the abdication of his father, 31st August 1848. Granted a sanad confirming succession in accordance with Islamic laws, 11th March 1862. Deprived of his jurisdictional powers in 1869 but had these restored to him in 1870. Faced a rebellion by his by his sardars while absent from the state, when they seized the capital and placed the Heir Apparent on the musnaid, but later surrendered to a British force. Inter-communal riots between Hindus and Muslims erupted in 1877, when the British authorities intervened for a third time and reformed the administration. Rcvd: the Prince of Wales's (1875) and KIH (1877) medals. m. (first) Sharifa Bibi Sahiba (d.s.p.), a lady from Hubshan. m. (second) at Murud, 3rd April 1849, Zainab Begum Sahiba (b. before 1831/2), previously styled Saida Bai Sahiba, a lady of low birth, daughter of Sayyid Ahmad, a manyar of Murud. m. (third) Naranji Bai Sahiba. m. (fourth) Fatima Bibi Sahiba (d.s.p.), a lady from Hubshan. m. (fifth) at Janjira, 1858, H.H. Nawab Sharfu Begum Sahiba (b. 1835), née Fatima Bibi, daughter of Sidi Husain Sidi 'Abdu'llah Jabarti, a sardar of Janjira. He d. at the Nawab Mahal, Janjira Fort, 28th January 1879, having had issue, four sons and one daughter:
    • 1) A son by Saida Bai. He d. young before 1855.
    • 2) Nawabzada Sidi Muhammad Bakhshi Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan. b. at the Rani Mahal, Janjira Fort, 6th October 1853 (s/o Saida Bai), educ. privately. Bakshi (C-in-C) Janjira State Forces 1873-1920. Proclaimed at Janjira Fort on the death of his father, 11th June 1879 (annulled by the GOI). He d. at Janjira, 14th April 1920, having had issue:
      • a) Bakhshizada Sidi Daud Sidi Muhammad Khanzada, of Waroli. b. at Janjira, 21st May 1873. Contested the succession in 1922. He had issue:
        • i) Najm un-nisa Begum Sahiba. m. 1929, Khan Bahadur 'Abdu'l Kadir Muhammad Husain, CIE (b. at Shikapur, Sind, 1890), Dewan & Vice-Presdt. Junagadh State Cncl., younger son of Mian Muhammad Husain, of Shikapur, Sind - see India (Baoni).
      • a) Shams un-nisa Begum Sahiba. m. as his second wife, Nawabzada Mir Said Alam Khan Sahib (b. at Surat, 1887; d. at The Hermitage, Bombay, 24th December 1953), younger son of Meherban Sardar Mir Rasul Alam Khan Sahib, Nawab of Belha and Surat (Senior). She had issue, one son - see India Pensioners (Surat).
    • 3) Nawabzada Sidi 'Abdu'l Rahman Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan, Inamdar of Pangoli. b. at the Rani Mahal, Janjira Fort, 15th September 1858 (s/o Saida Bai), educ. privately. He d. 13th September 1915, having had issue:
      • a) Sidi Ibrahim Sidi Abdul Rahman Khanzada. b. 1884. Customs Inspector 1910, Chief Customs Officer, 1948. Rcvd: Coron. medal (1937).
    • 4) H.H. Nawab Sidi Sir Ahmad Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan, Nawab of Janjira (s/o Fatima) - see below.
    • 1) Sahibzadi Hasina Bai Sahiba. b. at the Rani Mahal, Janjira Fort, before 1855 (d/o Naranji Bai). She d. 1916.

    1879 - 1922 H.H. Nawab Sidi Sir Ahmad Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan, Nawab of Janjira, GCIE (1.1.1906, KCIE 1.1.1895). b. at the Rani Mahal, Janjira Fort, 31st August 1862, youngest son of H.E. Nawab Sidi Ibrahim Khan III Sidi Muhammad Yakut Khan, Nawab of Janjira, by his first wife, H.H. Nawab Sharfu Begum Sahiba [Fatima Bibi], daughter of a Sidi Husain Sidi 'Abdu'llah Jabarti, educ. Rajkumar Coll., Rajkot. Succeeded on the death of his father, 28th January 1879. Installed on the musnaid, at the Nawab Mahal, Janjira Fort, 11th June 1879. Reigned under a Council of Regency until he came of age and was invested with full ruling powers, 11th October 1883. He permanently transferred his capital to Murud, on the mainland. Attended the Coronation Durbars at Delhi in 1903 and 1911. Granted a hereditary salute of 11-guns, together with the style of Highness,  1st January 1903. Prom. to a personal salute of 13-guns 1st January 1918, and a permanent local salute of 15-guns 1st January 1921. An enlightened ruler and gifted administrator, who began his reign by taking steps to conserve the forests and thereby regulate the rainfall and secure the country against famine. He built and endowed several modern schools, established municipal boards, introduced a modern system of justice through civil and criminal courts, and reformed land settlement and revenue collection. Rcvd: Delhi Durbar gold medals (1903 and 1911), and the Order of the Osmans (Nishan-i-Osmanieh) 1st class of Turkey (1908). m. (first) at Savanur, 10th February 1882, H.H. Nawab Ahmed Begum Sahiba (d.s.p. at the Rani Mahal, Janjira Fort, 1885), second daughter of Meherban Nawab 'Abu'l-Khair Khan Bahadur, Khair Jang, Nawab of Savanur, by his wife, Lucheema Bibi Sahiba, daughter of Diwan Sahib Muhammad Ghaus Khan, sometime Chief Minister of Savanur. m. (second) 1886 (div. March 1887), H.H. Nawab Nazli Raffiya Sultan Begum Sahiba (b. at Istanbul, Turkey, 1874; d.s.p. at Karachi, Pakistan, 1968), rcvd: the Order of Charity (Nishan-i-Shafakat) 1st class of Turkey (1908), daughter of Haji Hasan Ali Fyzee, of Bombay, by his first wife, Amir un-nisa Begum, daughter of Shuja ud-din Tyabji. m. (third) at the Nawab Mahal, Janjira Fort, 27th February 1913, H.H. Nawab Kulsum Begum Sahiba [Lady Kulsum Sidi Ahmadkhan] (b. 6th January 1897; d. 29th April 1959), Regent for her son from 2nd May 1922 to 9th November 1933, née Kulsum Bibi Sahiba, rcvd: Silver Jubilee (1935) and Coron. (1937) medals, eldest daughter of Sidi Husain Khan Sidi Muhammad Khan, by his wife, Jinnat Bibi Sahiba. He d. at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud, 2nd May 1922, having had issue, an only son:
    • 1) H.H. Nawab Sidi Muhammad Khan Sidi Ahmad Khan, Nawab of Janjira (s/o Kalsum Begum) - see below.

