A
BRIEF HISTORICAL & GEOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
The
Foundation
William
Carey, the Father of Modern Missionary Movement, arrived in Serampore
on November 11, 1793. After spending about seven years in North Bengal,
Carey, along with Joshua Marshman and William Ward established the Serampore
Mission of the Baptist Missionary Society on January 10, 1800. They
started the Serampore College in 1818.
University
Character and the College
Since
Serampore was a Danish Colony from 1755 to 1845, the Baptist missionaries
were given all encouragement to develop their educational enterprise
by the Danish Governors, Colonel Bie and his successor Colonel Krefting.
Joshua Marshman visited Copenhagen and secured from the King of Denmark,
Fredrick the Sixth, a Royal Charter (1827) with university rights, empowering
the College to confer degrees in all subjects. In other words, Serampore
College was considered the third University of Denmark, the other two
being at Copenhagen and Kiel. In 1845, when the Danish settlement was
purchased by the British, the treaty of purchase included provisions
for maintaining the rights and immunities granted to the College by
the Royal Charter, 1827.
The powers
conferred by the Royal Charter was used by the College for the first
time in 1915 when three students of the College were conferred the degree
of Bachelor of Divinity. The Charter was modified taking into account
all legal issues involved and submitted to the Bengal Legislative Council
for necessary action. The College Bill was passed by the Legislature
at its meeting on 28th March 1918 and subsequently received the assent
of the Governor-General and was gazetted on 1st May 1918. The special
status of Serampore College is thereby given statutory recognition in
the Serampore College Act.
As part
of the Centenary Development of the College under leadership of the
Principal Dr. George Howell, known as the second founder of the college,
in 1918, the Council of Serampore College was reconstituted representing
various Christian traditions in India and a common accrediting body.
The Senate of Serampore College, was constituted to have uniform theological
training for Christian Ministry for the Protestant and Orthodox Churches
of the country and neighboring countries through the many Seminaries
affiliated to the College (University), by the Bengal Act No. IV of
1918. Since then the College began to affiliate other colleges and seminaries
to offer theological degrees and became a University for theological
education in South-East Asia. Many graduates, men and women trained
through these institutions were conferred various degrees during the
College Convocation held annually at Serampore College since 1915. Now
Serampore College has grown large and annual Convocations are held in
different affiliated Colleges and Seminaries.
However,
the Arts, Science and Commerce (ASC) Department of the College was affiliated
with the University of Calcutta which was established in 1857 and this
connection has been maintained barring two interruptions one during
1884 and 1909 when the College was confined to theological training
and during 1960 and 1965 when the College was under the University of
Burdwan. The ASC Department operates with the government grants employing
more than 80 lecturers and professors with a student body of more than
2500 students.
The Theology
Department draws teachers and students from all over the nation and
neighbouring countries. It is a residential college of ministerial formation.
With a history of excellence, Serampore College provides a place of
learning rooted in the pioneering spirit of its founders.
Subject
to the control of the Council of Serampore College, the Senate of Serampore
College, with 18 Senators, determines the qualifications for the B.Th.,
B.D., M.Th., D.Th and Dip.C.S. and B.C.S. and D. Min. degrees and diplomas
to be awarded to the graduates of the more than 45 affiliated colleges.
The Senate through its various committees like Board of Theological
Education, the Committee on Academic Administration regulate uniform
standard of theological education for the whole country and the Coordination
Committee to see Church relations and relevance.
Although
legally empowered to confer degrees in all (theology and secular) subjects,
the Council of Serampore College partly fulfills this privilege in conferring
theological degrees only. It is hoped that the time will come when the
Council will be in a position to also introduce secular degree courses
of its own, thus fully implementing the power and privilege granted
by the Charter and the Act.
Contribution
to Education and Social Transformation
Besides
educational enterprises, the founders of the College had multifarious
activities of services to the society. They did the pioneering work
of publishing the periodicals such as the "Dig Darshan", the "Serampore
Darpan" and the "Friend of India", the ancestor of the present "The
Statesman". William Carey published a large number of grammatical and
lexicographical works in Sanskrit and Bengali and in other Asian languages.
He is rightly given a place among the founders of modern Bengali prose.
He had translated the Bible into more than thirty six Asian languages
(the whole Bible into six languages and the New Testament, or portion
of the Bible into other languages) with the help of many scholars. His
study of Indian flora was reflected in the establishment of the Agri
Horticultural Society in Calcutta in 1820. Carey and his associates
were pioneer for women education and studying modern science in vernacular.
They not only promoted education in vernacular, but also published text
books on Chemistry, Medical Science and also on Geography and Map on
India in Bengali. Joshua and his wife Hanna Marshman were greatly involved
in establishing several schools for both boys and girls in and around
Serampore. William Ward, who was in charge of the Serampore Press, one
of the largest presses in the world, was a learned scholar and a great
publisher. The pioneers cut the types of many languages with the help
of pundits and craftsmen and had manufactured paper and ink themselves.
Their
missionary zeal and academic pursuits never deterred the founders from
fulfilling social and humanitarian obligation. They stopped infanticide,
promoted the idea of saving money in banks for the poor and helped in
bringing proper legislation to stop the cruel practice of sati or burning
the widow on the funeral pyre of her husband.
The College
continues to cherish the values in motivating our students and staff
in serving the underprivileged and marginalized. Special seminars highlighting
the contemporary issues faced by our society are held as part of the
co-curricular activities of the College. Both theological and secular
disciplines have been taught on the same campus for last two centuries,
promoting understanding and respect for people of all traditions. Thus
the College continues to uphold the broadest culture and the strongest
character, transcending narrow sectarian beliefs envisioned and articulated
by the founders.