-
Main menu
- Sign in
24 Parganas was a district in the Indian state of West Bengal until 1986, when it was bifurcated into two separate administrative units, North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas. Located in the southern part of the state, the district was named after the 24 parganas (revenue and administrative subdivisions) granted to the British East India Company in the eighteenth century. For much of its existence it was one of the largest and most populous districts in India, encompassing the southern fringes of Kolkata (then Calcutta), the agricultural plains of the lower Ganges delta, and the northern reaches of the Sundarbans.
| Name | 24 Parganas (also rendered Twenty-four Parganas) |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| State | West Bengal |
| Status | Former district |
| Bifurcated into | North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas |
| Year of bifurcation | 1986 |
| Headquarters (historical) | Alipore |
| Region | Lower Ganges delta, southern West Bengal |
The name "24 Parganas" derives from the cluster of twenty-four parganas — Bengal-era fiscal units — that were ceded by Mir Jafar, the Nawab of Bengal, to the British East India Company in 1757 following the Battle of Plassey. These lands, lying south of Calcutta, became the zamindari of the Company and formed the territorial nucleus of what later evolved into a regular district under British administration.
The district stretched from the suburbs of Calcutta in the north to the mangrove forests and tidal estuaries of the Bay of Bengal in the south. It was bounded by the Hooghly River on the west, the international border with Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan) on the east, and Nadia and Howrah districts to the north and west respectively. The terrain was almost entirely alluvial, crisscrossed by distributaries of the Ganges such as the Matla, Bidyadhari, Saraswati, and Ichhamati rivers. The southern portion fell within the Sundarbans biosphere, the world's largest contiguous mangrove ecosystem and habitat of the Royal Bengal tiger.
Historically, the district's economy combined paddy cultivation, jute, fisheries, salt production along the coast, and forest produce from the Sundarbans. Its proximity to Calcutta made the northern parts heavily industrialised by the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with engineering works, jute mills, and chemical plants concentrated along the Hooghly. The southern parganas remained predominantly agrarian and forest-based. The district was linguistically Bengali-majority, with sizeable Hindu and Muslim populations and significant Scheduled Caste communities, particularly the Namasudras and Pods.
The 24 Parganas occupy a central place in the early colonial history of British India: as the first substantial territorial possession of the East India Company in Bengal, the parganas marked the transition of the Company from a trading