    1922 - [1972] H.H. Nawab Sidi Muhammad Khan Sidi Ahmad Khan, Nawab of Janjira. b. at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud, 7th March 1914, only son of H.H. Nawab Sidi Sir Ahmad Khan Sidi Ibrahim Khan, Nawab of Janjira, GCIE, by his third wife, H.H. Nawab Kulsum Begum Sahiba [Lady Kulsum Sidi Ahmadkhan], educ. Rajkumar Coll, Rajkot and Deccan Coll, Poona. Bakshi (C-in-C) Janjira State Forces and MSC 1920-1922. Succeeded on the death of his father, 2nd May 1922. Ascended the musnaid on the same day, at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud. Reigned under the Regency of his mother until he came of age and was invested with full ruling powers, 9th November 1933. Greatly interested in education and learning, he expanded state provision by building several Marathi, Urdu and English language schools. Signed the Instrument of Accession to the Dominion of India, August 1947. The state was merged with Bombay, at the insistence of the Government of India and against the wishes of the people of Janjira, 8th March 1948 (when he ceased to be sovereign). The GOI amended the Indian Constitution to remove his position as a "ruler" and his right to receive privy-purse payments, 28th December 1971. Rcvd: Silver Jubilee (1935), Coron (1937) and Indian Independence (1947) medals. m. at Jaora, 14th November 1933, H.H. Nawab Rabia Sultan Jahan Begum Sahiba [Shahjadi Begum Sahiba] (b. at Jaora, 23rd December 1913), fourth daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel H.H. Fakhr ud-Daula, Nawab Sir Muhammad Iftikhar ‘Ali Khan, Bahadur, Saulat Jang, Nawab of Jaora, GBE, KCIE, by his second wife, Musammat Nur Jahan Mumtaz Mahal Begum Sahiba, a former Hindu Kunjran lady. He d. at Indore, Madhya Pradesh, 1st April 1972, having had issue, one son and four daughters:
    • 1) H.H. Nawab Sidi Shah Mehmood Khan, Nawab of Janjira - see below.
    • 1) Shahajadi Fatma Begum Sahiba [Mrs Fatma Begum Jasdanwalla]. b. at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud, 10th September 1934. m. Adamji Yahiya Jasdanwalla, son of Yahiya Adamji Jasdanwalla, sometime Chair Alco Insurance Co Ltd. and Partner Adamji Lookmanji & Co, from a Dawudi Bohra family originally from Jasdan. She had issue, a daughter:
      • a) Arshad Adamji Jasdanwalla. b. 27th June 1970, educ. Greenlawns High Sch., Bombay. MD Legion Corporation FZE, in Dubai. m. Shireen Begum [Mrs Shireen A Jasdanwalla], daughter of a Parsi construction engineer. He has issue, one  daughter:
        • i) Ayesheh Jasdanwalla. b. 18th May 2003.
      • a) Faaeza Jasdanwalla. b. 14th January 1973, is a doctoral candidate in the Dept. of History at the University of Aberystwyth.
    • 2) Shahajadi Ahmadi Jehan Begum Sahiba. b. at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud, 1st December 1935. unm.
    • 3) Shahajadi Mumtaz Jehan Begum Sahiba. b. at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud, 23rd April 1939. m. Sahibzada Salim Ahmad Khan, of Aligarh, UP, son of a former Police Cmsnr. She had issue, one son and one daughter:
      • a) Sahibzada Sa'ad Ahmad Khan. b. 6th May 1976.
      • a) Sahibzadi Sehar Begum. b. 10th November 1971. m. Numaan Moghul. She has issue, one son:
        • i) Mohammad Hamza Moghul.
    • 4) Shahajadi Qamar uz-Zamani Sultan Begum Sahiba [Qumar Zama Begum Sahiba Khan]. b. at the Ahmadganj Palace, Murud, 4th June 1943. m. 1974, Sahibzada Sidi Muhammad Zahir Khan, elder son of Major Nawabzada Sidi Freeman Muhammad Kaiser Salim Khan Bahadur, sometime Military Sec and Hon Peshkar of Sachin, by his first wife, Ruqia Sultan Begum Sahiba, daughter of Aga Sahib, of Cambay - see India (Sachin).

    [1972] H.H. Nawab Sidi Shah Mahmud Khan, Nawab of Janjira. b. at Indore, 15th March 1952, only son of H.H. Nawab Sidi Muhammad Khan Sidi Ahmad Khan, Nawab of Janjira, by his wife, H.H. Nawab Rabia Sultan Jahan Begum Sahiba, educ. Daly Coll, Indore. Succeeded on the death of his father as Head of the Royal House of Janjira, 1st April 1972. m. 27th May 1977 (div. August 1993) Kishwar Zainab Begum Sahiba (b. 17th September 1954), daughter of Nawabzada Gholam Moyeen Sahib, of Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, by his wife, Maimuna Begum. He had issue, two daughters:
    • 1) Nawabzadi Sidi Tazeen Jehan Begum Sahiba. b. 29th March 1978, educ. The Shari Acad, Lower Parel West, Bombay. m. (first) 28th December 2001, as his first wife (div. September 2002) Nawabzada Muhammad Fateh Faiz Bin Jung (b. 1974), youngest son of Nawab Muhammad Bashir ud-din Khan Bahadur, Bashir Yar Jung, of the Paigah family of Hyderabad, by his wife, Nawabzadi Saleha Sultan Begum Sahiba, eldest daughter of Nawab Muhammad Iftikhar 'Ali Khan Bahadur, Hanifi ul-Muzhab, Nawab of Pataudi, by his wife, H.H. Sikander Saulat, Iftikhar ul-Mulk, Nawab Mehr-i-Taj Sajida Sultan Begum Sahiba, Nawab Begum of Bhopal - see Hyderabad (Paigah). m. (second) 12th December 2003, Dr. Shaad Siddiqui, cardiothoracic surgeon in Mauritius, son of Mohammad Hassib Siddiqui Sahib, by his wife, Razia Begum.
    • 2) Nawabzadi Sidi Huma Sultan Begum Sahiba. b. 18th November 1979, educ. Greenlawns High Sch, and Sophia Coll, Bombay (BA). Teacher. m. Zubeen Mehrotra, Exec with ICICI Bank, son of Naveen Kumar Mehrotra, by his wife, Pervin, daughter of Boman.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    sidis attack and defeat english in bombay-1689 a.d...

    oldphotosbombay.blogspot.com/.../siddis-attack-and-defeat-english-in.ht...
    Sep 3, 2011 - ... was Siddi Qasim Khan. Yakut Khan was a Siddi Naval Admiral and administrator of Janjira Fort ... During a Muhgal-English conflict he laid siege to the British-held Bombay in 1689. The Siddis are a ... SURAT FORT 1700 ...




    SIDIS ATTACK AND DEFEAT ENGLISH IN BOMBAY-1689 A.D.BOMBAY HISTORY

    Yakut Khan

    His real name was Siddi Qasim Khan
    Yakut Khan was a Siddi Naval Admiral and administrator of Janjira Fort

    Murud Janjira
    Raigad districtMaharashtra
    Janjira Fort bastions 3.jpg
    Murud Janjiraa bastions


     who first served under Bijapur Sultanate

    Bijapur Sultanate

    बिजापूर सल्तनत्
    ಬಿಜಾಪುರ ಸಲ್ತನತ್
     

     
    1527–1686 

     
    Bijapur Sultanate Territories under Ibrahim II, 1620 CE
    CapitalBijapur
    Language(s)Deccani Urdu
    ReligionShi'a Islam
    GovernmentMonarchy
    Shah
     - 1490–1510Yusuf Adil Shah
     - 1510–1534Ismail Adil Shah
     - 1534Mallu Adil Shah
     - 1534–1558Ibrahim Adil Shah I
     - 1558–1580Ali Adil Shah I
     - 1580–1627Ibrahim Adil Shah II
    Historical eraLate Medieval
     - Established1527
     - Disestablished1686


     and later under the Mughal Empire. His real name was Siddi Qasim Khan but was given the title of Yakut Khan by Emperor Alamgir. During a Muhgal-English conflict he laid siege to the British-held Bombay in 1689.
    The Siddis are a community of African ancestry that live in much of Karnataka and Kerala, India. They were loyal to the Mughals and had earned a reputation as excellent sea-farers. 
    In October, 1672, Khan entered the seven islands of Bombay

     and attacked the Marathas with whom they were at war with. Khan returned the following year, on 10 October 1673, after destroying the towns of Pen and Nagothane.
    Yakut Khan, along with Khariyat Khan, had earlier saved the Portuguese from the Marathas left by Sambhaji 


    Sambhaji Bhosale
    BornMay 14, 1657

    at Chaul

    In return, they enjoyed a cordial relationship in the otherwise tense political climate.

