The Tarakeshwar murder: Elokeshi offers a betel-leaf to the seated Mahant. Watercolour drawing.

Reference:
26882i
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Description

The Tarakeshwar murder, 1873, involved three people. A husband and wife, Nabin Chandra Banerjee, a young Brahmin who lived in Calcutta; his wife Elokeshi, a buxom girl who lived with her father (Nil Kamal Mookerjee) in Kumrul, a village in the Hooghly district close to Calcutta; and the Mahant or chief priest of the Shiva temple at Tarakeshwar, a short distance away from Kumral. In 1872 while on a visit to the tample, Elokeshi caught the eye of the Mahant, who subsequently seduced her and carried on an affair for a year after in his quarters. All of Elokeshi's family were privy to the affair and helped her. Nabin never suspected his wife's infidelity until May 1873, during a visit to her. He learnt of the intrigue and questioned his wife and her family, but all denied the facts and Nabin was pacified. However Nabin decided to remove Elokeshi to her grandmother's house and later to Calcutta to be with him. The Mahant had become very attached to Elokeshi and persuaded her father to sabotage Nabin's plans. Nabin learnt of this and all his suspicions were confirmed about the affair. This led Nabin to murder Elokeshi by beheading her with a fish-knife

Physical description

1 drawing : watercolour, with silver

Notes

Kalighat painting is a school of painting in Kalighat, a small district in Calcutta. It is named after the celebrated Hindu goddess Kali. Kalighat painting originated from the folkart tradition of rural Bengal. The Patuas or picture makers had migrated from Bengal in the early nineteenth century. There are a range of subjects from religious imagery of Hindu gods, goddesses and stories to natural history, social types and proverbs. The range of materials used in drawing are pencil, watercolour, indian ink and silver paint

Reference

Wellcome Collection 26882i

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