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Vorlage:Short description Vorlage:Use dmy dates Vorlage:Infobox university

Dhaka College (Vorlage:Lang-bn) also known as DC is one of the most important as well as the earliest higher secondary educational institution of Bangladesh located in Dhanmondi, Dhaka. It offers higher secondary education (HSC). It has Honours and Master's programs as well which are affiliated with the University of Dhaka.[1][2][3]

History

The East India Company and British rule were closely related to the spread of modern education in the subcontinent. During the Company rule, the rulers established the Calcutta Madrasah (now Aliah University) in 1780 and the Sanskrit College in Varanasi in 1791 for the Indians, and the Fort William College in 1800 for the employees of the East India Company.

But through the 'Charter Act 1813', the East India Company was instructed by the British government to focus on the education of Indians. The act was the foundation of modern Indian education. Hindu College (now Presidency University) was established in 1817.

After that, almost two decades passed in various debates about the means and methods of spreading education in India. In 1835, a member of the British Parliament, Lord Macaulay, proposed in the 'Minute on Education' that India's education should be in the English language and in the light of European knowledge. As a result, the Governor General of India Lord Bentinck gave the 'English Education Act' effect. The 'General Committee of Public Instruction', the then government agency responsible for the country's education system, in a report submitted on 20 April 1835 to Lord Bentinck, recommended to establish schools in major cities under the Bengal Presidency to teach English literature and science. They also recommended to allocate money from the government fund for establishing such schools wherever possible and to start the program from Dhaka and Patna.

The proposal was approved on June 24, 1835. The first government school in the whole of Bengal was established in Dhaka on July 15, 1835 by Dr. James Taylor Wise, Civil Surgeon of Dhaka, in a hired house of East India Company. The school was known as 'Dhaka English Seminary'. A local Committee of Public Instruction was formed by Dr. Wise with the help of District Magistrate Mr. Grant to conduct the administrative and academic affairs of the school. The school building was built partly out of public donations on the grounds of an English factory. With this school, Dhaka became an important center for the spread of modern education. The school created an unprecedented impact on the socio-economic arena of Dhaka city. Learners of this region were introduced to the western modern art, science and philosophy of the west for the first time.

Later, Lord Auckland, the Governor General of India, presented his famous Minute on Education in 1839, following which the General Committee of Public Instruction proposed the establishment of a college in Dhaka to the Governor General in 1840. The proposal was approved on July 18, 1841. On November 20, 1841, Dacca Central College was established. Cambridge University student and Hindu College (now Presidency University) teacher J. Ireland was appointed the first Principal.

 
Dhaka College in 1904 (located at Dhaka Collegiate School premise)

Dhaka College, one of the main educational institutions of the subcontinent, started its journey with 3 rooms on the second floor of the English Seminary School (now Dhaka Collegiate School) building. The local 'Public Education Committee' bought the land for the college building. Colonel Garstin designed the building. On November 20, 1841, Reverend Daniel, Bishop of Calcutta, laid the foundation stone of the college at Sadarghat. The construction of the building was completed in 1844 and on May 25, 1844 the students started their education in the new building. In the first graduating class there were both Muslim and Hindu students, as well as a number of foreign students, mainly from Armenia and Portugal. Since its inception, Dhaka College has been an important educational institution in Bangladesh for leading the cultural, social and intellectual activities of East Bengal.

It was renamed as Dacca College in 1846.

In 1854, due to 'Education Dispatch' of Sir Charles Wood, discipline and coordination was established in Indian modern education. Due to the new educational policy, since 1854 the meritorious students of Dhaka College got the opportunity to study medicine in Calcutta Medical College, the only medical college in the subcontinent that time.

After the establishment of Calcutta University in 1857, Dhaka College was affiliated to it. In the first year, 4 students were sent from Dhaka College to appear in the BA examination, although one student appeared in the examination named Deenanath Sen.

In 1873, the College was relocated to a spacious building to the east of Victoria Park to accommodate the increased number of students and the physics and chemistry laboratories. In 1875, a separate science building was established and science classes were opened in Dhaka College. Dhaka College became the heart of modern education in East Bengal by providing higher education in philosophy, history, literature, mathematics, law and science - which continued until the establishment of Dhaka University in 1921.

 
First modern designed student hall of Dhaka College (1908), now known as Dr. Muhammad Shahidullah Hall of University of Dhaka

However, there was no dormitory in Dhaka College until 1880. Though a dormitory was built in 1874, it did not last long. Subsequently, the first dormitory named Rajchandra Hindu Student Hostel was constructed at Shridas Lane, Bangla Bazar for Dhaka College in 1880 with a completely private grant subject to the permission of the government.

In 1903 new infrastructure plans were made for Dhaka College and in 1904 land was acquired and construction work started. On February 19, 1904, Lord Curzon inaugurated the construction of Curzon Hall. At a government meeting on May 27, 1904, it was decided to build a modern dormitory for Dhaka College. In 1908, construction of Curzon Hall was completed and Dhaka College was shifted to Curzon Hall and some adhering buildings at Ramna area after the partition of Bengal. The road on the east of Curzon Hall was named as College Road when Dhaka College was here. In March 1908, the construction of Dhaka Hall (now Shahidullah Hall) was completed. Dhaka College transformed into a full-fledged residential college here in a beautiful natural setting with a separate science building, Dhaka Hall (now Shahidullah Hall) for students and four residential buildings for professors.

With the beginning of the World War I in 1914, its adverse impact on Dhaka College resulted in declination of academic activities and other development works. Even, there were chances of the college buildings being taken over by the military. In July 1920, another college named Dacca Intermediate College was founded comprising the intermediate classes of Dhaka College for strategical reasons. On August 20, 1920, the new college was moved to the then Engineering School (now BUET) campus. Only the remaining BA, BSc, MA and MSc classes were accommodated in Curzon Hall.

On July 1, 1921, the University of Dhaka was established. Dhaka College has a glorious contribution and sacrifice for the establishment of the University of Dhaka. A section of Dhaka College was merged with the newly created university. In fact, all the movable and immovable properties of Dhaka College, students, teachers, staffs, employees, books, library, science rooms and various buildings were brought under the university so that the university could start its academic activities on July 15, 1921. A large amount of college land and campus, hostels and other infrastructures, scientific equipment and various scholarships allotted to meritorious students were also handed over to the university.

On the other hand, Dhaka College was shifted to the Residence of Lieutenant Governor (Old High Court Building) and the Engineering School (now BUET) building was made the student hostel of the college. The Engineering School (now BUET) was moved to Secretariat building. In 1943, the High Court College building had to be vacated to rehabilitate the wounded soldiers of World War II. The armed forced occupied the building and used it as a tent. Then the college was shifted temporarily to Islamic Intermediate College (now Kabi Nazrul Govt. College) located in Luxmibazar. Shortly afterwards, the official and academic activities of the college were conducted in a rusty old private building of late Khan Bahadur Abdul Hai located in Siddiq Bazar, adjacent to Fulbaria Station. Apart from this, a few houses were rented and used as college hostel.

In 1955, the journey of Dhaka College was started anew with new infrastructures in the present campus at Dhanmondi with a land area of 24 acres. In 1972, undergraduate courses on some subjects were reopened.

In 1982, the English spelling of the city was officially changed from Dacca to Dhaka. As a consequence the college was named Dhaka College.

During the Ershad period, the college had to relinquish about 6 acres of land. At present, the college is situated on a land of 18.57 acres.

The Intermediate courses were discontinued in 1996 and reopened in 2010.

Affiliations

Vorlage:See also

List of the Principals

Vorlage:Columns-list

Facilities

The library of Dhaka College was established in 1841 at the time of the establishment of the college. It has a collection of around 50,000 books.[7]

Laboratory

  • Physics Lab
  • Chemistry Lab
  • Botany Lab
  • Zoology Lab
  • Computer Lab

Academic building

  • Main Building
  • Botany Building
  • ICT Building
  • Lt. Sheikh Jamal Academic Building

Transportation

A number of college buses ply on main routes of Dhaka city to transport students living away from the college since 1992. Vorlage:Colstart

Dormitory

There are 8 dormitories in the college campus.

Vorlage:Colbegin

  • North Hall
  • South Hall
  • Southern Hall
  • Sheikh Kamal Hall (Only HSC students)
  • International Hall
  • Akhteruzzaman Elias Hall
  • Shaheed Farhad Hossain Hall
  • West Hall (Except Muslim students)Vorlage:Colend

Other facilities

Vorlage:Colbegin

  • Library
  • Cafeteria
  • Mosque
  • Medical Center
  • Gymnasium
  • Central Playground
  • Dormitory Playground
  • Lawn Tennis Court
  • Basketball Court
  • Pond
  • Flower garden
  • Shaheed Minar
  • Principal's residence
  • Residential building for TeachersVorlage:Colend

Academics

Dhaka College offers two years of Higher Secondary, four years of Honours and one year of Master's courses in various disciplines.[8]

Higher Secondary course

The college offers higher secondary courses according to the curriculum of National Curriculum and Textbook Board in three different disciplines. After two years of course, Higher Secondary Certificate examination is held under Dhaka Education Board.

Enrollment every year
Group #
Science 900
Business Studies 150
Humanities 150

Undergraduate and Graduate program

Undergraduate (Honours) and postgraduate (Master's) programs are running in 19 departments. Noncredit course for post graduate students in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) was started from 1 August 2010.

Faculty

Dhaka College consists of 20 departments under some faculties. There are 200+ teachers in these departments. Many of them hold PhD, MPhil and other higher degrees. Vorlage:Colbegin Faculty of Science

Faculty of Arts

Faculty of Social Science

Faculty of Business Studies

Vorlage:Colend

Notable alumni

Academia and science

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
M. Zahid Hasan The Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics at Princeton University

Scientist, named to endowed professorship

[9][10]
Musharrof Husain Khan Intermediate 1951 5th vice-chancellor of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology [11]
Muhammad Shahjahan 6th vice-chancellor of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology [12]
Nooruddin Ahmed 8th vice-chancellor of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology [13]
Muhammad Ibrahim Intermediate 1918 8th vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka

Former Law Minister of Pakistan

[14]
Abdul Matin Chowdhury I.Sc. 1939 14th vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka [15]
AAMS Arefin Siddique 27th vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka
A R Mallick Intermediate 1936 1st vice-chancellor of the University of Chittagong

Former Minister of Finance

Historian and educationist

[16]
Jamilur Reza Choudhury Intermediate 1959 Former vice-chancellor of University of Asia Pacific

Former vice-chancellor of BRAC University

Former president of Bangladesh Mathematical Olympiad Committee

National Professor of Bangladesh

Recipient of the Ekushey Padak

Adviser (Minister) to Caretaker government of Bangladesh

[17][18]
Zafrullah Chowdhury Recipient of Ramon Magsaysay Award

Recipient of Independence Award

Public health activist

[19]
Amit Chakma Intermediate 1976 19th vice-chancellor and President of the University of Western Australia

10th President of the University of Western Ontario

[20]
Abdur Razzak Educator, intellectual and one of the National Professors of Bangladesh [21]
Mufazzal Haider Chaudhury Intermediate 1944 Prominent Bengali essayist, educator and linguist of the Bengali language and Martyred Intellectual [22]
Muhammed Zafar Iqbal Academic and writer, recipient of Bangla Academy Literary Award [23]
Haider A. Khan Freedom Fighter, professor, international economist, poet, translator, literary, music, art and film critic
Mohiuddin Ahmad Writer and political historiographer [24]
Dinesh Chandra Sen FA 1885 Writer, educationist and researcher of Bengali folklore [25]
Mir Masoom Ali I.Sc. 1953 George and Frances Ball Distinguished Professor Emeritus, statistician and educator [26]
Qazi Motahar Hossain BA (Hons.) 1919

MA 1921

Author, statistician, chess player, journalist and one of the National Professors of Bangladesh [27]
Khan Bahadur Abdul Aziz Graduate 1886 Educationist, writer and social worker [28]
Syed Modasser Ali Ophthalmologist
Mohammed Fazle Rabbee Intermediate 1950 Cardiologist, medical researcher and martyred intellectual [29]
Meghnad Saha I.Sc. 1911 Fellow of the Royal Society

Astrophysicist and developer of Saha equation

[30][31]
Akbar Ali Khan I.Sc. 1961 Economist

Adviser (Minister) to Caretaker government of Bangladesh

[32][33]
Abdul Karim I.Sc. 1942 Soil scientist [34]
M Harunur Rashid I.A. 1942 Archaeologist, educationist and museum curator [35]
Mohammad Samir Hossain A theorist in death anxiety
Debapriya Bhattacharya Economist and public policy analyst [36]
Maqsudul Alam Life-science scientist, first to decode the genome sequence of jute in Bangladesh and receiver of the Independence Day Award [37]

Government and politics

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
A Q M Badruddoza Chowdhury 12th President of Bangladesh
Zillur Rahman 14th President of Bangladesh
Tajuddin Ahmad 1st Prime Minister of Bangladesh
Maumoon Abdul Gayoom Former President of the Maldives
Golam Maula Rony Politician, businessman & writer
Mujibur Rahman Chowdhury Known as Nixon Chowdhury, is a Bangladeshi politician
Rashed Khan Menon Politician
Abdur Razzaq Former minister of water resources
Shafique Ahmed Former minister of law
Muhiuddin Khan Alamgir Former minister of home affairs
Faruk Khan Former minister of civil aviation and tourism
Kazi Zafarullah Industrialist and politician
Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury Energy Adviser to the Prime Minister of Bangladesh

Bir Bikrom

Abul Hassan Mahmud Ali Diplomat and politician, former Bangladesh foreign minister
Zunaid Ahmed Palak Lawyer and politician, current Telecommunications & Information Technology Minister
Nicholas Pogose Armenian merchant and zamindar
Anwarul Iqbal BPM (Bar), PPM, adviser (2007–2009) to the interim Caretaker Government of Bangladesh, founder Director General of the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB)
A. F. M. Abdur Rahman Justice of Bangladesh Supreme court [38]
Syed Ishtiaq Ahmed Former Attorney General

Military and diplomacy

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
Major General Khaled Mosharraf Bir Uttom, 4th Chief of Army Staff, Bangladesh Army
Colonel Shafaat Jamil Bir Bikrom
Ismail Faruque Chowdhury Former Engineer-in-Chief of the Bangladesh Army
Sheikh Kamal Freedom fighter, founder of Abahani Limited (Dhaka)
Sheikh Jamal Freedom fighter, second son of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
Shafi Imam Rumi Freedom fighter and martyr, son of Jahanara Imam
Dinesh Gupta Indian revolutionary who took part in the Writers' Building attack

Corporate and entrepreneur

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
Imran Khan Former Chief Strategy Officer (CSO) of Snap Inc.

Entrepreneur

Fazle Hasan Abed Founder and former chairman of BRAC

Recipient of Ramon Magsaysay Award

[39]
Mustafa Jabbar The entrepreneur behind the Bijoy Bangla computing interface

Current technocrat Minister of Post and Telecommunication

Culture and literature

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
Humayun Ahmed Novelist, filmmaker, songwriter, and chemist [40]
Abdul Gaffar Chowdhury Writer, columnist, philosopher and lyricist of Amar Bhaier Rokte Rangano [41]
Akhteruzzaman Elias Intermediate 1960 Novelist and short story writer [42]
Alauddin Al-Azad Intermediate 1949 Author, novelist, poet, literary critic and educationist [43]
Mohammad Rafiq Poet

Recipient of Ekushey Padak and Bangla Academy Literary Award

[44]
Lutfor Rahman Riton Recipient of Bangla Academy Literary Award
Nowsher Ali Khan Yusufzai Writer and philanthropist
Shamsur Rahman Poet
Mahadev Saha Poet
Kaiser Haq Poet and writer
Abu Zafar Obaidullah Poet
Rudra Mohammad Shahidullah Poet
Abul Hasan Poet and journalist
Shahidul Zahir Poet
Ghulam Murshid Author, scholar and journalist

Media, entertainment and sports

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
Niaz Murshed Chess Grandmaster
Waheedul Haq Journalist, writer, musicologist, and one of the founders of Chhayanaut
Abul Mansur Ahmed Journalist, recipient of Bangla Academy Literary Award and Independence Day Award
Ahmed Humayun Journalist, recipient of the Ekushey Padak
Serajur Rahman Journalist, broadcaster, columnist
Abul Kalam Shamsuddin Journalist and author
Shafik Rehman Journalist
Alamgir Kabir I.Sc. 1954 Film director and cultural activist

Recipient of Independence Award

[45]
Rathindranath Roy Musician [46]
Tanzir Tuhin Architect, musician, and member of the band Avash
Shafiq Tuhin Lyricist and music director
Manna Actor
Khaled Khan Actor
Shajal Noor Actor
Afran Nisho Actor
Ferdous Ahmed Actor
Mosharraf Karim Actor

Bureaucrat

Vorlage:Table alignment

Name Batch Notability Notes
Monirul Islam (police officer) Additional commissioner of Bangladesh Police and the current Chief of Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC)
Sir Krishna Govinda Gupta ICS, Member, Secretary of State's Council, UK (1907)
A. F. Mujibur Rahman Jurist and first Bengali Muslim Indian Civil Service (ICS) officer

Notable faculty

Name Notability Notes
Ayub Ali Islamic scholar, author and educationist [47]
Akhteruzzaman Elias Novelist and short story writer [42]
Akhtar Imam Educationist and social activist [48]
Iqbal Azeem Urdu poet and scholar [49]
Nurul Haque Miah Professor of chemistry [50]
George Harry Langley 2nd vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka [51]
Walter Allen Jenkins 7th vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka [52]
Muhammad Mansuruddin Author, literary critic, essayist, folklorist, lexicographer and biographer

Recipient of Independence Award, Ekushey Padak and Bangla Academy Literary Award

[53]
Mohammad Noman Educationist

Recipient of Ekushey Padak

[54]
Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir General Secretary of Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) [55]
Shawkat Osman Novelist and short story writer [56]
Alauddin Al-Azad Author, novelist, poet, literary critic and educationist [43]
Mohammad Rafiq Poet

Recipient of Ekushey Padak and Bangla Academy Literary Award

[57]
Prasanna Kumar Roy First Indian principal of Presidency College, Kolkata [58]
Abdullah Abu Sayeed Educationist [59]
Kazi Abdul Wadud Essayist, critic and dramatist [60]

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