    In 1689, the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb 

    Abul Muzaffar Muhy-ud-Din Muhammad Aurangzeb Alamgir













    Flag of the Mughal Empire.svg 6th Mughal Emperor of India



    ordered the Khan to attack Bombay for the third time after Indian vessels sailing to Surat
    SURAT FORT 1700
     were captured in 1686. In April 1689, the Siddis laid siege to the British fortification

     to the south. The British governor Sir John Child appealed to Aurangzeb. In February 1690, the Mughals agreed to halt the attack in return for 150,000 rupees (Over a billion USD at 2008 conversion rates) and Child's dismissal. Child's untimely death in 1690 however, resulted in him escaping the ignominy of being sacked.
    Enraged at the agreement, Sakat withdrew his forces on 8 June 1690 after razing the Mazagaon Fort.

    Khan died in 1733.



    Shivaji

    On his escape from Delhi at the close of 1666, Shivaji drove the Moghals out of most of the south-east of Thana. They continued to hold the great hill-forts of Karnala 

    KarnalaMaharashtra
    Yash.jpg
    Karnala fort entrance

    and Mahuli,


     but, after heavy fighting, lost them also in 1670. 

    In 1670 the Portuguese defeated Shivaji at sea

    But he came perilously near them on land, taking several forts in the north-east of Thana and attacking Ghodbandar


     in Salsette. 


     This advance of Shivaji's led the English to send him an envoy, and an alliance was agreed to, in which he promised to respect the English possessions.

     In 1672 the Sidi of Janjira, whose appointment as Moghal admiral had lately (1662) increased his importance, blockaded the Karanja river

     and made a fort at its mouth. In October of the same year (1672) a Sidi and Moghal squadron landed troops on the banks of the Nagothna river, laid the country waste, and carried off the people as slaves

    In February 1673 a Dutch fleet, 

    under their Governor General, appeared before Bombay and caused such alarm that the settlers fled to the Portuguese territories. But the Governor, Gorald Aungier, had given so much care to the fortifications 


    and to strengthening the garrison and organizing the militia that, after hovering about the mouth of the harbour for some time, the Dutch retired without attempting an attack

    Another cause of difficulty in Bombay were the Sidis. Nearly every season between 1672 and 1680, sometimes with leave sometimes without leave, the Sidis came to Bombay to winter, that is to pass the stormy south-west monsoon (May-October). In 1674 they scared the people from Sion fort in the north-east of the Island, but were attacked by English troops, and an agreement was made that not more than 300 of the Sidi's men were to remain on shore at one time and that none of them wore to have any arms except a sword. These visits placed the English in an unpleasant dilemma. If they allowed the Sidis to land, they roused the suspicion and anger of Shivaji; if they forbad the Sidis landing they displeased the Moghals

    RAJAPUR FACTORY
    DHABOL FORT

    Sewri  Fort, Bombay, looking across to Trombay Island.  An officer, probably a self portrait, is shown sketching
    Pen and ink drawing of Sewri Fort in Bombay looking across to Trombay Island by William Miller (1795-1836) in 1828
    In April 1674 Shivaji was crowned at Raygad fort near the town of Mahad in south Kolaba. An embassy sent by the Bombay Government found him friendly. He granted them leave to trade to any part of his territory on paying an import duty of two and a half per cent; he allowed them to establish factories at Rajapur and Dabhol in Ratnagiri, 
    Weavers came from Chaul to Bombay, and a street was ordered to be built for them stretching from the customs-house to the fort. 

    f.21   'The Bazar Gate and Part of the Town of Bombay taken from the Esplanade'.






    The view shows the islands of Bombay, part of the village of Mazagaon, and the Mahratta mountains in the background. The top of Belvidere House and Cross Island are on the left; to the right is Fort George. Ships are pictured at anchor in the harbour. Across the water is Chaul and the Kanheri.
    View from Belmont 00008



    Marine Battalion, Esplanade.-BOMBAY-Artist: Gonsalves, Jose M. (fl. 1826-c.1842) Medium: Lithograph Date: 1826

    Marine Battalion, Esplanade.


    Lithograph of the Marine Battalion at the Esplanade by Jose M. Gonsalves (fl. 1826-c.1842). Plate 4 from his 'Lithographic Views of Bombay' published in Bombay in 1826. Gonsalves, thought to be of Goan origin, was one of the first artists to practice lithography in Bombay and specialised in topographical views of the city. In 1772, the English feared an attack on Bombay by the French and cleared a semi-circular area of land around the fort to provide a clear line of fire. This area was known as the Esplanade. In the southern section of this area, there was a parade ground known as Marine Lines. This view shows a battalion soldiers on parade with military bungalows in the background.

    BOMBAY-Back Bay in 1861.-Photographer: Johnson, William Medium: Photographic print Date: 1861

    Back Bay in 1861.


    Photograph taken by William Johnson in 1861, of Back Bay in Bombay (Mumbai), Maharashtra, from an album of 40 albumen prints taken in the 1860s. The busy port and industrial hub of Bombay is the capital of Maharashtra. During British rule, it was the administrative capital of the Bombay Presidency. Extending over a peninsula into the Arabian Sea on the west coast of India, Bombay prospered with maritime trade and became the chief commercial centre of the Arabian Sea. Originally a collection of fishing villages of the Koli community built on seven islands, Bombay was by the 14th century controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it was part of the dowry brought to Charles II of England when he married the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. In the 19th century, Bombay burgeoned with economic activity and grew huge. Land reclamation along Back Bay provided for further development. Back Bay is located at the southeast tip of Bombay, near the fort and central district. In this view local craft are beached in the foreground.

    Elphinstone Circle, Bombay-Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1860

    Elphinstone Circle, Bombay. 394127


    This photograph was taken by Samuel Bourne in the 1860s. Elphinstone Circle was constructed from about 1860 onwards on the site of Bombay Green in the centre of the Fort area. It lies at the eastern end of Vir Nariman Road, formerly known as Church Gate Street. The elegantly curved, arcaded terraces exhibit unified Italian facades enriched with cast-ironwork imported from England. Following Independence the area was renamed after Benjamin Horniman, an English journalist who was an ardent proponent of Indian self-determination.


    Y

    'Pagoda and church in Fort of Bassein, 1828'. Lithograph hand-coloured by W. Miller.




    Lithographer: Miller, William (1795-1836)
    Medium: Lithograph, coloured
    Date: 1828




    Coloured lithograph of a church and temple in Bassein Fort by William Miller (1795-1836) in 1828. Bassein (Vasai) is situated at the mouth of the Ulhas River north of Bombay. In 1534, the Portuguese seized Bassein from Bahadur Shah, the Sultan of Gujarat, and the town remained in their control for just over 200 years. At the height of its prosperity, Bassein had 5 convents and 13 churches. In 1739, Bassein was taken by the Marathas. In 1802, the British secured the Treaty of Bassein with Peshwa Baji Rao II, which allowed British forces to be stationed in Maratha territory.




