The Great Paradox of Bengal: Why the Richest Province Never Ruled Itself
From Mughal Treasure House to Colonial Enclave to Communist Heartland—A Four-Century Journey Through Wealth, Power, and Structural Tragedy For nearly two centuries, Bengal was the undisputed economic crown jewel of the Mughal Empire—generating nearly twelve percent of imperial GDP, dominating global textile markets, and functioning as the empire's treasury. Yet the Mughals never moved their capital there. The British eventually did, making Calcutta the seat of their Indian empire, only to abandon it for Delhi in 1911. This article synthesizes a sweeping historical analysis of why Bengal—despite its staggering natural wealth, human capital, and commercial sophistication—consistently failed to translate prosperity into sovereign power. The answers lie in a complex web of geography, climate, institutional design, colonial extraction, and political ideology. From the delta's annual self-fertilization to the Permanent Settlement's feudal codification, from the Jagat Seth...