Skip to content
  • English
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
Daily News India

Daily News India

Just another WordPress site

  • English
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Toggle search form
  • ITC Nimyle’s “Shuddh Shuruat’’: An Initiative to cleanse the Rath Yatra’s path with Neem based Nimyle Business
  • Atharv Aaradhyam Construction Update – Progress on Track for Timely Completion Business
  • Role of Grassroots in National Elections: Case Study from Village India National
  • Lalbaugcha Raja continues to bless devotees thanks to the support from generous donors Lifestyle
  • Eco-Friendly Ganpati Utsav Celebrated in Hongkong with Chocolate idols Lifestyle
  • Revised Advisory To Indian Students Seeking Admission In Medical Studies In Georgia Press Release
  • The Visionary Leadership Propelling ALC Group’s Rapid Ascent To Excellence Business
  • Excelia Business School enhances International BBA with first year options in Australia, USA, and Singapore Education

Christmas in Calcutta (1780–Today): The Unstoppable City Ritual

Posted on December 25, 2025 By

New Delhi [India], December 25: Christmas in Calcutta did not arrive as a fragile import. It landed like a citywide performance and refused to stay indoors.

By the late eighteenth century, Calcutta had already detached Christmas from its English stiffness. Colonial commentators noticed it early. An 1894 article in The Saturday Review openly complained that English Christmas traditions had become formulaic, while Calcutta had turned the festival into something freer, louder, and frankly more enjoyable.

By then, the city was already calling it Burrah Din. The Big Day. No apology needed.

This was not mimicry. It was an adaptation. Calcutta did not chase snowflakes or fireplaces. It worked with light, food, music, and streets. The result was a ritual that made sense to a tropical port city with global connections and zero patience for narrow definitions of celebration.

From Artillery Salutes to Marigold Gates

The idea that Christmas in Calcutta began as a small colonial club event is simply wrong.

Records show large-scale celebrations as early as 1780. James Augustus Hickey, never one to exaggerate subtly, documented Christmas Day that year as a full ceremonial affair. Governor-General Warren Hastings hosted an official breakfast, followed by what Hickey described as an extravagant dinner attended by elite guests. Artillery salutes thundered from Lal Dighi. The evening ended with music, illumination, and a ball.

This was not a quiet holiday. It was a civic theatre.

Eliza Fay’s letters from the same period provide sensory details. Large plantain trees stood at entrances. Gates were decorated with flowers. Fish and fruit arrived in abundance. Native servers handled logistics. Christmas had already crossed racial and cultural lines.

By the mid-nineteenth century, decorations blended British custom with Indian symbolism. Plantain leaves signalled abundance. Marigolds appeared alongside laurel wreaths. Lamps replaced candles. Gordon-Cumming later observed that locals embraced Christmas aesthetics with enthusiasm because feasting was a universal language.

Calcutta did not dilute Christmas. It expanded it.

How Commerce Turned Christmas into a City Event

If religion introduced Christmas, commerce made it unstoppable.

By the 1850s, newspapers were already running Christmas Eve advertisements. The Bengal Hurkaru promoted Stilton cheese and turkey at the Great Eastern Hotel. Luxury stores stocked imported foods, gifts, and decorations. Governors-General chose Calcutta as their winter base precisely because the city knew how to host.

By the 1880s, Christmas shopping had become a seasonal economy. The Statesman described illuminated streets, packed luxury stores, and shoppers who stayed out until dawn. New Market emerged as a central node, bringing together Jewish and Armenian confectioners and Indian crowds.

This was not elite-only consumption. It was urban participation.

Plum cakes, brandy-soaked puddings, pastries, and sweets became heirlooms. Recipes passed through families and communities. Christmas food in Calcutta became a memory you could taste.

Clubs, Hotels, and the Business of Celebration

Calcutta professionalised Christmas before most cities even tried.

Hotels like the Great Eastern, Grand Hotel, Firpo’s, Peliti, and Bristol ran elaborate Christmas buffets and entertainment weeks. European clubs organised lunches, dinners, and garden parties that doubled as social calendars.

The Calcutta Club, founded in 1907, became a powerful venue. Viceroys dined there. Princes attended lunches. Garden parties followed Christmas dinners. Even after the capital moved in 1911, the city did not lose its Christmas gravity.

Entertainment scaled with confidence. Circuses arrived by December. Wrestling exhibitions, theatre shows, magic acts, river cruises, polo matches, horse races, and cricket games filled the season. Royal Circus shows ran from mid-December with nearly a hundred animals by the 1920s.

Christmas was no longer a date. It was a season.

Cakes, Cards, and Cultural Memory

One of Calcutta’s most underestimated contributions to Christmas was its intellectual and visual culture.

Christmas cards printed between 1908 and 1912 by Thacker, Spink & Co featured humour, local scenes, and irreverent illustrations. They were not pious images of European winters. They were distinctly Calcutta creations. The anonymous artist signing as Geo. D understood the assignment.