    Aquatinter: Clark, J. (fl.1789-1834)
    Medium: Aquatint, coloured
    Date: 1813


    Coloured aquatint of the Fleet under Convoy of H. M.'s Ship 'Chiffone' Captain Wainwright leaving Bombay in Maharashtra by J. Clark (fl.1789-1834) after an original drawing of September 14th 1809 by Robert Temple (fl.early 1800) of the H. M. 65th Regiment and published in London in 1813.


    In 1674, Bombay replaced Surat as the headquarters of the English East Company in India. The esplanade, seen in the foreground of this view, provided a clear range of fire from the fort and was added in the 1770s to protect the city from the French.

    The Fleet under Convoy of H. M.'s Ship 'Chiffone' Captain Wainwright leaving Bombay'. Coloured aquatint by J. Clark after Robert Temple. H.M. 65th Reg. Sept. 14, 1809. From the Apollo Gate


    Sailors' Home [Bombay].--Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1870

    Sailors' Home [Bombay].
    Photograph of the Sailor's Home buildingl, taken by an unknown photographer in the 1870s in Bombay (Mumbai), Maharashtra, from an album of 40 prints mostly dating from the 1860s. Bombay, the capital of Maharashtra and one of India's major industrial centres and a busy port, was originally the site of seven islands on the west coast, sparsely populated by Koli fisherfolk. Bombay was by the 14th century controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. By the 19th century Bombay was a prosperous centre for commerce. The removal of the ramparts of the fort had opened up the city to fresh developments in architecture, and in the second half of the 19th century Bombay witnessed accelerated building activity fuelled by its booming maritime trade. A collection of grand public buildings sprang up at the Esplanade and city centre. The Royal Alfred Sailors' Home was completed in 1876 and is now the Bombay Council Hall. The building was designed by the architect Frederick William Stevens, an engineer with the Indian Public Works Department.

    Town & Fort of Dejouri,=Artist: Nash, Alexander (fl. 1834-1846) Medium: Pencil on paper Date: 1844

    Town & Fort of Dejouri, Deccan


    Pencil drawing of the town and fort of Dejouri (Deogiri or Daulatabad) by Alexander Nash (fl. 1834-1846) between 1844 and 1845. This image is from an album of 19 drawings (19 folios) depicting the monuments of Bijapur and the hill forts of Dejouri and Purandhar, made during a Revenue Survey of the Deccan. Nash served with the Bombay Engineers and from 1836 was mainly employed in the Revenue Survey of the Deccan, first as an assistant and from 1841 as Superintendent.


    The citadel of Devagiri, "Hills of Gods" was occupied and renamed Daulatabad "City of Fortune" after the Tughluq conquest at the end of the 13th century. In the 14th and 15th centuries it became the capital of the Bahmani sultans of the Deccan and was taken by the Mughals in 1633. The impressive fortress is situated on the top of a steep hill 200 metres high. There are three concentric lines of fortifications between the outer wall and the citadel which is reached by steep flights of steps. The remains of the original town of Deogiri are enclosed by the outer walls, entered through three gateways. A series of underground passages carved into the solid rock lead to the citadel.

    Church Gate Street, Bombay.Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1860

    Church Gate Street, Bombay.
    CHURCH GATE =THE GATE OF THE BOMBAY FORT ; NEAR TO ST THOMAS CATHEDRAL CHURCH,SEEN AT FAR END [THE FORT HAD MANY SIMILAR GATES ;The fort walls had three main gates. One was the Apollo Gate, near the present day location of the St. Andrew's Church. The most well-known was Church Gate, named after St. Thomas', standing almost exactly on the spot that the Flora Fountain now occupies. The third was the Bazaar Gate, right opposite the present dome of the General Post Office, which lends its name to the area even now, long after the gate itself has disappeared.]


    This view of Churchgate Street, now known as Vir Nariman Road, in the Fort area of Bombay was taken in the 1860s to form part of an album entitled 'Photographs of India and Overland Route'. Churchgate Street runs from Horniman Circle at the east end to what was originally named Marine Drive at the edge of the Back Bay. Churchgate Station, the old General Post Office (now the Telegraph Office) and the Cathedral Church of St Thomas, the oldest still-functioning structure in the city, are all located along its length. However, Churchgate Station and the Post Office were later additions to the street and would not have been in existence at the time of this photograph.
    In 1772 an order was promulgated to segregate Indian and English houses, both within and outside the Fort. A more important development came five years later, in 1777, when the first newspaper in Bombay was published

    'View of Bombay Harbour, taken from the Island of Colaba'. Uncoloured lithograph by W. Watson from C. Head's Eastern and Egyptian Scenery London, 1833. Printed by C. Hullmandel.



    Lithograph of Bombay harbour by W. Watson after Charles Franklin Head from his 'Eastern and Egyptian Scenery' printed by C.Hullmandel and published in London in 1833. The area of Bombay was originally composed of seven islands separated by a marshy swamp. In 1661, the British Crown acquired the islands of Bombay from the Portuguese as part of Catherine of Braganza's marriage dowry to Charles II. From 1668, the East India Company developed the area as a trading port. The fort was situated on the island of Bombay. The island of Colaba, to the south, became a popular place for recreation in the 18th century and was connected to the island of Bombay by a causeway the 1830s.

    Back Bay, Bombay.--Photographer: Johnson and Henderson Medium: Photographic print Date: 1855

    Back Bay, Bombay.


    A photograph of the Back Bay in Bombay from the 'Vibart Collection of Views in South India' taken by Johnson & Henderson about 1855. Originally, Bombay was composed of seven islands separated by a marshy swamp. It’s deep natural harbour led the Portuguese settlers of the 16th Century to call it Bom Bahia (the Good Bay). The British Crown acquired the islands in 1661when Catherine of Braganza married Charles II, as part of her marriage dowry. It was then presented to the East India Company in 1668. The second governor, Gerald Aungier, developed Bombay into a trading port and centre for commerce and inducements were offered to skilled workers and traders to move here. Back Bay is located on the southeast tip of the island near the fort, the central business district and the area known as Colaba.The Back Bay Reclamation Project was originally proposed in 1865, started in 1913, sidelined by government regulations until 1922, abandoned in 1930, proposed again in 1950 and finally completed in 1970.

    Elphinstone Circle, Bombay.

    Elphinstone Circle, Bombay. 8


    Photograph of Elphinstone Circle in Bombay from the 'Lee-Warner Collection: 'Bombay Presidency. William Lee Warner C.S.' taken by an unknown photographer in the 1870s. Elphinstone Circle was laid out in 1869 on the site of the old Bombay Green in Fort area of the city. The buildings were designed by James Scott as part of the redevelopment of Bombay which began under the Governorship of Sir Bartle Frere in the 1860s. This view shows that these buildings are characterised by the uniformity of their design and the use of a covered arcade at ground level. Following Independence, the Circle was renamed Horniman Circle. This name refers to Benjamin Horniman, an English journalist.

    The Secretariat [Bombay].--Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1870

    The Secretariat [Bombay].


    Photograph of the Secretariat building, taken by an unknown photographer in the 1870s in Bombay (Mumbai), Maharashtra, from an album of 40 prints mostly dating from the 1860s. Bombay, the capital of Maharashtra and one of India's major industrial centres and a busy port, was originally the site of seven islands on the west coast, sparsely populated by Koli fisherfolk. Bombay was by the 14th century controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. By the 19th century Bombay was a prosperous centre for commerce. The removal of the ramparts of the fort had opened up the city to fresh developments in architecture, and in the second half of the 19th century Bombay witnessed accelerated building activity fuelled by its booming maritime trade. A collection of grand public buildings sprang up at the Esplanade and city centre. The Bombay Secretariat was completed in 1874 and designed by Captain Henry St. Clair Wilkins in the Venetian Gothic style. With its arcaded verandahs and huge gable over the west facade, it was a monument to the civic pride of Bombay's British rulers.

