Namak Haram Deorhi
Namak Haram Deorhi (also known as the Traitor's Gate, Jafarganj Deorhi or Jufarganj Palace) was the palace of Mir Jafar.[1] It is located just opposite to the Jafarganj Cemetery in the Lalbagh area of the town of Murshidabad and near Mahimapur in the Indian state of West Bengal. Namak Haram Deorhi refers to both the place of Mir Jafar and the main gate which leads to the palace. This building was used as the residence of Mir Jafar,[1][2] before he ascended the musnad of Bengal or when he was the Commander-in-Chief of the subha.
Namak Haram Deorhi | |
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The Traitor's Gate or Namak Haram Deorhi is the gate to the residence of Mir Jafar. It refers to both the palace and the gate. At present it is in ruins. | |
Alternative names | Traitor's Gate, Jafarganj Deorhi and Jafarganj Palace |
General information | |
Status | In ruins. |
Location | In Murshidabad district's town Murshidabad's Lalbagh area. |
Town or city | Murshidabad |
Country | India |
Website | |
http://murshidabad.net/history/places-topic-places-zone-three.htm#nizamat-imambara |
Features
The palace was fortified with towers and turrets. It was also provided with a cannon to protect it from attacks. Now nothing of the palace remains except the Deorhi (gate) which led to the palace.
Significance
The last secret conference was held here, before the Battle of Plassey, between William Watts, Mir Jafar and his son Mir Miran. Watts was chief of the Kasimbazar (or Cossimbazar) factory of the British East India Company. He lived in Bengal, and he was proficient in Bengali, Hindustani and Persian languages. Miran received Watts in one of the palace's seraglio. A seraglio is a sequestered living quarters used by wives and concubines of a Muslim. Watts placed the Quran on Mir Jafar's head and Jafar's hand on the head of Miran. Then Mir Jafar swore with great solemnity that he would faithfully perform whatever he was told to do (i.e. to betray Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah in the Battle of Plassey, which was to be held the next day, so that the British could win the battle and he would be dethroned from the throne of the Nawab of Bengal).
According to Seir Mutaqherin, Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah was murdered by Muhammad-i-Beg on the orders of Mir Miran in the campus of this Deorhi,[1] beside the public road under a Neem tree on 2 July 1757 after he fled to save his life, after he was defeated in the Battle of Plassey.
But, according to historian Robert Orme, he was seen to be murdered inside the Mansurganj Palace, on the west banks of the Bhagirathi River, opposite to this Deorhi. There in the Mansurganj Palace Mir Miran used to reside.
After the murder Siraj's mangled body was taken over the river and kept at Jafarganj for the night. The next morning, his body was placed on an elephant and paraded through the streets of Murshidabad and also past Siraj ud-Daulah's mother, Amina Begum's house. He was then taken across the river to Khushbagh.
Etymology
Namak Haram is a Hindi phrase which means "one who is treacherous" or "one who cannot be trusted" while Deorhi is a word in Hindi which means "gate". So the total sums up to "the gate to him who cannot be trusted". It has been named so because Mir Jafar and Mir Miran asked Muhammad-i-Beg to kill Nawab Siraj ud-Daulah just for the reason so that Mir Jafar could become the next Nawab of Bengal. Furthermore, his actions directly led to the establishment of a permanent British foothold in the country, from which they eventually conquered the entire Indian subcontinent and Myanmar. "Namak Haram Deorhi" is also known by its English transliterated name, the "Traitor's Gate".
See also
References
- "Residence of Mir Jafar". Archived from the original on 5 April 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2012.
- Vanessa Betts (30 October 2013). Footprint Focus - Kolkata and West Bengal. Footprint Travel Guides. pp. 73–. ISBN 978-1-909268-41-8.