Posted on: 26 July 2010

Rear view of the East India Company's Factory at Cossimbazar - 1795.

Watercolour of the rear view of the East India Company's Factory at Cossimbazar in West Bengal by an anonymous artist working in the Murshidabad style, part of the Hyde Collection, c.1790-1800. Inscribed on back in ink: 'North view of the Cossimbuzar Factory House.'.

Cossimbazar was the chief overseas port in Bengal from the 16th to the 18th centuries and as a result, all the different European nations who traded with India had a factory in the town. By the close of the 17th century the English factory, depicted in this drawing, was a highly profitable enterprise. The factory owed much of its wealth to its location, near Murshidabad, and to the efficiency of the Commercial Agent and Chief who ran the factory. Its position as chief overseas port in Bengal was surpassed by Calcutta at the end of the 18th century and the town began to decline.

Source : British Library


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...very elegant...

I have seen this Watercolour before in the British Library. There is also another one by the same artist showing the South or Front View of the building. It is a splendid 18th Century structure in the plain Neoclassical style much favoured by the British in India during this period.

Hello, I went off to try to find out if this building survives. I have no luck discovering that yet. However I did discover the following very sad image. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4d/Old_cossimbazar_palace_satyajit_sinha.jpg Nick Balmer

Thanks for this amazing research Nick.