Ashutosh Mukherjee
Ashutosh Mukherjee
22nd, 26th Vice Chancellor of Calcutta University
In office
4 April 1921 – 3 April 1923
Preceded byNilratan Sircar
Succeeded byBhupendranath Basu
In office
31 March 1906 – 30 March 1914
Preceded byAlexander Pedler
Succeeded byDevaprasad Sarvadhikary
Personal details
Born(1864-06-29)29 June 1864
Calcutta, Bengal, British India (now West Bengal, India)
Died25 May 1924(1924-05-25) (aged 59)
Patna, Bihar and Orissa, British India (now Bihar, India)
Resting placeRussa Road, Calcutta (Now 77 Ashutosh Mookerjee Road, Kolkata – 700025)
CitizenshipBritish
SpouseJogomaya Devi
Children4, including Syama Prasad Mukherjee
RelativesChittatosh Mookerjee (grandson)
Alma materUniversity of Calcutta (B.A., M.A., M.Sc, LL.D.)
OccupationEducator and the second Indian Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta Judge of the Calcutta High Court (1903–1924)
AwardsKnight Bachelor (1911)
Companion of the Order of the Star of India (CSI, 1909)

Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee CSI FRAS FRSE MRIA[1][2] (anglicised, originally Asutosh Mukhopadhyay,[2] also anglicised to Asutosh Mookerjee) (29 June 1864 – 25 May 1924) was a prolific Bengali educator, jurist, barrister and mathematician. He was the first student to be awarded a dual degree (MA in Mathematics and MSc in physics) from Calcutta University. Perhaps the most emphatic figure of Indian education, he was a man of great personality, high self-respect, courage and towering administrative ability. The second Indian Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta for four consecutive two-year terms (1906–1914) and a fifth two-year term (1921–23), Mukherjee was responsible for the foundation of the Bengal Technical Institute in 1906, which was later known as Jadavpur University and the University College of Science (Rajabazar Science College) of the Calcutta University in 1914.

Mukherjee also played a vital role in the founding of the University College of Law popularly known as Hazra Law College. The Calcutta Mathematical Society was also founded by Mukherjee in 1908 and he served as the president of the Society from 1908 to 1923.[3][4] He was also the president of the inaugural session of the Indian Science Congress in 1914 held at the Rajabazar Science College, which he founded. The Ashutosh College was also founded under his stewardship in 1916, when he was Vice-chancellor of University of Calcutta.

He is often called "Banglar Bagh" ('The Bengal Tiger') for his high self-esteem, courage and academic integrity.[5] According to historian D. R. Bhandarkar, the epithet 'Vikramaditya' is also ascribed to Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee.[6]

Early life

Ashutosh Mukherjee was born on 29 June 1864 at Bowbazar, Kolkata in a Brahmin family to Jagattarini Devi and Ganga Prasad Mukhopadhyaya, a well-known doctor who founded the South Sub Urban School in Calcutta. Among his ancestors were several distinguished Sanskrit scholars, including Pandit Ramchandra Tarkalankar, a professor of nyaya who had been appointed by Warren Hastings to that chair at the Sanskrit College in Kolkata.[7] Brought up in an atmosphere of science and literature at home, young Ashutosh went to the Sisu Vidayalaya at Chakraberia, Bhowanipore and showed an early aptitude for mathematics. When he was young, he met Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar who was a major influence on him. He was a student of Madhusudan Das.[8]

Personal life

Mukherjee married Jogamaya Devi Bhattacharyya (1871–16 July 1958) in 1885.[9] The couple had seven children, Kamala (born 1895), Rama Prasad (1896-1983),[10] Syama Prasad (1901-1953), Uma Prasad (1902-1997), Amala (born 1905), Bama Prasad (born 1906) and Ramala (born 1908). His son Syama Prasad Mookerjee, the most notable of his children, founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, the direct precursor to the modern Bharatiya Janata Party. Rama Prasad became a judge in the High Court of Calcutta while Uma Prasad became famed as a Himalayan trekker and a travel writer - being awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award for his travelogue Manimahesh.[11] His grandson Chittatosh Mookerjee was the Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court.[12]

Family history

Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee was born into a Hindu Brahmin family in Kolkata, West Bengal.[13] His ancestral town was Jirat in Hooghly District, West Bengal.[14] His grandfather actually came to Jirat from another village named Digsui, situated also in the Hooghly District and settled down there. Sir Ashutosh's father Ganga Prasad Mukherjee was born in Jirat, Hooghly District on 16 December 1836.[14] He was a very meritorious student and he came to Kolkata to study in Medical College with the help of the wealthy people of Jirat. Later he settled down in Bhawanipore area of Kolkata.