    Bombay Green of 1862.



    Bombay Green of 1862.

    Thana Fort on the Island of Salsette seen from the Esplanade. Camels and European figures in the foreground Artist: Heen, A. van der (fl. 1782) Medium: Wash Date: 1752

    Thana Fort on the Island of Salsette seen from the Esplanade. Camels and European figures in the foreground


    Wash drawing by A. van der Heen (fl. 1782) of Thana Fort on the Island of Salsette near Bombay in Maharashtra, seen from the Esplanade, with camels and European figures in the foreground, dated 1782. The image is inscribed on the back in ink: 'Tanah fort taken from the Esplanade. A. van der Heen fecit, 1782.'

    Thana Fort on the Island of Salsette seen from the mainland. European figures in the foreground Artist: Heen, A. van der (fl. 1782) Medium: Watercolour Date: 1782

    Thana Fort on the Island of Salsette seen from the mainland. European figures in the foreground


    Wash drawing by A. van der Heen (fl. 1782) of Thana Fort on the Island of Salsette, near Bombay in Maharashtra, seen from the mainland with European figures in the foreground, dated 1782. The image is inscribed on the back in ink:' Thanah Fort on the Island of Salsett taken from the Contenent. A. van der Heen delt ad Vivum, 1782.'

    Government House, Parell [Parel, Bombay].-Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1860

    Government House, Parell [Parel, Bombay].
    Photograph of Government House at Parel in Bombay (Mumbai), Maharashtra, taken by an unknown photographer, from an album of 40 prints of the 1860s. The busy port and industrial hub of Bombay is the capital of Maharashtra. During British rule, it was the administrative capital of the Bombay Presidency. Extending over a peninsula into the Arabian Sea on the west coast of India, Bombay prospered with maritime trade and became the chief commercial centre of the Arabian Sea. Originally a collection of fishing villages of the Koli community built on seven islands,
    Bombay was by the 14th century controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. This building was originally a Portuguese Franciscan friary, completed in 1673 and taken over by Governor Boone in 1719 as a country residence after which it became the official summer home of Governors of Bombay, and Parel developed as an affluent district. In 1771, when William Hornby resided here as Governor, it became the new Government House in place of the original one in the Fort. The banqueting hall and ballroom are housed in the shell of the original vaulted chapel, and were much admired for their splendour. Several mills now sprang up on the newly-reclaimed flats around Parel and the ensuing congestion and pollution resulted in the shifting of the Governor's residence to a new Government House at Malabar Point. After the plague epidemics in the 1890s, the house at Parel was converted into the Haffkine Research Institute.

    View Of Bombay, From Mazagon Hill.--Artist: Gonsalves, Jose M. (fl. 1826--c. 1842) Medium: Lithograph, coloured Date: 1833

    View Of Bombay, From Mazagon Hill.




    Mazagon hill was an outlying suburb of Bombay and became a fashionable place to live in the 18th century. Bungalows and plantation houses were built by the British and more affluent Indians moving out of the crowded fort area. During the 19th century, Mazagon experienced a decline as residents moved into the fashionable Bycullah area nearby. The docks were reclaimed towards the end of the century and Mazagon was left landlocked; eventually the fumes from the developing mills drove out any remaining affluent residents.

    Hill Fort, Poorandhur--Artist: Nash, Alexander (fl. 1834-1846) Medium: Pencil on paper Date: 1844

    Hill Fort, Poorandhur
    Pencil drawing of Purandhar Fort by Alexander Nash (fl. 1834-1846) between 1844 and 1845. This image is from an album of 19 drawings depicting the monuments of Bijapur and the hill forts of Dejouri and Purandhar, made during a Revenue Survey of the Deccan. Nash served with the Bombay Engineers and from 1836 was mainly employed in the Revenue Survey of the Deccan, first as an assistant and from 1841 as Superintendent.


    Purandhar Fort is situated on a basalt cliff commanding a passage through the Western Ghats in Maharashtra. There are actually two forts on this site, Purandhar, the stronger of the two and the lower fort of Wazirgarh, or Vajragad. The fortifications are protected by a wall which is 42 km in extent and relived by three gateways and six bastions. The earliest fortifications on this site date from 1350 and there is also a Mahadev temple near to the Delhi Gate of the fort. Later it became one of the most important strongholds of Shivaji, the independent Hindu king of muslim (Mughal) dominated India and was also a retreat for the Peshwars until in 1818 when it fell to the British under General Pritzler.

    Town Hall, Bombay--Artist: Medium: Pen and ink on paper Date: 1825

    Town Hall, Bombay\


    Pen and ink drawing of the Town Hall in Bombay by an unknown artist c.1825. Bombay, the capital of Maharashtra, is one of India's major industrial centres. The Town Hall is situated on the east side of Elphinstone Circle, formally Bombay Green, in the fort area of Bombay. The Town Hall was designed in the Neo-Classical style by Colonel Cowper of the Bombay Engineers and the construction started before he died in 1825. This drawing may be one of the preparatory works for the final design of the building. The Town Hall was finally completed in 1833 with the assistance of Charles Waddington.

    View of Bombay Harbour--Artist: Wales, James (1747-1795) Medium: Etching, coloured Date: 1800

    View of Bombay Harbour




    The panoramic view (which continues on plate two) depicts the dockyard and fort areas, including the Pier Head Battery on the left. Chaul, the seaport of Konkan, can be seen on the right, with the island of Karanja on the left. Completed in 1784 under the governorship of William Hornby, the Hornby Vellard was the first major work of reclamation in Bombay. The dockyard itself was initiated by the famous Wadia family, who moved to Bombay from Surat in 1736. Bombay soon began to develop into a major trading town and by the middle of the century workers from the neighbouring towns, including the Bhandaries from Chaul, and goldsmiths, ironsmiths and weavers from Gujarat, migrated to the island.

    View of Bombay from Colaba.island-1828

    View of Bombay from Colaba.
    Bombay was originally composed of seven islands. However, since the 18th century, land reclamation projects joining the islands together have dramatically altered its topography. By 1838, the Island of Colaba was connected to Bombay by a causeway that was only accessible at low tide. In this view, we can see the causeway being constructed with the use of timber. Bombay came under English control as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza in 1661. The fort area, shown in this view, was located on Bombay Island.
    Artist: Gonsalves, Jose M. (fl. 1826-c.1842)
    Medium: Lithograph
    Date: 1826

    Panorama of Bombay from the Ladies' Gymkhana, Malabar Hill.-Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1880

    Panorama of Bombay from the Ladies' Gymkhana, Malabar Hill.


    Photograph of a panoramic view of Bombay (Mumbai), part of the Earl of Jersey collection taken in the 1880s by an unknown photographer. The capital of Maharastha on the west coast of India, Bombay was originally a group of fishing villages. By the 14th century it was controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. In the 17th century, the British built up fortifications around the original Portuguese settlement of the area overlooking the harbour. In the 1760s the fortifications were enhanced as the British were engaged in war with France in both Europe and India. By the 19th century the British had established control and in 1864 the fort walls were torn down and the area was converted into the central district of Bombay city. The removal of the ramparts of the fort opened up the city to new developments in architecture, and in the second half of the 19th century accelerated building activity was fuelled by its booming maritime trade. This photograph is taken in two parts and looks across Back Bay from the top of Malabar Hill.

