Kogram | |
---|---|
Village | |
Coordinates:23°32′20″N87°53′53″E / 23.53889°N 87.89806°E /23.53889; 87.89806 | |
State | West Bengal |
District | Purba Bardhaman |
Languages | |
• Official | Bengali |
Time zone | UTC+5:30 (IST) |
Website | purbabardhaman |
Kogram is a village inKetugram ICD block inKatwa subdivision ofPurba Bardhaman district inWest Bengal,India.
According toBinoy Ghosh, Kogram is located at the confluence of theAjay and theKunur. The Ajay has been eating up parts of Kogram and pushing it back. In olden days Ujani or Ujaninagar (not to be confused withUjjaini) covered a much bigger area, covering present day Kogram,Mongalkote and surrounding areas.Kabikankan Mukundaram (16th century poet), in hisChandimangal, as well as other poets of the era, have spoken of the fortified Ujani, its king Vikramkesari and its merchants. Ujani was the home of Dhanapati Sadagar. It was also the paternal home ofBehula ofManasamangal fame. In the olden days, many merchants lived in the riverine territory now a part ofPurba Bardhaman andHooghly districts, with easy access to the port-town ofSaptagram. Around 700 merchants are said to have come to Ujani to attend the last rites Dhanapati Sadagar’s father. The merchants had close links and were mostly centered around Karjana and Saptagram.[1]
Binoy Ghosh says that it is thought that the merchant class had operated from this riverine territory for around fifteen hundred years and the merchant families amassed enormous wealth. It was a common practice to anchor or submerge the boats in ‘Bhramarar Daha’ when not in use. They used to sail to far off lands. Dhanapati Sadagar had sailed to what is present daySri Lanka, and when he did not return for a long time, his son, Srimanta Sadagar, set sail in search of him. Life in the region was affected with the changing course of rivers and the arrival of European merchants.[1]
See also -Kasba for Champaknagari ofChand Sadagar andManasamangal fame.
It is located at23°32′20″N87°53′53″E / 23.53889°N 87.89806°E /23.53889; 87.89806.
88.44% of the population of Katwa subdivision live in rural areas. Only 11.56% of the population live in urban areas.[2] The map alongside show some of the notable locations in the subdivision. All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map.
As per the2011 Census of India Kogram had a total population of 383, of which 209 (55%) were males and 174 (45%) were females. Population below 6 years was 46. The total number of literates in Kogram was 219 (64.99% of the population over 6 years).[3]
Kumud Ranjan Mullick, a notableBengali writer and poet, was born at Kogram on 3 March 1882, and wrote many of his poems there. He was a teacher at Mathrun School located nearby. Lochan Das, author ofChaitanya Mangala (16th century), was born at Kogram. There is a memorial temple in the village.[4][5]
Kogram is a sakti peetha and is famous for the temple of goddessChandi.[6]
It is said that a piece of the right arm-bend of Sati fell at Kogram and it is considered one of the fifty one shakti peethas.[7]
As in other parts of neighbouring rural Bengal, in the Ujani-Kogram area also, the non-Aryan content in the regional religious practices were predominant. There was conflict and gradual assimilation of other schools of thought. At one point of timeBuddhisttantric practices andJainism must have prevailed at Ujani. In the temple of Chandi there is an ancient idol ofGautam Buddha. Earlier, there was also an idol of JaintirthankaraShantinatha – it was taken away and is now atBangiya Sahitya Parishad in Kolkata.[1]