Accomplishments as a mathematician

In November 1879, at the age of fifteen, Mukherjee passed the entrance exam of the Calcutta University in which he stood second and received a first grade scholarship.[15] In the year 1880, he took admission at the Presidency College (now Presidency University) in Kolkata where he met P.C. Ray and Narendranath Dutta who would later become famous as Swami Vivekananda. Later that year, though only a first-year undergraduate, he published his first mathematical paper, on a new proof of the 25th proposition of Euclid's first book.[15]

In 1883, Mukherjee topped the BA examination at Calcutta University[16] to complete a postgraduate degree in mathematics. In 1883 S.N. Banerjee wrote an article in the newspaper Bengalee against the orders of the Calcutta High Court and he was arrested in contempt of court. Protests and hartals erupted across Bengal and other cities, led by a group of students headed by Mukherjee at Calcutta high court. In 1884, he won the Harishchandra Prize for academic achievements, and completed an M.A. with first-class honours in mathematics in 1885.[15] In 1886, he was awarded a second Masters in Natural Sciences, making him the first student to be awarded a dual degree from Calcutta University.[15] In the same year he was married to Jogomaya Devi, and also published his third mathematical paper, "A Note on Elliptic Functions." The paper was praised by the distinguished British mathematician and Fellow of the Royal Society Arthur Cayley as a contribution of "outstanding merit."[15] Mukherjee was recognised for his achievements by the grant of the Premchand Roychand Fellowship in Mathematics and Physics, Pure and Applied.[2] Still only aged 22, he was further recognised by his election as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE).[2] By 1888, Mukherjee was a lecturer in mathematics for the recently established Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science (IACS).[17]

Mukherjee continued publishing scholarly papers on mathematics and physics into his 30s. By 1893, aged 29, Mukherjee had been further elected to the fellowships of the Physical Society of France and the Mathematical Society of Palermo, and was a member of the Royal Irish Academy. He subsequently became a member of the London Mathematical Society, the Paris Mathematical Society and the American Mathematical Society (1900).[2][15] Although after 1893 he largely abandoned his mathematical pursuits for a legal career, Mukherjee has been recognised as the first modern Indian mathematician to enter the field of mathematical research, and founded the Calcutta Mathematical Society in 1908. Among his mathematical contributions, Mukherjee determined several crucial derivations of Gaspare Mainardi's answer to determining the oblique trajectory of a system of confocal ellipses. He also made lasting contributions in differential geometry, developing analytical methods of simplifying Gaspard Monge's interpretation of his general differential equation for conics.[2][15]

Lawyer, jurist and educationist

Dedication to Mukherjee in a 1922 copy of Chandrasekhara Raman's "Molecular Diffraction of Light"
Dedication to Mukherjee in C. V. Raman's Molecular Diffraction of Light (1922)

At the age of 24, Mukherjee became a Fellow of the Calcutta University. Turning down a job offer in the Department of Public Instruction in order to complete his Bachelor of Law degree, he received his degree in 1888 and enrolled as a vakil of the Calcutta High Court. By 1897, he had received an LL.D. and was appointed the Tagore Professor of Law of the Calcutta University in that year. In 1904, he was appointed a puisne judge of the High Court, and subsequently served as its acting Chief Justice for a couple of years.[15]

Mukherjee was influential in the university affairs throughout his life. From the age of 25, he was a member of its Syndicate, serving on the University Senate and Syndicate for the next 16 years. He served as President of the Board of Studies in Mathematics for 11 years, and represented his university in the Bengal Legislative Council from 1899 to 1903. He was appointed Vice-Chancellor from 1906 to 1914 and again from 1921 to 1923.[15] He was instrumental in discovering the talents of C. V. Raman and S. Radhakrishnan.The French scholar Sylvain Lévi commented :

Had this Bengal Tiger been born in France, he would have exceeded even Georges Clemenceau, the French Tiger. Ashutosh had no peer in the whole of Europe.

Academic career and later life

Ashutosh Mukherjee had a vision of the kind of education he wanted young people to have, and he had the acumen and courage to extract it from his colonial masters. He set up several new academic graduate programs at the Calcutta University: comparative literature, anthropology, applied psychology, industrial chemistry, ancient Indian history and culture as well as Islamic culture. He also made arrangements for postgraduate teaching and research in Bengali, Hindi, Pali and Sanskrit. Scholars from all over India, irrespective of race, caste, and gender, came to study and teach there. He even persuaded European scholars to teach at his university. He was one of the first persons to recognise the work of Srinivasa Ramanujan. He also established Asutosh College in South Kolkata in 1916. He laid the foundry stone of Jagadbandhu Institution in 1914 and Santragachi Kedarnath Institution in 1925.