    Esplanade and Bandstand, Bombay.Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1855

    Esplanade and Bandstand, Bombay.


    A photograph of the Esplanade and Bandstand, Bombay from the 'Vibart Collection of Views in South India' taken by an unknown photographer about 1855. After the fall of the Portuguese fort of Bassein in 1739, an Esplanade and parade ground was cleared from the walls of the Bombay fort almost upto present day Crawford Market. People sometimes drove around the esplanade in the evenings as a form of relaxation or simply sat around relaxing. In the early part of the 20th century, tents for showing films were pitched here.

    Hill Fort of Mhowle-Lithographer: Ackermann, Rudolph (1764-1834) Medium: Lithograph Date: 1820

    Hill Fort of Mhowle


    Coloured lithograph of the Hill Fort of Mhowle in the Western Ghats in Maharashtra by Rudolph Ackermann (1764-1834) after an original drawing by Captain James Barton (1793-1829). Plate 8 of 'Captain James Barton's 12 Views of Hill Forts in the Western Ghats near Bombay' published in London c.1820. The Western Ghats are a range of hills that reach from the state of Maharashtra to Tamil Nadu and separate Bombay, on the western coast, from central India. This view shows a British encampment in front of a large outcrop of rock at Mowle. The artist, Captain James Barton, was an artillery officer who served in the third Anglo-Maratha war in 1817-19.

    'Bombay on the Malabar Coast belonging to the East India Compnay of England'. Engraving by Jan Van Ryne, published Robert Sayer, London, 1754. Letterpress trimmed and on reverse.


    Coloured engraving of Bombay by Jan Van Ryne (1712-60) published in London in 1754. The area of Bombay was originally composed of seven islands. In 1661, these islands were acquired by the British Crown from the Portuguese as part of the marriage dowry of Catherine of Braganza when she married Charles II. From 1668, the East India Company leased the land from the British Crown and developed the area as a trading port. A manor house of the Portuguese, situated on Bombay Island, provided a suitable site for the fort. A custom house, warehouse, quay and fortifications were also built soon after. Under the governorship of Charles Boone in the early 18th century, outer fortifications around the town of Bombay were constructed as well as a number of public buildings, including the Church of St Thomas. In this view, we can see the custom house, the Church of St Thomas and the flagstaff. By the 1860s, the need for military defence lessened and Governor Sir Bartle Frere demolished the fort walls. As a result, Bombay underwent an ambitious phase of building in the Victorian style.

    Bombay Castle--Aquatinter: Baily, James (1810-37) Medium: Aquatint, coloured Date: 1809

    Bombay Castle





    Coloured aquatint by J. Baily (fl. 1810-37) after an original drawing by William Westall (1781-1850) of the Fort at Bombay in Maharashtra published by Joyce Gold in London in 1809. Built on seven islands, Bombay was ceded to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it was part of the dowry brought to Charles II of England when he married the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. In the late 17th century, the Portuguese settlement on Bombay Island was developed as a trading port with Bombay Castle at the epicentre. Although the fortifications were enhanced in order to protect Bombay in the disputes between France and England in the 1760s, such defence was obsolete by the mid 19th century. The British, under the governorship of Sir Henry Bartle Frere, tore down the fort walls and redeveloped the area.

    Hill Fort on the Island of Caranjah-near BOMBAY-Artist: Forbes, James Medium: Engraving Date: 1813

    Hill Fort on the Island of Caranjah
    From Salsette near Bombay, Forbes(1749-1819) sailed to Karanja and landed about two miles from the principal town, situated between two lofty mountains, on the west. He observed that it was: 'nothing more than a large Mahratta village, with low-straggling houses, near a tank covered with wild ducks and water-fowls, hitherto unmolested by Europeans. On its bank a small fort, a Portuguese church and a Hindoo temple embellished the view. It commands a western view of the town and harbour of Bombay, Salsette and all the adjacent islands, and to the east the mountains of the continent, and nearer plains of Caranjah; abounding in rice-fields, coco-nut, palmyra, mango and tamarind trees, filled with monkeys, parrots, owls, and singing-birds of various kinds'.

    View from Sion Fort --Artist: Wales, James (1747-1795) Medium: Etching, coloured Date: 1800

    View from Sion Fort 00011


    From the vantage of Sion fort, the view opens out to the island of Mahim, which was occupied by the Portuguese in the 16th century. In the 1670s the convent of Our Lady of Salvation was built on the island, and a Franciscan church constructed in what is now Dadar. In the 17th century, the Englishman John Fryer wrote of a customs house and a guard house on the island.

    'Bombay--1754.

    'Bombay on the Malabar Coast belonging to the East India Company of England.'  Reduced version of the engraving by Jan Van Ryne of 1754.

    The Dutch Factory and Fort at Vingorta - Southern Koncan. One of a series of Views in India and in the vicinity of Bombay


    Lithograph of the Dutch Factory and Fort at Vengurla by William Spreat after an original sketch by Robert Pouget, one of a series of 'Views in India and in the vicinity of Bombay' published in London c.1850. Vengurla was a Dutch settlement from 1638 and they used the port to take on supplies during their eight month blockade of Goa. The town was often a retreat for pirates in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. A small British factory was set up in the early 1770s and the town and port were ceded to the British in 1812.hographer: Spreat, William (fl. mid-19th century)Medium: LithographDate: 1850

    'Basseen Fort'. Captain James Barton's 12 Views of Hill Forts in the Western Ghats near Bombay, London, c.1820.

    'Basseen Fort'.  Captain James Barton's 12 Views of Hill Forts in the Western Ghats near Bombay, London, c.1820.  Pl. 6.
    Coloured lithograph of a view in Bassein Fort by Rudolph Ackermann (1764-1834) after Captain James Barton (1793-1829) plate 6 of Barton's 12 Views of Hill Forts in the Western Ghats near Bombay published in London c.1820. Bassein (Vasai) is situated at the mouth of the Ulhas River north of Bombay. In 1534, the Portuguese seized Bassein from Bahadur Shah, the Sultan of Gujarat, and the town remained in their control for just over 200 years. At the height of its prosperity, Bassein had 5 convents and 13 churches. In 1739, Bassein was taken by the Marathas. In 1802, the British secured the Treaty of Bassein with Peshwa Baji Rao II, which allowed British forces to be stationed in Maratha territory.

    Street scene in the Fort area, Bombay.--Photographer: Bourne and Shepherd Medium: Photographic print Date: 1870

    Street scene in the Fort area, Bombay.
    This view is of a street composed of western Indian wooden architecture in a thriving bazaar

    View from the Esplanade of Fort George Bombay towards Mazagon'--Date: 1828

    Artist: Miller, William (1795-1836) Medium: Wash

    Inscribed on reverse: ' View from the Esplanade of Fort George Bombay towards Mazagon'


    showing the view from Fort George in Bombay towards Mazagaon by William Miller (1795-1836) c.1828. Inscribed on reverse: 'View from the Esplenade of Fort George Bombay towards Mazagon'.


    The area of Bombay was orignally made up of seven islands, including Mazagon. From the mid-16th century, the Portuguese had a manor house located here that was closely associated with the De Souza family. After the area of Bombay was ceded to English control as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza in 1661, Mazagon became an affluent residential district.

