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  2. He is considered one of the pioneers of Bengali literature. Early life. Dutt was born in Sagardari, a village in Keshabpur Upazila, Jessore District of Bengal, to a Hindu family. [citation needed] . His family being reasonably well-off, Dutt received an education in the English language and additional tutorship in English at home.

    • Early Life and The Origins of His Passion For Writing
    • Converting to Christianity and The Ensuing Estrangement
    • The Madras Newspapers and His First Books on Poetry
    • His Two 'Unacceptable' Marriages and Moving Back to Kolkata
    • Stepping in as The First Bengali Playwright and Experimenting with Blank Verse
    • Accepting His Bengali Roots and The First Bengali Sonnets
    • The Generosity of Ishwarchandra Vidysagar
    • The Breakdown in Kolkata and His Last Works

    Dutt was born on January 25, 1824 in a village named Sagardari in East Bengal's Jessore district, to a law practioner father, Rajnarayan Dutt, and mother, Jahnabi Devi. He initially studied at home and the village primary school before being admitted to a school in Kolkata. He grew up to enrol in Kolkata's Hindu College, where he studied Bengali, P...

    Dutt converted to Christianity on February 9, 1843 while he was still at college partly in order to escape an arranged marriage set up by his father. After his conversion, he took up the first name of Michael. He had to leave Hindu College after that and took admission to Bishop's College in 1844, where he remained till 1847. Here, he also learned ...

    In Madras, he continued his writing work and was associated with a few newspapers in journals. He edited the Hindu Chronicle, the Madras Circulator, the Eurasian (later the Eastern Guardian), and General Chronicle, and also worked as the assistant editor of the Madras Spectator from 1848 to 1856. Moreover, he published two English poetry books -- T...

    While living in Madras, he did something even more unusual-he got married to a woman who was around three-quarters white in December 1855. While British men often married Indian females, the reverse was not so common. Rebecca Mactavys gave him four children. While Dutt was in Madras, his mother and father died one after the other. He moved to Kolka...

    After moving to Kolkata, Dutt first worked at the police court as a clerk and later, as an interpreter, before starting to contribute his work to several journals.While translating a play by Ramnarayan Tarkaratna called Ratnavali (1858) into English, Dutt realised there was a huge dearth of good plays in Bengali. Soon after, he got associated with ...

    Michael Madhusudan Dutt went to study law in England at Gray's Inn on June 9, 1862, but couldn't bear the weather and the racism. It was after he went to Versailles in France in 1863 along with Henrietta and their family that he finally got over the longing for England that had given rise to the style of his previous works and started to consider h...

    Living in France, he was thrown into abject poverty and when the money from his late father's estate did not come regularly, he appealed to the great scholar, reformer and activist Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar who looked into ensuring that Dutt got his money. For his generosity, Dutt termed him 'dayar sagar' or 'the ocean of generosity'.

    In 1856, Dutt returned to England from Verssailes and in 1866, became a barrister. Though he returned to Calcutta in 1867 with his second family, his extravagant lifestyle and drinking problems did not let him achieve success. He gave up law in three years because of a failing practice and joined as a High Court translator with a Rs 1000 monthly sa...

    • India Today Web Desk
  3. Michael Madhusudan Datta (born Jan. 25, 1824, Sāgardari, Bengal, India [now in Bangladesh]—died June 29, 1873, Calcutta, India) was a poet and dramatist, the first great poet of modern Bengali literature. Datta was a dynamic, erratic personality and an original genius of a high order.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Jan 25, 2023 · T he poet, playwright and non-conformist Michael Madhusudan Dutt is perhaps best remembered for ushering in a renaissance in Bengali literature. He is credited for introducing English Byronic sonnets into Bengali literature and introducing free verse.

  5. Jan 25, 2024 · Michael Madhusudan Dutta reached the pinnacle of his career from 1861-62 with the publication of “Meghnad-Badh,” “Krishna-Kumari,” “Vrajangana,” and “Virangana-Kavya.” He briefly served as the editor of the Hindu Patriot before departing for England on June 9, 1862, to pursue legal studies.

    • Alisha Das
  6. Oct 20, 2021 · Michael Madhusudan Dutt was a poet and a rebel, who shook off the shackles of Hindu tradition. He expressed the deep cultural conflict that he felt in his literary works but it would spill over into his personal life as well. Here’s the story of this troubled genius.

  7. Dutt is considered a leading figure of the Bengali Renaissance of the mid-nineteenth century. He is credited with poetic and dramatic innovations best illustrated by his merging of Bengali...