| Calcutta Botanic Garden | |
|---|---|
![]() Interactive map of Calcutta Botanic Garden | |
| Type | Public |
| Location | Shibpur,Howrah |
| Nearest city | Howrah,Kolkata |
| Area | 109 hectares (270 acres) |
| Created | 1787; 238 years ago (1787) |
| Designer | Robert Kyd,William Roxburgh |
| Operated by | Botanical Survey of India |
| Status | Open (5 AM – 7 AM for Morning Walkers 9 AM – 5 PM for Visitors) |
| Website | Official website |
TheAcharya Jagadish Chandra Bose Indian Botanic Garden, previously known asIndian Botanic Garden[1] and theCalcutta Botanic Garden,[2]Royal Botanic Garden, Calcutta,[3] is abotanical garden situated inShibpur,Howrah nearKolkata. The garden houses a wide variety of rare plants boasting of a total collection of over 12,000 specimens spread over 109hectares. It is managed by theBotanical Survey of India (BSI) under the Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India.
The gardens were founded in 1787 by ColonelRobert Kyd, an army officer of theEast India Company, primarily for the purpose of identifying new plants of commercial value, such as teak, and spices.[4]
At the time of the Kyd's proposal to Governor-GeneralJohn Macpherson, India was facing agreat famine as a result of the British colonial expansion, in addition to severe socio-economic crises. Therefore, Kyd's proposal was partly motivated by the desire to increase agricultural revenue in an effort to end food scarcity and promote economic growth.[5] In his written proposal to the Governor-General, Kyd had stated it was "not for the purpose of collecting rare plants as things of mere curiosity, but for establishing a stock for disseminating such articles as may prove beneficial to the inhabitants as well to the natives of Great Britain, and which ultimately may tend to the extension of the national commerce and riches."[6]
Furthermore, Robert Kyd was accustomed to growing various spices from the East Indies, which were obtained fromEast India Company's expansionist voyages. The East India Company's Court of Directors supported Kyd's ambitions to establish cinnamon, tobacco, dates, Chinese tea, and coffee in the Garden due to its economic benefits.[6] Tea, for example, was a highly commodified plant and indispensable to the European economy. Theindigenous tea plants of India were still not able produced in mass quantities, leading to the kidnapping of Chinese gardeners and their tea plants. Chinese tea was first transplanted to the Calcutta Garden and larger tea plantations inOoty andthe Nilgiris were established by forcing the people of Assam and Ooty to relocate. Additionally, Cacti such asnopal were imported from Mexico and established in the Garden to produce textile dyes, an industry which Spain dominated.[5]
A major change in policy, however, was introduced by thebotanistWilliam Roxburgh after he became superintendent of the garden in 1793.[7] Roxburgh brought in plants from all over India and developed an extensiveherbarium.[8] This collection of dried plant specimens eventually became the Central National Herbarium of theBotanical Survey of India, which comprises 2,500,000 items. During the early years of the garden Joseph Dalton Hooker writes:[9]
... contributed more useful and ornamental tropical plants to the public and private gardens of the world than any other establishment before or since. ... I here allude to the great Indian herbarium, chiefly formed by the staff of the Botanic Gardens under the direction of Dr.Nathaniel Wallich, and distributed in 1829 to the principal museums of Europe.
The Calcutta Botanic Garden played a significant role in the intersection of botanical science and colonial power in British India. As a center for plant research and cultivation, it became an important tool for scientific advancement and economic development. However, its functions were closely tied to the political and economic goals of the British East India Company. This section explores how the garden's scientific pursuits were intertwined with colonial expansion and governance, highlighting the complex relationship between botany and imperial power in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
The Calcutta Botanic Garden was part of a large network of scientific institutions, including theSingapore Botanic Gardens andSaint Vincent and the Grenadines Botanic Gardens. This network moved plants between gardens and classified them using theLinnaean system. It supported scientific research and was also used in colonial expansion.[5]


The East India Company went through major political changes while developing its botanical work. TheEast India Company Act 1784 (24 Geo. 3. Sess. 2. c. 25) put the company under British Government rule, but it still had governing power. From 1786-1787, it ruled together with theNawabs of Bengal.[6] As the company gained more control over farming in South Asia, it did a lot of scientific research, including plant surveys. These surveys had two main goals:
Although it was a trading company, the East India Company had powers like a government, including collecting taxes. Its system kept officials separate from farmers. Both Indian and British officials were involved, and the Court of Directors watched over this to try to keep it fair.[5]

More and more plant scientists were able to study new areas in India, collecting lots of information. Important people who worked at the Calcutta Garden were:
The Calcutta Botanic Garden changed a lot since it was first set up. It made beautifulgardens for people to visit while still studying plants. In the 1970s, the Garden started growing betterfood plants and other useful plants for India. This shows how the Garden started to focus more on helping the country and its people.

Griffith was instrumental in rearranging the Calcutta Garden in a way that reflected scientific practice at the time, emphasizing the importance of scientific classification in the Garden's appearance. Griffith often criticized the layout of the Botanic Garden under Wallich's control as he believed it did not have the qualities of a traditional European garden. These qualities included "uniformity of design, adaptation of particular parts to particular purposes, including those of science and instruction."[10] The ways in which the Garden was restructured from 1816 to 1846 reflected the demands of a rapidly growing scientific field that fueled European colonial influence. Key features of the 1816 map depict four nurseries, housing for laborers, a farm, and a small Linnaean Garden. The map titled "Plan of the Botanical Gardens December 1845" was developed in 1843 by Griffith and shows key differences compared to the 1816 plan created by Wallich. Major illustrations of natural features such as rivers and trees, which appeared alongside the nurseries, are either not included in the map or depicted using symbols. A large teak plantation replaces the native housing and the landscape is clearly divided into large divisions, indicating that science was used to categorize the natural landscape. An emphasis was placed on labelling plants and categorizing the different areas of the Garden which, according to Griffith, allowed it to be "gardens of science and instruction."[10]
The best-known landmark of the garden isThe Great Banyan, an enormousbanyan tree (Ficus benghalensis) that is reckoned to be the largest tree in the world, at more than 330 metres in circumference. It partially inspired the novel Hothouse by Brian Aldiss.[11] The gardens are also famous for their enormous collections oforchids,bamboos,palms, and plants of the screw pine genus (Pandanus).
Animals seen inside the Botanic Garden include the Jackal (Canis aureus), Indian mongoose and the Indian Fox (Vulpes bengalensis). Many species ofsnake are also to be found in the garden.
Joseph Dalton Hooker says of this Botanical Garden that "Amongst its greatest triumphs may be considered the introduction of the tea-plant from China ... the establishment of thetea-trade in theHimalaya andAssam is almost entirely the work of the superintendents of the gardens ofCalcutta and Seharunpore (Saharanpur)."[12]