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CHANDERNAGORE , or CHANDARNAGAl2, a FrenchSee also: settlement in See also: India, with a small adjoining territory, situated on the right See also: bank of the See also: river See also: Hugli, 20 M. above See also: Calcutta, in 22° 51' 40" N. and 88° 24' 50" E
.
See also: Area 3 sq. m.; pop
.
(1901) 25,000
.
Chandernagore has played an important See also: part in the See also: European See also: history of See also: Bengal
.
It became a permanent French settlement in 1688, but did not rise to any importance till the See also: time of See also: Dupleix, during whose administration more than two thousand brick houses were erected in the See also: town and a considerable maritime See also: trade was carried on
.
In 1757 Chandernagore was bombarded by an See also: English See also: fleet under See also: Admiral See also: Watson and captured; the fortifications and houses were afterwards demolished
.
On See also: peace being established the town was restored to the French in 1763
.
When hostilities afterwards broke out in 1794, it was again taken possession of by the English, and was held by them till 1816, when it was a second time given up to the French; it has ever since remained in their possession
.
All the former commercial grandeur of Chanders nagore has now passed away, and at See also: present it is little more than a quiet suburb of Calcutta, without any See also: external trade
.
The European town is situated at the bottom of a beautiful reach of the Hugli, with clean wide thoroughfares, and many elegant
residences along the river-bank
.
The authorities of Chandernagore are subject to the jurisdiction of the governor-general of See also: Pondicherry, to whom is confided the general See also: government of all the French possessions in India
.
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