    The Fort of Visiadroog - Southern Koncan. One of a series of Views in India and in the vicinity of Bombay





    Lithographer: Spreat, William (fl. mid-19th century)Medium: LithographDate: 1850

    Lithograph of the Fort at Vijayadurg by William Spreat after an original sketch by Robert Pouget and one of a series of 'Views in India and in the vicinity of Bombay' dated c.1850 and published in London.
    The Fort at Vijayadurg is located at the mouth of the Vaghotan creek on the western coast of India between Goa and Bombay. The fort, built by the Adil Shahi dynasty of Bijapur, was strengthened and enlarged by the Maratha ruler Shivaji from 1669. While main entrance to the fort on the landward side was protected by outworks and a moat, the inner circuit of walls include 20 towers and rise to the height of 36m.

    Fort & Cotton Market, Bombay.--Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1860

    Fort & Cotton Market, Bombay.
    This photograph showing the fort and cotton market at Bombay, what is now modern-day Mumbai, was taken in the 1860s to form part of an album entitled 'Photographs of India and Overland Route'. The fort was constructed between 1715 and 1722 under Charles Boone’s governorship to protect the island city from seabourne assailants. Early in the nineteenth century the area expanded with the construction of several public buildings including the Town Hall (1833), the Mint (1824-29), Customs House and St. Andrew’s Church (1819). With the acceleration of trade and commerce later in the century Bombay was transformed into a colonial town of high architectural accomplishment. This was largely due to Governor Sir Bartle Frere, who in 1862 initiated improvements such as road widening and the restructuring of squares.

    Part of the Fort and fort wall, Bombay, 1863.--Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1863

    Part of the Fort, Bombay, 1863.


    Photograph taken shortly before the demolition of the rampart and moat of the Fort in Bombay (Mumbai), Maharashtra, by an unknown photographer, from an album of 40 prints of the 1860s. The busy port and industrial hub of Bombay is the capital of Maharashtra. During British rule, it was the administrative capital of the Bombay Presidency. Extending over a peninsula into the Arabian Sea on the west coast of India, Bombay prospered with maritime trade and became the chief commercial centre of the Arabian Sea. Originally a collection of fishing villages of the Koli communitybuilt on seven islands, Bombay was by the 14th century controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. The British built up fortifications around Bombay harbour in the 17th century around the original Portuguese settlement. In the 1760s the fortifications were enhanced as the British were engaged in war with France in both Europe and India. By the 19th century the British had established control over India and the fort walls were torn down and the area converted into the central district of Bombay city.

    Part of the Fort, Bombay in 1864.--Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1864

    Part of the Fort, Bombay in 1864.


    Photograph with a view looking towards a street of private houses at the Fort perimeter, after the removal of the ramparts, in Bombay (Mumbai), Maharashtra, taken by an unknown photographer, from an album of 40 prints of the 1860s. The busy port and industrial hub of Bombay is the capital of Maharashtra. During British rule, it was the administrative capital of the Bombay Presidency. Extending over a peninsula into the Arabian Sea on the west coast of India, Bombay prospered with maritime trade and became the chief commercial centre of the Arabian Sea. Originally a collection of fishing villages of the Koli communitybuilt on seven islands,


    Bombay was by the 14th century controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. The British built up fortifications around Bombay harbour in the 17th century around the original Portuguese settlement. In the 1760s the fortifications were enhanced as the British were engaged in war with France in both Europe and India. By the 19th century the British had established control over India and the fort walls were torn down and the area converted into the central district of Bombay city.

    Public Buildings, Bombay.--Photographer: Unknown Medium: Photographic print Date: 1880

    Public Buildings, Bombay.
    Photograph of the High Court, Rajabai Tower and University library in Bombay (Mumbai), part of the Earl of Jersey collection taken by an unknown photographer in the 1880s. The capital of Maharashtra on the west coast of India, Bombay was originally a group of fishing villages. By the 14th century Bombay was controlled by the Gujarat Sultanate who ceded it to the Portuguese in the 16th century. In 1661 it passed to the English as part of the dowry brought to Charles II by the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza. In the 17th century, the British built up fortifications around the original Portuguese settlement of the area overlooking the harbour. In the 1760s the fortifications were enhanced as the British were engaged in war with France in both Europe and India. By the 19th century the British had established control and in 1864 the fort walls were torn down and the area was converted into the central district of Bombay city. The removal of the ramparts of the fort opened up the city to new developments in architecture, and in the second half of the 19th century accelerated building activity was fuelled by its booming maritime trade. The High Court, pictured on the right, is on the border of what was once the walled fort of Bombay. The Rajabai Clock Tower to its left stands 260 feet high and is positioned above the library. The University Library and Rajabai Tower were designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott and were completed in 1878 in a French Gothic style.

    Hill Fort of Kurnallah--Lithographer: Ackermann, Rudolph (1764-1834) Medium: Lithograph, coloured Date: 1820

    Hill Fort of Kurnallah



    Coloured lithograph of the 'Hill Fort of Kurnallah' in the Western Ghats in Maharashtra by Rudolph Ackermann (1764-1834) after an original drawing by Captain James Barton (1793-1829). Plate 9 of Captain James Barton's '12 Views of Hill Forts in the Western Ghats near Bombay' published in London c.1820.
    Western Ghats are a range of hills that reach from the state of Maharashtra to Tamil Nadu and separate Bombay, on the western coast, from central India. The artist, Captain James Barton, was an artillery officer who served in the third Anglo-Maratha war in 1817-19.


    'A View of Bombay from Malabar Point. Taken on the spot by Lieut-Col. Williamson during the dreadful fire of the night of 17th Feb 1803.'


    THE GREAT FIRE OF BOMBAY  by Lieut-Col. Williamson during the dreadful fire of the night of 17th Feb 1803.'


    'A View of Bombay from Malabar Point. Taken on the spot by Lieut-Col. Williamson during the dreadful fire of the night of 17th Feb 1803.'
    Coloured aquatint of the fire in Bombay from Malabar Point on the night of 17 February 1803 by J.S. Barth from the drawing by Thomas George Williamson published by R.Cribb on the 5 January 1804. Malabar Point is situated at the tip of Back Bay on the eastern side of Bombay. This view looks towards the fort area of Bombay to the west. Bombay Fort was constructed between 1715 and 1722 under the governorship of Charles Boone.


    The original British community lived within the fort area until it was largely destroyed by the devastating fire of 17 February 1803 after which a new town with wider streets was built. Early in the 19th century the area expanded with the construction of several public buildings including the Town Hall (1833), the Mint (1824-29), Customs House and St. Andrew’s Church (1819). With the acceleration of trade and commerce later in the century Mumbai was transformed into a thriving trading port and commercial centre.





























    The Sidis –Freedmen of the Indian Ocean http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/files/38503/122910237757.BlackLiberators.pdf/7.BlackLiberators.pdf
    There were essentially three types of freedmen employed by the Royal Navy: Africans 
    liberated by the navy and employed directly; Africans liberated and taken by the Royal 
    Navy to be employed in Bombay and the Seychelles; and manumitted Africans employed 
    in the ports of East Africa. All of these men were termed “Seedies” by the Royal Navy 
    (Spelt “Sidis”in East Africa and in India). In the nineteenth-century Anglo-Indian English 
    usage, Sidis came to denote Moslem seamen originally from the Swahili coast, especially 
    Zanzibar, particularly sailors and harbour workers. British census records indicate the 
    birthplaces, names and occupations of Sidis which helps to differentiate between three 
    groups of Sidis. 



