West Bengal Government and Society
West Bengal Government and Society
West Bengal Government and Society
Constitutional framework
The structure of the government of West Bengal, like that of most
Indian states, is determined by the national constitution of 1950. The
head of state is the governor, who is appointed by the president of
India. The elected Council of Ministers, with a chief minister at its
head, aids and advises the governor. The chief minister is appointed
by the governor, and the other ministers are appointed by the
governor on the advice of the chief minister. The Council of Ministers
is collectively responsible to the state legislature, which consists of a
single house, the Legislative Assembly (Vidhan Sabha). The
constitution provides for a High Court; its chief justice and judges are
appointed by the president of India. Other judges are appointed by the
governor.
Education
West Bengal has more than 10 degree-granting universities, as well as
engineering and medical colleges and many technical institutes. The
University of Calcutta (1857) and Jadavpur (1955) and Rabindra
Bharati (1962) universities are all located in Kolkata. The science
laboratories of the University of Calcutta, the Indian Association for
the Cultivation of Science, and the Bose Institute have made notable
contributions to science. The Asiatic Society of Bengal, a scholarly
organization founded in 1784, is headquartered in Kolkata. Vishva-
Bharati University, in Shantiniketan (now part of Bolpur), is a world-
famous centre for the study of Indology and international cultural
relations.
Vishva-Bharati UniversityVishva-Bharati University, West Bengal,
India.Kaypix/Shostal Associates
The state has a central library, together with a number of district, area,
and rural libraries. More than 5,000 adult education centres aid in
literacy training. The state’s literacy rate, which exceeded 75 percent in
the early 21st century, is one of the highest in India, and the disparity
in the rate between men and women is lower than the national
average.
Cultural Life
Bengalis have long fostered art, literature, music, and drama.
The visual arts have, by tradition, been based mainly on clay modeling,
terra-cotta work, and decorative painting. Bengali literature dates to
before the 12th century. The Chaitanya movement, an intensely
emotional form of Hinduism inspired by
the medieval saint Chaitanya (1485–1533), shaped the subsequent
development of Bengali poetry until the early 19th century, when
contact with the West sparked a vigorous creative synthesis. The
modern period has produced, among others, the Nobel Prize-winning
poet Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941), whose contribution still
dominates the Indian literary scene.
ChaitanyaChaitanya, statue in a temple in Māyāpur, West Bengal,
India.Gaura
SIMILAR TOPICS
Kerala
Goa
Maharashtra
Tamil Nadu
Andhra Pradesh
Telangana
Uttar Pradesh
Rajasthan
Jammu and Kashmir
Gujarat
History
The name of Bengal, or Bangla, is derived from the ancient kingdom
of Vanga, or Banga. References to it occur in early Sanskrit literature,
but its early history is obscure until the 3rd century BCE, when it
formed part of the extensive Mauryan empire inherited by the
emperor Ashoka. With the decline of Mauryan power, anarchy once
more supervened. In the 4th century CE the region was absorbed into
the Gupta empire of Samudra Gupta. Later it came under control of
the Pala dynasty. From the beginning of the 13th century to the mid-
18th century, when the British gained ascendancy, Bengal was under
Muslim rule—at times under governors acknowledging the suzerainty
of the Delhi sultanate but mainly under independent rulers.
Plassey monumentMonument commemorating the Battle of Plassey (1757), Palashi, West Bengal,
northeastern India.Kaypix/Shostal Associates
Murshidabad: Nizamat KilaNizamat Kila, the palace of the nawabs, in Murshidabad, West Bengal,
India.Czarhind
Britain was not, however, the only European presence in Bengal. The
town of Hugli, north of Calcutta, was the location of a Portuguese
factory (trading post) until 1632; Hugli-Chinsura (Chunchura), the
next town south, was the Dutch post until 1825; the next
town, Shrirampur (Serampore), was the Danish post until 1845;
and Chandernagore (Chandannagar) remained in French hands until
1949.