Curzon's education mission in 1902 identified the universities including the Calcutta University, as centres of sedition where young people formed networks of resistance to colonial domination.[18] The cause of this was thought to be the unwise granting of autonomy to these universities in the nineteenth century. Thus in the period of 1905 to 1935, the colonial administration tried to reinstate government control of education.

In 1910, he was appointed the President of the Imperial (now National) Library Council to which he donated his personal collection of 80,000 books which are arranged in a separate section. He was the president of the inaugural session of the Indian Science Congress in 1914. Mukherjee was a member of the 1917–1919 Sadler Commission, presided over by Michael Ernest Sadler, which inquired into the state of Indian education. He was thrice elected as the president of The Asiatic Society. Having served as a fellow and subsequently as a vice-president of the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science since the 1890s, in 1922 he was elected President of the IACS and held the office until his death.[19]

After serving five terms as Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University, Mukherjee declined to be reappointed to a sixth term in 1923 when the university's Chancellor, Governor of Bengal the Earl of Lytton, tried to impose conditions on his reappointment. Shortly thereafter, he also resigned his judgeship on the Calcutta High Court and resumed his private practice of law. While arguing a case in Patna the following year, Mukherjee died suddenly on 25 May 1924, a month before his sixtieth birthday. His body was returned to Kolkata and cremated at a funeral service which drew crowds of mourners.[15]

Recognition and legacy

Mukherjee on a 1964 stamp of India

Mukherjee was a polyglot learned in Pali, French and Russian. Apart from his fellowships and memberships in several international academic bodies, he was recognised by an award of the title of Saraswati in 1910 from pandits in Nabadwip, followed by that of Shastravachaspati in 1912 from the Dhaka Saraswat Samaj, Sambudhagama Chakravarty in 1914 and Bharat Martanda in 1920.[1] Mukherjee was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Star of India (CSI) in June 1909,[20] and knighted in December 1911.[21]

In his lifetime, he was appointed to numerous academic societies:

The Government of India issued a stamp in 1964 to commemorate Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee for his contribution to education.

The epitaph beneath his marble bust at the Ashutosh Museum of Arts at the University of Calcutta reads:

His noblest achievement, surest of them all/ A place for his mother tongue --- in step mother's hall.

Ashutosh Mukherjee Statue in front of the Statesman House, Kolkata

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Sar, Satyabachi (July 2015). "Asutosh Mukhopadhyay and his Mathematical Legacy". Resonance: Journal of Science Education. 20 (7): 575–604. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The mathematician in Asutosh Mukhopadhyay" (PDF). Current Science. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  3. Patrick Petitjean, Catherine Jami and Anne Marie Moulin eds. (1992) Science and Empires, Boston Study in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 136, Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 978-94-011-2594-9, doi:10.1007/978-94-011-2594-9
  4. "Calcutta Mathematical Society". Calmathsoc.org. Archived from the original on 31 May 2012. Retrieved 12 July 2012.
  5. "Asutosh Mukhopadhyay: An eminent educator who made Bengalis proud".
  6. Dutta, Ashis (29 June 2013). "First in class". The Hindu.
  7. "Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee: educationist, leader and institution-builder" (PDF). Current Science. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  8. "Our History". mslawcollege.org. 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2012. Ashutosh Mukherjee, the then Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University who was a student of Utkal Gourab Madhusudan Das
  9. "Shrimati Jogmaya Devi Passes Away". The Calcutta Municipal Gazette. 68 (13): 301. 19 July 1958. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  10. Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science: Annual Report for 1983-84. 1984. p. 3.
  11. Tathagata Roy (2014). The Life & Times of Shyama Prasad Mookerjee. Prabhat Prakashan. p. 11. ISBN 9789350488812.
  12. "Grandson of Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee upset at Mamata's silence on letter". The Times of India. 25 March 2013. Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  13. Mukherji, Purabi (11 October 2022). Notable Modern Indian Mathematicians and Statisticians: During the 19th and 20th Centuries of Bengal. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-981-19-6132-8.
  14. 1 2 Ghatak, Atulchandra, Ashutosher Chatrajiban Ed. 8th, 1954, p 1, Chakraborty Chatterjee & Co. Ltd.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Sir Asutosh Mukherjee: educationist, leader and institution-builder" (PDF). Current Science. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  16. Rachana Chakrabarty (2012). "Premchand Roychand Studentship". In Sirajul Islam; Ahmed A. Jamal (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  17. IACS - Annual Report for the Year 1888
  18. Aparna Basu (1974) The Growth of Education and Political Development in India, 1898–1920, New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
  19. "IACS - Annual Report for the Year 1924" (PDF). Archive - IACS. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  20. "No. 28263". The London Gazette (Supplement). 22 June 1909. p. 4855.
  21. "No. 28559". The London Gazette. 8 December 1911. p. 9365.
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