    Africans were given various names by crew of the ship that liberated them. Sometimes 
    they were given the name of the ship itself; others were given a name based on 
    something they asked for by mimicking, on a duty that they undertook on board, or even 
    after a member of British royalty. After being deposited in Bombay by British ships, 
    young African freedmen sometimes entered the British navy as cabin boys. At least one 
    freed African was working at Multan in  the Royal Navy in 1849. In Bombay, freed 
    Africans joined Indian ship  crews and in 1864, more than  half of the (probably under 
    reported) two thousand Africans in Bombay earned their living as sailors or in related 
    maritime work. Younger Africans were sent to mission schools such as the one at Nasik, 
    where they learned various skills. Between 1861 and 1872, the Royal Navy delivered 
    2,409 “liberated” Africans to the Seychelles. Many of these were indentured to planters, 
    but some were employed by the Royal Navy. Sidis from the Seychelles usually bore 
    European names and were likely to be Christians.  




    Many Sidis were escapees or manumitted slaves. Records often show their birthplace as 
    Zanzibar, where slaves or freedmen constituted a significant portion of the population. 
    Sometimes they are described as born in  “Africa – not known”. Frequently they are 
    shown as born at a port known for its slave market such as  Zanzibar, Kilwa, or 
    Mozambique. Many of these men were nominally Moslem and  the recurring common 
    names of freedmen on the census returns include Mubarak (or Mabruki), Farhan, Faraj, 
    Murjan, and Marzuq. Family names remain “unknown”. The first Sidi seaman to be known 
    in Europe was Farhan, hired by the explorer Lt. John H. Speke in Aden in early 1855 for 
    his expedition to Somaliland.  
    It is not surprising that the plan announced by the Admiralty on 7th April 1870 to end the 
    service of the Kru men on the East Coast was met with opposition from the officers of the 
    Cape Station. This move was prompted by the difficulty in bringing the West African Kru 
    men back and forth to the East African Station. It was therefore decided by the Admiralty 
    that Sidis should replace Kru men. Lushington was sceptical about their abilities and 
    estimated that it would take 12 Sidis to make up for 8 Kru men. Commodore Heath was 
    totally opposed to the change as were most of the officiating ship commanders on the 
    station. Support for employment of the Sidis came from other quarters, including the 
    white explorers of the period. Some of these explorer Sidis had been sailors in the Royal 
    Navy. Rahan for example worked with the Royal Navy in Rangoon before joining Speke in 
    1852. Frij who received a medal from the  Royal Geographical Society travelled with 
    Speke in 1860-63. Mabruki Majera had served  on a man-of-war before working with 
    Thomson and Johnson in the 1880’s. 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



    It then appears that there were five sets of  Siddi transfers or migrations from East Africa to India.
    1.  As slaves sold by  Muslim Arab tradesmen to Hindu South Indian princes

    2. As slave/soldiers sold by Muslim Arab tradesmen to Hindu Central, Western and  Eastern Indian princes (habshis)

    3.  As slaves sold by  Muslim Arab tradesmen to Catholic Portuguese sea farers who then transported them to Goa (siddis) and other Portuguese possessions on the west Coast of India, and to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) (kaffirs)

    4.  Those who migrated and settled in areas along the NW Frontier of the Indian subcontinent (now Pakistan) (sheedes)

    5. Those who settled further south of the NW frontier in the Indian State of Gujarat (siddis)

    Most Siddis -- estimated to number between 20,000 and 30,000 in a nation of  over a billion people -- live in the western Indian State of Gujarat. Smaller populations are found in neighboring Maharashtra and two southern states, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh.
    The village of Jambur, Gujarat, deep in the Gir forest, is the site for one of two exclusively Siddi settlements. It is miserably poor. The headman explains that yes, everyone in Jambur is a Siddi. They speak the same Gujarati language and eat the same flavorful food as other villagers, but nevertheless stand out from their neighbors.
    A number of Africans (Ethiopians aka Abyssinians aka  Habshis) who  were enslaved and taken to India in medieval and post-medieval times eventually rose to positions of power and influence in the 16th century e.g.  Shams ud-Dawlah Muhammad al-Habshi, Bilal Habshi, Said Safar Salami and Shaik Said al-Habshi Sultani (perhaps best remembered as the builder of a famous mosque, known by his name, in Ahmedabad)





    Murud Janjira
    Murud-Janjira are situated near Kashid. Murud is an old fisherman town with a nice beach. Janjira is a famous fort in the middle of the sea near Murud. The tourists can also visit the Nawab’s palace, Ganapati Pule temple and the beautiful Birla temple nearby. About ten km from Kashid beach is the Phansad bird sanctuary.


    Areal view of -Murud Janjira Fort.



    Murud Janjira Fort




    The Landing   Gate of                              





    slave ship
    Ship of British East India Company at Penang
    Ship of British East India Company

    BOMBAY FORT -[VIEW FROM SION FORT AREA]


    ANOTHER VIEW OF BOMBAY FORT -1700'S


    PHOTO OF BOMBAY FORT BEFORE WALLS REMOVED



    SION FORT BOMBAY-OUT LINE OF BOMBAY FORT IN THE DISTANCE TO THE RIGHT





    BOMBAY FORT (RIGHT) VASAI FORT (LEFT)





    BOMBAY FORT AND EAST INDIA COMPANY SHIPS-1670'S PAINTING


    Shivaji and the Sidis, 1675-1680.
    In October 1679, to guard the southern shores of Bombay harbour against the Sidi's raids, Shivaji took possession of the small rocky island of Khanderi or Kenery at the mouth of the harbour. This island was claimed both by the Portuguese and by the English, but it had been neglected as it was supposed to have no fresh water. On its capture by Shivaji the English and Sidis attempted to turn out the Marathas. The English sent an aged captain, or according to another account a drunk lieutenant, in a small vessel to find out what the Marathas meant by landing on the island. The officer was induced to land, and he and his crew were cut off. The Revenge, a pink, and seven native craft were ordered to lie at anchor and block all approach to the rock. On this, the Marathas attacked the English fleet, took one grab, and put to flight all except the Revenge. The little man-of-war was commanded by Captain Minchin, and the gallant Captain Keigwin was with him as Commodore. These officers allowed the Marathas to board, and then, sweeping the decks with their great guns, destroyed some hundreds, sunk four of the enemy's vessels, and put the rest to flight. In spite of this success the Marathas continued to hold Khanderi. Soon after (9th January 1680), as a counter movement, Sidi Kasim entrenched himself on Underi or Henery rock, about two miles to the east of Khanderi, and the Marathas in vain tried to drive him out. The possession of these islands by enemies, or, at best, by doubtful friends, imperilled Bombay. The Deputy Governor prayed the Court for leave to expel them. In reply he was censured for not having called out the Company's ships and prevented the capture. But, owing to want of funds and the depressed state of trade, he was ordered to make no attempt to recover the islands, and was advised to avoid interference in all wars between Indian powers. An agreement was accordingly made acquiescing in Shivaji s possession of Khanderi.[ Bruce's Annals, II. 447-448; Anderson's English in Western India, 82; Low's Indian Navy, I. 65-69.]
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Khanderi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khanderi
    Khanderi (Khanderi Sea island) is an island with a fort, located south of Mumbai, along the coast of Maharashtra, India. Location and history[edit]. Khanderi

    KHANDERI - The Gazetteers Department - KOLABA

    raigad.nic.in/dg/1964/places_Khanderi.html
    Khanderi [Khanderi is written Kundra, Cundry, and Kenery; and Und:ri is ... is a small island near the entrance of the Bombay harbour, eleven miles south of ... fleet of fifty sail, chasing them to shoal water at the mouth of the Nagothana river.
    Khanderi Sea island Fort



  • Khanderi
  • Khanderi is an island with a fort, located south of Mumbai, along the coast of Maharashtra, India. Wikipedia
    www.shivchhatrapati.com