User:Mahistal kopai/sandbox

Dr.Ashin Das Gupta (1922-1998) Das Gupta was educated at Presidency College, Calcutta University, and Cambridge University, was a fellow at Oxford and taught at Presidency College, Visva Bharati, Heidelberg, and Virginia among other places. Later he became the director of the National Library, administrator of the Asiatic Society, and before he fell ill, vice-chancellor of Visva Bharati. He was awarded the Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award conferred by the government of India. Das Gupta was mainly a historian of Indian maritime trade and merchants. The central focus of his research was the course of Indian maritime trade and the nature of the activity of Indian merchants in the eighteenth century. His first book(1967),Malabar in Asian Trade was based on the research he did at Cambridge. This book is a portrayal of the impact of local and international politics on the merchants and trade of Malabar. His second book (1979), Indian Merchants and the Decline of Surat, 1700-1750 in an attempt 'to understand the real reasons and...actual process of decline' of the port of Surat. India and the Indian Ocean 1500-1800 (1987), a volume he edited with Michael Pearson, following Fernand Braudel's example of the Mediterranean, tried to see the Indian Ocean region as a unity and brought together essays on different parts of the region by scholars from various countries. Das Gupta believed in the tradition of narrative history. At Visva-Bharati many people from the campus would unofficially come to attend his classes on Gandhi. He had great respect for Gandhi's ideology. 'But' he would say, 'Gandhi was asking for the impossible. India would always admire Gandhi but India would never follow him. This admiration....makes Gandhi relevant to India at all times'. http://www.iias.nl/iiasn/18/regions/s3.html