Then came spectacle baking. Peliti produced monumental cakes, including replicas of Delhi monuments. In 1889, a twelve-foot Eiffel Tower cake stunned the city weeks before Christmas Eve. This was culinary confidence.

After World War I, Christmas gifts reflected modernity. Gramophones, phonographs, and music boxes dominated wish lists. Department stores competed aggressively with discounts and glossy brochures.

Christmas in Calcutta was always contemporary. It evolved with technology, taste, and aspiration.

Christmas After Empire

The empire left. Christmas stayed.

By the late 1950s, Christmas in Calcutta had become a civic tradition rather than a colonial residue. Historian accounts describe it as a cultural institution with broad participation.

Anglo-Indians played a visible role, sustaining architecture, schools, clubs, and charitable events. But they were not alone. Muslims supplied bakarkhanis. Jewish bakeries anchored dessert culture. Chinese kitchens in Tangra became late-night magnets.

The Bengali public embraced the festival fully. The name Boro Din says everything. It was never about theology alone. It was about scale, warmth, and shared time.

Bow Barracks turned into a street-level spectacle. New Market became a human tide. Tangra steamed with food and noise. Christmas moved from halls to sidewalks.

Why the City Still Shows Up

Christmas in Calcutta survives because it functions as civic glue.

It stages neighbourhood solidarity. It triggers diasporic returns. It activates memory without freezing it. It allows multiple communities to participate without forcing uniformity.

This is not nostalgia tourism. It is a living practice.

Schools host concerts—clubs host lunches. Charitable organisations stay busy through December. Institutions like Loreto Entally and the All India Anglo-Indian Association continue to show visible leadership.

The city shows up because Christmas here is not borrowed. It is owned.

Calcutta did not inherit Christmas passively. It rebuilt it publicly, commercially, and emotionally. That is why the lights still go up. That is why people still call it the Big Day. That is why the streets still fill.

Cities do not keep traditions alive by accident. They do it by making them useful. Calcutta figured that out over a century ago.

Kolkata Christmas Festival – West Bengal Tourism
https://www.wbtourism.gov.in/christmas

PNN News

Lifestyle Tags:lifestyle

Post navigation

Previous Post: Zota Health Care Raises INR 350 Crore via QIP, Onboards MS Dhoni and Suniel Shetty as Brand Ambassadors
Next Post: Vande Bharat Via USA: When A Gujarati Film Packs Its Bags, Its Identity, And A Very Oddly Familiar Dream

Related Posts

  • Daler Mehndi relishes food memories with Kake Da Hotel, Versova, Andheri Lifestyle
  • Vidhan Group by Ambitious farmer enters real estate to raise the bar for premium living in Banaras Lifestyle
  • Ahmedabad’s 16-year-old Musical Prodigy Karman Soni Attends Berklee College with Full Scholarship Lifestyle
  • Renowned Astrologer Dr. Sundeep Kochar Receives Global Recognition for Groundbreaking Achievements Lifestyle
  • Religion has became a strong wall between humans and Humanity for Many, says Ayush Gupta Lifestyle
  • IPS Quaiser Khalid: A Birthday Celebration Filled with Inspiration and Empathy Lifestyle

Recent Posts

  • Golden Globes 2026 Delivers A Glorious Win — And A Few Familiar Eye-Rolls
  • 104 Years of Heritage: RudraTree’s Century-Long Legacy in Rudraksha, Navaratna & Natural Crystals
  • Hyderabad Based BeSpoke AI Stylist Uses Fashion AI to Solve Personalisation Challenges in Fashion Retail
  • EQ India recognised as the No. 2 Top Employer for 2026 in India
  • Yash Anil Rashiya: Surat’s World Champion Brings Roll Ball Glory to India

Recent Comments

  • Unknown on Participants Reap Rewards in Wellman’s 8-Week Digital Campaign: IPL Tickets, Autographed Virat Kohli Merchandise, and More!
  • Anil Wadhwa: A social contributor Business
  • First season of UP Kabbadi league to be held in Noida Indoor stadium from 11th July, Matches to be held in Noida Indoor stadium Sports
  • Budget Smart: Using a Home Loan EMI Calculator for Financial Planning Finance
  • Neel Jogani Launches His Debut Book ‘AI for Everyone’ – A Friendly Guide Bringing Artificial Intelligence Into Daily Life Lifestyle
  • First edition of Veterans Super League (VSL) announced, to feature Indian football legends in Kolkata Press Release
  • Dr. Sudanagunta Swaroop Chandra Honored as One of the Top Ten Orthopedic Surgeons 2023 by Telangana Health Minister Harish Rao Health
  • Star Housing Finance Limited Crosses Rs.500 Crs Aum Milestone Business
  • Aajjo.com, Providing Global Reach to Indian Manufacturers and Sellers Business

Copyright © 2026 Daily News India.

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme