Alexander Kinloch Forbes

Alexander Kinloch Forbes

Alexander Kinloch Forbes (Gujarati: એલેક્ઝાન્ડર કિન્લોક ફૉર્બસ) (1821–1865) was a scholar of the Gujarati language and a colonial administrator in British India.

Life

Forbes was born in London in July 1821. He was educated at a school in Finchley. He articled to an architect but later joined a college in Haileybury as he was appointed to Bombay Civil Service by Sir Charles Forbes in 1840. He left it in 1842 and arrived in Bombay, India in November 1843.[1][2]

Administrative career

He spent his initial two and half years as Assistant Collector of Ahmednagar and Khandesh. Later he was appointed as Assistant Judge in Ahmedabad in November 1846 where he noted the absence of literary society.[1] He served in different departments in Gujarat such as First Assistant Collector of Ahmedabad and Political Agent to Mahi Kantha until he went home in March 1854. During this period he collected material which was later published as Rasmala. He went home in 1854 and returned at the end of 1856. He was appointed as Assistant Judge at Surat and later, in 1858, appointed on the same post at Khandesh. He want to return to Gujarat so he applied for vacant Political Agency of Kathiawar. It was turned down but later was moved to Kathiawar September 1859 to subdue rebellion by Vaghers. The rebellion subdued by March 1860 and he returned to Surat as Acting Judge. He was appointed as Secretary to Government in March 1861. He accepted post in Sudder Court which, in August 1862, made him a Judge of Bombay High Court which he remained till his death. He also held the honorary post of Vice Chancellor of the University.[2]

Literature

He met Dalpatram, a Gujarati poet, in 1848 who taught him Gujarati while Forbes encouraged him to write in Gujarati. They became close friends. He inspired Dalpatram to write Laxmi Natak published in 1849, the first play in Gujarati, based on Greek drama Plutus.[3][4]

On 26 December 1848 he started the Gujarat Vernacular Society in Ahmedabad, which contributed to a literary renaissance in Gujarati. The fund of Rs 9601 was raised from locals, Baroda State and British officers. The society started the first public library, first school for girls, first periodical, first newspaper and first literary magazine of Gujarat.[1] He also founded Andrews Library in Surat in 1850 and Gujarati Sabha in Bombay in 1865. Gujarati Sabha was later renamed Farbas Gujarati Sabha after him. He organized conclave of Gujarati poets in 1852 at Idar State. Dalpatram's Farbesvilas was an account of these conclave.[3][4] He visited many Jain libraries in search of bards who told the stories of history of Gujarat. In 1856, he published Râs Mâlâ: Hindoo Annals of the Province of Goozerat, in Western India which documented the history from 8th century to arrival of British and folk literature of Gujarat in two volumes.[3][5] It was later translated into Gujarati by Ranchhodlal Udayaram Dave in 1869.[4]

Death

He died in Pune in 31 August 1865 after brief illness.[2] Dalpatram composed Farbesvirah, a Gujarati elegy in his memory.[3][4]

Selected works

References

  1. 1 2 3 Shastri, Paul John & Parth (31 August 2015). "Forbes, Gujarati's renaissance man". The Times of India. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Forbes; Nairne (1878). Râs Mâlâ: Hindoo Annals of the Province of Goozerat, in Western India. Richardson. pp. xv–xvi.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Unnithan, Chitra (2014-02-22). "Briton inspired Dalpatram to write in Gujarati language". The Times of India. Retrieved 2014-02-22.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Amaresh Datta (1988). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature. Sahitya Akademi. p. 1319. ISBN 978-81-260-1194-0.
  5. Surinder Singh; I. D. Gaur (2008). Popular Literature and Pre-modern Societies in South Asia. Pearson Education India. pp. 181–182. ISBN 978-81-317-1358-7.

See also

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